Operations Strategy In A Global Environment
World Trade Organization (WTO)
international organization that promotes world trade by lowering barriers to the free flow of goods across borders (reduced tariffs from 40% in 1940 to 3% today)
Strategy
organization's action plan to achieve the mission
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
phase out all trade and tariff barriers among Canada, Mexico, an the U.S.
Core Competencies
set of unique skills, talents, and capabilities that a firm does at a world-class level
Global Strategy
strategy in which decisions are centralized with headquarters coordinating the organization to seek standardization and learning between plants/facilities
Mission
the purpose or rationale for an organization's existence
Resources View
thinking in terms of the financial, physical, human, and technological resources available and ensuring that the potential strategy is compatible with those resources to achieve competitive advantage
Outsourcing
transferring activities that have traditionally been internal to external suppliers
International Strategy
uses exports and licenses to penetrate the global arena
Key Success Factors (KSF's)
activities that are necessary for a firm to achieve its goals; often they are extremely important to helping a company survive
Five Forces Model
analyzing potential competing forces as immediate rivals, potential entrants, customers, suppliers, and substitute products
International Business
any firm that engages in international trade or investment
Differentiation
going beyond both physical characteristics and service attributes to encompass everything about the product or service that influences the value that the customers derive from it
Multidomestic Strategy
has decentralized authority with substantial autonomy at each business
Value-Chain Analysis
identify activities that represent strengths, or potential strengths and may be opportunities for developing competitive advantage
Theory of Comparative Advantage
if an external provider regardless of location, can perform activities more productively than the purchasing firm, the external provider should do the work
Competitive Advantage
implies the creation of a system that has a unique advantage over competitors
Response
including the entire range of values related to timely product development and delivery, as well as reliable scheduling and flexible performance
Experience Differentiation
engage the customer to use people's five senses so they become immersed, or even an active participant in the product
Transnational Strategy
exploits the economies of scale and learning as well as pressure for responsiveness, by recognizing that core competence does not reside in just the "home" country but can exist anywhere in the organization
Multinational Corporation (MNC)
firm with extensive international business involvement
SWOT Analysis
formal review of internal strengths and weaknesses and external opportunities and threats
Maquiladoras
free trade zones that allow manufacturers to cut their costs to cut costs by paying only on the value added by mexican workers
Advantages of Outsourcing
1. Cost Savings 2. Gaining outside expertise 3. Improving operations and service 4. Maintaining a focus on core competencies 5. Accessing outside technology
How Firms Achieve Their Mission
1. Differentiation 2. Cost Leadership 3. Response
Reasons Domestic Business Operations decide to change to some form of international operation
1. Improve the supply chain 2. Reduce costs (labor, taxes, tariffs, etc.) 3. Improve Operations 4. Understand Markets 5. Improve products 6. Attract and retain global talent
Risks of Outsourcing
1. Increased logistics and inventory costs 2. Loss of control (quality, delivery, etc.) 3. Potential creation of future competition 4. Negative impact on employees 5. Risks may not manifest themselves for years
European Union (EU)
27 member states that reduce trade barriers among all nations through standardization and a common currency (euro)...placing lot of restrictions on products sold
International Operations Strategies
Transnational: move material across national boundaries, economies of scale, cross cultural learning (High cost, Low Local Responsiveness) International: import/export or license existing product, (Low on Both) Multidomestic: use existing domestic model globally, franchise, joint ventures, subsidiaries (Low Cost reduction, High Local Responsiveness)
Activity Map
a graph that links competitive advantage, key success factors, and supporting activities
Low-Cost Leadership
achieving maximum value as defined (perceived) by your customer