Chapter 8 strategic mgmt byles TRUE/FALSE
A U.S. manufacturer of pigments for household paint that exports about 40 percent of its production to European markets will find its sales will be harmed by a weak dollar.
False
A global strategy is an international strategy through which the firm offers standardized products across country markets, with competitive strategy being dictated by offices within the host markets served
False
A multidomestic strategy is an international strategy in which a firm's home office determines the strategies business units are to use in each region.
False
Although licensing is the least costly method to enter a foreign market, its disadvantages include high costs of transportation and low control over the marketing and distribution of goods.
False
Because of the lack of protection of intellectual property in some foreign countries, licensing arrangements are one of the best ways for a firm to protect its technology from being appropriated by potential competitors
False
Because there are still several industrial and consumer markets in which only domestic firms compete, many firms do not have to be able to compete internationally.
False
Coca Cola and PepsiCo are examples of firms that have found it unnecessary to aggressively pursue international strategies because of extensive growth opportunities available in the U.S. market.
False
Establishing a wholly-owned subsidiary provides the quickest access to a new market
False
Even if effectively implemented, the transnational strategy often produces lower performance than does the implementation of either the multidomestic or global strategies.
False
Having substantial supplies of critical basic natural resources is a necessary condition for a country to support businesses that can successfully compete in international markets
False
Location advantages are influenced by costs of production, access to natural resources and critical supplies, as well as the needs of customers, but not culture.
False
Research suggests that wholly owned subsidiaries and expatriate staff are inappropriate for service industries because those industries require close contact with customers, high levels of professional skills, specialized know- how, and customization.
False
South Korea's success in international markets is primarily a result of its abundant natural resources
False
Strategic alliances tend to increase the risk associated with international expansion for the U.S. partner because of the greater dependence on the foreign firm
False
The "liability of foreignness" will have a greater negative impact on a firm using a multidomestic strategy than on a firm using a global strategy.
False
The chief risks in the international environment are political and cultural.
False
The three corporate-level international strategies are cost leadership, differentiation, and focus.
False
When the country risk is high, firms prefer to enter with a greenfield investment rather than a joint venture
False
While there are multiple means of entering new international markets, firms should use one method consistently with all of its various products and across its different markets in order to reduce administrative complexity
False
A company that chooses a truly global corporate-level strategy assumes that the liability of foreignness will be minimal.
True
A firm based in a country with a national competitive advantage is not guaranteed success as it implements its chosen international business-level strategy. Instead, the actual strategic choices managers make may be the most compelling reasons for success or failure.
True
A major advantage of multidomestic strategies is the ability to customize for the specific market, although this sacrifices economies of scale.
True
A major incentive for the use of international strategy by French-based Carrefour Group is the potential for large demand for goods and services from emerging markets such as China and India.
True
A multidomestic strategy is an international strategy in which strategic and operating decisions are decentralized to the strategic business units in individual or regions
True
A reason that firms use international strategies is to secure needed resources, especially minerals and energy
True
A transnational strategy is an international strategy in which the firm seeks to achieve both global efficiency and local responsiveness.
True
A transnational strategy is difficult to use because of its conflicting goals
True
Acquisitions, greenfield ventures, and sometimes joint ventures are appropriate when firms want to establish a strong presence in an international market.
True
After a firm decides to compete internationally, it must select its strategy and choose a mode of entry into international markets.
True
Although leaders in Russia have tried to reassure potential investors about their property rights, political risks in the form of weak laws and commonplace government corruption make firms leery of investing in Russia.
True
An increase in the value of the U.S. dollar is an example of an economic risk in that it can reduce the value of U.S. multinational firms' international assets and earnings in other countries
True
As an indication of the importance of economies of scale, Ford Motor Company runs a single global business developing cars and trucks that can be built and sold through the world
True
Both the size and the nature of a country's domestic demand for a particular industry's good or service are important in Porter's determinants of national advantage
True
By choosing a region where markets are more similar, the firm may be able to better understand those markets and cater to their needs, but also achieve economies through sharing of resources.
True
Cultural differences affect location advantages in that business transactions are less difficult for a firm to complete when there is a strong match among the cultures with which the firm is involved.
True
Evidence suggests that, in general, using an international cost leadership strategy when exporting to developed countries has the most positive effect on firm performance while using an international differentiation strategy with larger scale when exporting to emerging economies leads to the greatest amounts of success.
True
Export, licensing, and the strategic alliance entry modes are all appropriate for early market development
True
Export, licensing, and the strategic alliance entry modes are also appropriate when firms want to establish a strong presence in an international market.
True
Exporting and licensing are the most appropriate ways for smaller firms to first enter international markets
True
Fluctuation in the value of different currencies is a major economic risk associated with international diversification
True
Four types of distances are associated with the liability of foreignness: cultural, administrative, geographic, and economic.
True
In place of relatively stable and predictable domestic markets, firms across the globe find that they are competing in relatively unstable and unpredictable global markets.
True
In some industries, technology drives globalization because the economies of scale necessary to reduce costs cannot be met by competing in domestic markets alone
True
International associations such as the European Union, the Organization of American States, and the North American Free Trade Association encourage regionalization of competition rather than globalization.
True
International diversification can help to reduce a firm's overall risk through the stabilization of returns
True
International diversification is a strategy through which a firm expands the sale of its goods and services across borders of global regions and countries into a potentially large number of geographic locations of markets. Instead of entering one or a few markets, international diversification means that the firm enters multiple markets.
True
Italy has become the leader in the shoe industry because of related and supporting industries such as a well- established leather-processing industry that provides the leather needed to construct shoes and related products.
True
Michael Porter's Determinants of National Advantage describe factors associated with the firm's domestic environment that contribute to its dominance in a particular global industry
True
Multinational firms have many opportunities to learn from their experiences in international markets, but they must have a strong R&D system to absorb the knowledge
True
One reason why firms pursue international opportunities is to extend the product's life cycle
True
Research has shown that, as international diversification increases, firms' returns decrease initially but then increase quickly as firms learn to manage international expansion.
True
Research suggests that the performance of the global strategy is enhanced if it deploys in areas where regional integration across countries is occurring.
True
Rivals Airbus and Boeing have multiple manufacturing facilities and outsource activities partly for the purpose of developing economies of scale as a source of being able to create value for customers.
True
Some of the costs incurred by firms pursuing international diversification may derive from higher coordination expenses, trade barriers, and lack of familiarity with local cultures.
True
The "liability of foreignness" means that many firms need to focus more on local adaptation or risk problems such as the Walt Disney Company faced opening its theme park in France
True
The "regionalization" environmental trend means that firms can focus on a region (customization) but also have some standardization or sharing within the region.
True
The amount of diversification in a firm's international operations that can be managed varies from company to company and is affected by manager's abilities to deal with ambiguity and complexity.
True
The firm using a global strategy seeks to develop economies of scale as it produces the same or virtually the same products for distribution to customers throughout the world who are assumed to have similar needs.
True
The global strategy offers greater opportunities to take innovations developed at the corporate level or in one market and apply them to other markets.
True
The greenfield venture option is useful when control of proprietary technology is important in an international expansion.
True
The growing number of global competitors heightens the requirements to keep costs down and there is the desire for more specialized products to meet customer needs. These two pressures make transnational strategies increasingly necessary.
True
The high cost of transportation, expense of tariffs, and loss of control are three disadvantages of exporting
True
The three basic benefits of international strategies are 1) increased market size; 2) increased economies of scale and learning; and 3) development of competitive advantages through location
True
When a firm initially pursues an international business-level strategy, the resources and capabilities established in the home country frequently allow the firm to pursue the strategy into markets located in other countries.
True