Chat with us, powered by LiveChat Module3FunctionalConsiderationsv3.pptx - STUDENT SOLUTION USA

Module 2

Module 2 – Competitiveness, Global Strategies, Processes and Structure

2

Competitiveness and Strategy

Firm Competitiveness and International Impacts

Value Chain

VRIO

Porter’s Competitiveness Framework

Trade Fundamentals and Advantage

Becoming International

Managing and Succeeding Internationally

Making Alliances Work

This module will look at the international dynamics for start-ups and entrepreneurial companies as well as large international and MNCs.

Critical to this module will be a deeper understanding of:

Competitiveness

Trade

Alliances as a tool to enable global growth

3

Processes

How to think about strategy?

4

Strategy

Resources

Organisation

Strategy

Strategy is about choice

Simplicity is better

Be strategy driven – what are you trying to achieve?

What is your starting point?

From the competitiveness tools

Do not invert the pyramid

Set Strategy

Determine key processes (and resultant behaviours)

Determine relative resources – Capital, People/Talent, Technology and Capability

THEN, set the organisation structure

Source: Arthur D. Little

2.1 Global Competitiveness

How competitive are you?

Are you struggling at home?

Are you profitable?

Is there innate interest?

Changing Global Dynamics

What changes as you go global?

Can you extend those things that make you competitive at home?

Are you “ready” to be global?

5

Are you ready to compete?

Are you ready to compete internationally?

2.1 Global Competitiveness – Greenhouse Tomato Industry

Greenhouse

We are looking at the cherry tomato sector

From lab to store

Each team will play various roles in the context of understanding competitiveness:

Team 1 – Lab/Genetics

Team 2 – Seeds/Plant Materials

Team 3 – Greenhouse

Team 4 – Distributor

Team 5 – Farmers Market Store

Team 6 – Costco

6

2.1 Global Competitiveness – Resources and Capabilities

Resources

Tangible and intangible assets

Financial

Cash and Balance sheet strength

Cost of Capital

Fixed Assets

Plant, Equipment and Distribution

Raw materials and processing capacity

Technology – all aspects of IPR including trade secrets and corporate processes

People – trained and competent staff, aligned and mobile executive

Capability

Unique ability to utilize resources available for enhanced competitiveness

Financial

Investor relations

Capital raising prowess

Innovative use of financial structures

Branding

Create and grow brand(s)

Project Management

Ability to execute including proprietary processes for PM

7

Globally competitive firms (organisations) have both a resource base and a capability base which are competitive and readied for execution.

2.1 Global Competitiveness – Exercise

Example – Greenhouse

You are running a large greenhouse that produces tomatoes.

You have lots of land, a large greenhouse building and permits to grow tomatoes.

Your tomatoes are a variety that is proprietary and you can also create other varieties from that genetic stock because of your partnership with a lab.

You also have automated the greenhouse so that the labor costs are low and the risk of damage to the crops is very low.

You are a preferred provider to Costco and Superstore today.

Capability

For each segment, discuss the difference between resources and capabilities.

Resources are what you “have”

What are your resources?

Capabilities are what you are “good at doing”

What are you good at doing?

8

2.1 Global Competitiveness – Value Chain Considerations

What is a Value Chain?

9

Increasingly, value chains crisscross the globe.

Any of these activities can be done in NA or globally?

IT Infra

Human Resources

Logistics & Supply Chain

Finance

Raw Materials

R&D / Design

Manufacturing or Production

Packaging

Market-ing

Functional Activities

Core Activities

Where is most of the money made in this business?

Does this change in other countries?

Bain & Co. introduced the idea of value chain mapping and profit pools.

2.1 Global Competitiveness – Value Chain Considerations

Fully Integrated In House Value Chain

Outsource Value Chain

10

Increasingly, value chains crisscross the globe.

Any of these activities can be done in NA or globally?

IT Infra

Human Resources

Logistics & Supply Chain

Finance

Company Activities

Outsourced Activities

Raw Materials

R&D / Design

Manufacturing

Packaging

Market-ing

IT Infra

Human Resources

Logistics

Finance

Raw Materials

R&D / Design

Manufacturing

Packaging

Market-ing

IT Infra

Human Resources

Finance

Raw Materials

R&D / Design

Manufacturing

Packaging

Market-ingv

Supply Chain

Exxon Mobil

Apple

Yeezy – Adidas and Kanye

Logistics

Supply Chain

2.1 Global Competitiveness – Value Chain Example

Fully Integrated In House Value Chain

Company Profile

11

Hanky Panky Limited –

Look at breaking down the value chain and where the cash sits.

Design led

Wholesale history

Strong reliance on one supplier – little understanding of global quotas, tax and tariffs

Cuts and some sewing in-house

Wholesale is “outsourced customers”

DTC growing fast

International has never been a focus – distributors and agents

2.1 Global Competitiveness – Value Chain Example

12

2.1 Exercise – Value Chain

Tomato Industry

Seed Genetics (R&D)

Seed Distribution

Greenhouse Operations

Vegetable Marketing / Wholesale Distribution

Retail Farmer’s Market Store

Costco

Break into your [five] teams

Consider the tomato retail price of $4.99 per box of mini-tomatoes

Sketch the value chain back

Where do you think the most money is made? Cash resides? Why?

How would that change in other global markets? Pick an alternative market and compare

TWU – MBA 662: R. Ian Angell Oct. 2020

13

2.1 VRIO – A framework for thinking through global competitiveness.

VRIO Framework

14

Exploited (Exploitable)

Is the firm organized (or capable of being organized) to exploit the other three levers?

How can a firm be organized to develop and leverage the full potential of its resources and capabilities?

Paradoxically, it is both simple and complex. Apple’s appeal is simple but the combination of all these measures requires a consciously complex approach to sustaining advantage.

Imitable (Ease of Imitation / Replication)

If it is valuable and scarce, can competitors replicate what you have? Over what time frame?

It is incredibly important that the differentiation be clearly understood and articulated within the firm’s strategy and ethos – e.g.) GE management cadre / Harvard MBA – truly believed they are the best and so did everyone else

E.g.) shale oil in the US and Canada – unique combination of factors which make it incredibly hard to replicate elsewhere (but may not be valuable if prices stay low)

Rare

Is it valuable?

Is the rarity innate (scarcity) or erodible? E.g.) rare earths are innate but battery innovation will reduce premium and control

Can it be created and sustained? E.g.) new airplane design

Are the skills and people protectable? E.g.) Google coders – how to retain them, Tesla design and electrical engineers

Valuable

Does the firm, product, activity add value?

Where in the value chain is the value created? (Profit Pools – Bain Methodology)

Commoditization of the product or activity over time e.g.) patent positions

Or WORSE, value erosion e.g.) Transmission Grids, Department stores

2.1 VRIO – The benefits compound both the competitive advantage and, ultimately, returns.

VRIO Framework

15

2.1 Exercise 2 – VRIO

Tomato Industry

Seed Genetics (R&D)

Seed Distribution

Greenhouse Operations

Vegetable Marketing / Wholesale Distribution

Retail Farmer’s Market Store Farmer’s Market

Costco

Break into up to six teams

Apply VRIO to your segment?

Does it have extendable global competitiveness (using VRIO)?

Which of these segments has the most extendable competitive global advantage using VRIO?

Where would you rather play? Why?

Is that different than in the domestic context?

TWU – MBA 662: R. Ian Angell Oct. 2020

16

2.1 Porter Industry Competitiveness

Four Measures

Bargaining Power of Suppliers

Extent of suppliers ability to dictate price and terms?

Can they forward integrate?

Threat of Substitutes

How quickly and strongly can substitute products come into the market?

Be clear that substitutes are different than New Entrants

Bargaining Power of Buyers

How many and how strong are the buyers? Can they control the price and terms? Are certain aspects controlled by regulation, etc.?

Threat of New Entrants

How easily and quickly can competitors enter the market?

17

How does this change in a new global market?

Bargaining Power of Suppliers

Are suppliers protected or preferentially enabled (licenses, domestic production, etc.) – bad

Is there more competition? (good)

Threat of Substitutes

Is there anything different in this market that could change the industry product/service mix?

Bargaining Power of Buyers

Again, what changes in the buying structure in the new market?

Threat of New Entrants

Is there a more open or favorable market for new entrants in this new market?

2.1 Exercise – Porter

Tomato Industry

Seed Genetics (R&D)

Seed Distribution

Greenhouse Operations

Vegetable Marketing / Wholesale Distribution

Retail Farmer’s Market Store

Costco

Break into five teams

Think about the vegetable production business.

Are there any of the components where the industry rivalry may be less intense and, therefore, more attractive?

Pick a country and compare that to Canada. Is the competitive intensity greater or lesser?

TWU – MBA 662: R. Ian Angell Oct. 2020

18

Team Exercise – Comparing Competitiveness Tools

For your company,

Use ALL FOUR competitive analytical tools to examine your business

Prepare a summary of the competitiveness of your business

So What?

What does that mean or imply about your ability to grow internationally?

What are the gaps and opportunities? How would you address them?

What would be the implementation steps you would take to fill the gaps or address opportunities?

Prepare a slide deck.

One summary slide

Four competitive analysis slides

One implications slide

One implementation slide

Prepare to present

Presentation tomorrow morning.

10 marks – will adjust from final project.

Remember the pyramid thinking structure

Use good ppt practices

TWU – MBA 662: R. Ian Angell Oct. 2020

19

2.2 International Trade Fundamentals

Classical Trade Theories

Mercantilism

Trade is good and generates foreign currency…

…but self reliance is better as it preserves reserves

Absolute Advantage

Nations are endowed with resources and have natural advantages

Comparative Advantage

Nations are relatively better off to trade even if they are not the “best” in the world in a given resource or activity

Encourages optimization – produce as much of you can of that which you are best at and then produce alternatives

What is the country endowed with? People, manufacturing capacity, PhD’s, etc.

Modern Trade Theories

Product Life Cycle

Creation and innovation is an endowment (New Products)

Demand is satiated in home country (Mature Product)

As a product commoditizes, production shifts elsewhere, as does demand (Standard Product)

E.g.) clothes washing machines

Does this still work as a construct?

Basic Android phones

Trade in used clothing and vintage market development

Strategic Trade

Industrial policy actively encourages investment in innovation and the control of the “next” segment

Governments are notoriously bad a predicting winners and losers and which segments will emerge

National Competitive Advantage

See next page

20

2.2 International Trade Fundamentals (cont’d)

National Competitive Advantage

Factor Conditions – Endowments

Basic – Natural Resources, Unskilled Labor

Advanced – Specialist Education, Unique Capital structures (VC)

Demand Conditions

Local demand drives innovation; nurturing and growing demanding customers is GOOD

Firm Structure and Rivalry

Internal competitiveness creates innovation, drives down costs and creates efficiency

Protection, licenses and monopolies do not help

Related and Supporting Industries

Multiple options along the supply chain; part of the innovation

Government

Contrary to popular belief, regulation and related pressures HELP drive innovation

Centres of Excellence, Consolidation of certain services (testing, science centers, labs, infrastructure, etc.)

21

Source: Competitive Advantage of Nations – Michael Porter

2.2 Porter National Competitiveness – Example

National Competitive Advantage – Dairy Sector

Factor Conditions – Endowments

Low-cost land and competitive feed costs

Demand Conditions

Small and complacent demand market

Emphasis on minimum health and quality

Firm Structure and Rivalry

Limited competition, regional monopolies

Farm sector operates on quotas limiting supply but maintaining viability of the farm

Related and Supporting Industries

Allied sector have few innovative customers (farms) to supply to

Government

Strong commitment to managed supply

22

Source: Competitive Advantage of Nations – Michael Porter

National Competitive Advantage – Dairy Sector

Factor Conditions – Endowments

Potential in cold climates and related facility intensive geographies

Demand Conditions

Inabiity to understand the benefits of scale

Struggle with more sophisticated/diverse customer base – ie.) cheeses, etc.

Firm Structure and Rivalry

Again, limited competitiveness

May be able to play in global consolidation plays from strong cash/balance sheet positions

Related and Supporting Industries

Few innovations that can be used to “tag along” globally

Government

Most global governments are not protecting via supply management

2.2 Investment and Going Global

23

Key Concepts – National Level

Foreign Direct Investment- brings in cash to a country/region

Vertical (Upstream, downstream) and Horizontal Investment (adjacent markets – segments or geographies. Typically less attractive.)

Trade Surplus / Deficit (Income Statement)

Investment Surplus / Deficit (Balance Sheet)

Advantages of Investment

Ownership

Location

Internalization

Licensing and Support

2.3 Becoming International – Strategic Assessment and Options

24

How to assess whether and how to go global?

Basics apply to any growth or expansion strategy?

Information is scarce.

Key factors are new to the management team (and you).

Domestic or regional markets are almost always unknown and misunderstood.

This gets us to yes/no and, broadly as to how

(capital exposed or not?)

Source: International Management, Helen Deresky, p. 250

2.3 Becoming International – Entry Modes

25

A Vast Array of Options

Entry can be mind-boggling to mature businesses, let alone start-ups or domestic firms

Each has trade-offs and risks

* BOOT – Build, Own, Operate and Transfer (Can be any combination almost)

*

Offsets and Countertrade

2.3 Becoming International – Entry Modes

26

*

Offsets and Countertrade

Kaodim Interview – Fui Yu-Choong, Founder of Kaodim, Lawyer and Start-Up Ecosystem Enthusiast.

27

Global, Regional and Local Market Contexts for Consumer Start-Ups.

Tell us a bit about yourself and your career track?

Tell us about Kaodim. Where did the idea come from? What is the unmet need that you are serving?

Where does the company operate today? Where did you start?

Do you think this is an ubiquitous global offering or regional offering or does it vary by country or by other segmentation?

As you look at growing Kaodim, how do you assess countries or regions or new segments to enter?

What are your observations regarding expansion success factors? Put another way, what would you have done differently if you knew then what you know now?

Tell us about financing start-ups in SE Asia. Do you think this varies differently in SEA or is it largely similar to anywhere globally?

2.4 International Management Topics – Competition and Collusion

28

Topics

Marketing Coordination – 5Cs

Competition – unfettered competition

Coordination – loose relationships, cooperate where helpful

Collusion – formal or informal but ongoing understandings

Cartels or Marketing Agencies – Canpotex experience

Communications – use of press, industry forums, intermediaries, banks, etc. to send a message

Dynamics of Competition

Large players vs Small Players

High margin vs Low Margin

Home country advantage vs New-Comer

Marginal Cost Pricing vs Full Cycle Pricing

Insurgency

State Resources and SOEs

Infrastructure

Capital Structures and Financing

Collaboration

Collaboration enables adaptation which is consistent with nature’s models of competition

Tesla (Musk’s open-source mentality)

2.5 Making Alliances Work

29

A Continuum

Relationships typically evolve over time (decades)

Power dynamics (including external factors) often dictate decisions

Transactional vs Relational

Hybrids

Hybrids

2.5 Alliance Evolution – Case Study

30

Canadian Oil Company and Japanese Trading House

Talisman Confirms PNG Strategy Acquiring Rift Oil and Others

Pandora field was “stranded” – sell or grow

Numerous transactions lined up like dominoes

Talisman developed a strategic plan (mid-scale export LNG) and required partners to execute plan

Global partnership search short-listed a few players – Mitsubishi selected

3 years and $280 million +++ received

Progress made swiftly thereafter

MC to market LNG, JV structure over-arching including secondees, working and steering committees and deadlock voting procedures

Ultimately, unsuccessful in exploration to progress and Mitsubishi and Talisman (Repsol) sold

2.6 Strategy in the International Context

How does the strategy process vary from domestic business to international?

What are the different options for strategy to underpin international growth?

What are the advantages and disadvantages of these various options?

What are the organisation structures which are more “naturally” aligned with the strategic internationalisation planning constructs?

31

2.6 Global growth strategy – inherently more complex

32

Degrees of complexity

Sheer numbers of regions and markets to assess

Tendency to simplify is greatest risk – e.g.) GDP per capital, size of market, language, etc.

In most cases, single product/service analyses is insufficient

Intelligence gathering, even with internet, is mammoth

More steps…

…more risks

Source: International Management, Helen Deresky, p. 248. 245

Growth Strategies

33

Home Replication Strategy

Most standard place to start

Exports and / or agents

Hard to unravel

Global Standardization of Products/Services

Works well for ubiquitous ideas and where segments or niches are large enough to justify a global footprint

Lends itself well to centres of excellence or specialities

Consistent with web and social media sales – @tinydogpaintings

Localization – or multi-local

Nothing wrong with this

Brand-driven but tailored for taste, practice, religion, etc.

E.g.) MacDonalds

Transnational Strategy – “best of all worlds”

Ubiquity around processes, functions and economies of scale

Key products are global for technological or proprietary reasons

Localization around customer-centricity and regulatory requirements

Typically achievable among only the largest firms

Considerations – Advantages and Disadvantages

34

2.7 Strategy and Structure Considerations

35

International Division

Separate focus for emerging international activities

Global Product or Service Structure

Supports global segments with limited differentiation locally

Kotter view of the world

Geographic or Regional Structure

Multi-local structure views every region as different

Global Matrix – “best of all worlds”

Matrix structures with attendant complexity

Exploring and Understanding the importance of structure – “The International Division”

36

Structure Benefits and Constraints – International Division Structure

Mysterious “rest of world” focus, often leads to out-of-sight, out-of-mind mentality which fosters neglect, maverick behaviours, deals that are hard to get out of, etc.

Kindergarten organisation structure – good for nascent or immaterial international segments

International division managers often rotate through this to “tick-the-box” on career development which can lead to them “playing to HQ” as objectives are often not clear or important

International customers often feel inferior leading to limited success in overseas markets (chicken and egg challenge)

Overseas staff and suppliers/partners feel like second-class citizens

Exploring and Understanding the importance of structure – “Geographic Organisation”

37

Structure Benefits and Constraints – Geographic Organisation Structure

Creates adequate focus on the importance of international markets

Creates internal competition for funds, people, product, etc. and resultant “fiefdoms” and over-reliance on regional chiefs

Allows for regional (and national) differentiation

Assumes heterogeneity among countries and / or segments in each region – major flaw

Exploring and Understanding the importance of structure – “Global Product Structure”

38

Structure Benefits and Constraints – Global Product Structure

Very common in technical companies where there is little/no commonality across divisions

Local or regional cooperation is limited

Customers and Distribution in countries often send confusing messages impacting branding

Margin and market share

Customer friendliness and positioning

Regulatory and other related postures

Ascendant structure even amongst global firms

Importance of understanding the “segment”

Very strong amongst conglomerate or mutli-product businesses like GE and Honeywell

Exploring and Understanding the importance of structure – “The Matrix Structure”

39

Structure Benefits and Constraints – International Division Structure

Matrix structures are inherently complex

Necessity to have strong “ligaments” (processes or principles)to reinforce the “bones” (matrix)

Criticality elements

Transfer pricing

Rules of engagement and behaviours

Common language and alignment around strategy and objectives

Follow the money – capital allocation, profitability/cash flow and bonuses

E.g. ) Schlumberger

Management by Objectives Culture

Material bonuses associated with both dimensions of the matrix

Competitiveness and Structure Assignment

Part 2 In-Class or Take-Home Assignment – Use the Coe’s Mexico Case Study to answer.

Select 1 of the first FOUR of the following questions/areas of enquiry and prepare a commentary using and EMAIL format. And, answer #5.

Assume that your boss has asked you to assess the competitiveness of Coe’s and suggest the corporate organizational structure which may be best. (300 words max.)

Resources vs Capabilities

What are the resources Coe’s may use? • What are their capabilities? • How can they best exploit both?

Value Chain

Sketch out the international value chain for Coe’s. Summarize where the “cash” resides. What can we learn?

VRIO

Do a VRIO table and summary note for Coe’s. What can we learn from there VRIO positioning?

Porter’s Competitive Analysis • Look at Coe’s through a Porter Competitive Strategy lens? Explain.

Corporate/Organisation Structure

Which organisation structure do you think works best for Coe’s as they expand? Why ?

TWU – MBA 662: R. Ian Angell Oct. 2020

40

Select One

Must Do

image4.png

image5.jpeg

image6.jpeg

image7.png

image8.png

image9.png

image10.png

image11.png

image12.png

image13.png

image14.png

image15.png

image16.png

image17.png

image18.png

image19.png

image20.png

image21.png

image22.png

image23.png

image24.png

image25.png

image26.png

image27.png

image28.png

image29.png

image30.png

image31.png

image1.jpeg

error: Content is protected !!