Chapter 11: International Strategy and Organization
International area structure
Organizational structure that organizes a company's entire global operations into countries or geographic regions.
Global strategy
Offering the same products using the same marketing strategy in all national markets.
Global product structure
Organizational structure that divides worldwide operations according to a company's products areas.
Multinational (multidomestic) strategy
Adapting products and their marketing strategies in each national market to suit local preferences.
Stakeholders
All parties, ranging from suppliers and employees to stockholders and consumers, who are affected by a company's activities.
Chains of command
Lines of authority that run from top management to individual employees and that specify internal reporting relationships.
International division structure
Organizational structure that separates domestic from international business activities by creating a separate international division with its own manager.
Global matrix structure
Organizational structure that splits the chain of command between product and area divisions.
Value-chain analysis
Process of dividing a company's activities into primary and support activities and identifying those that create value for customers.
Planning
Process of identifying and selecting an organization's objectives and deciding how the organization will achieve those objectives.
Strategy
Set of planned actions taken by managers to help a company meet its objectives.
Core competency
Special ability of a company that competitors find extremely difficult impossible to equal.
Stability strategy
Strategy designed to guard against change and used by corporations to avoid either growth or retrenchment.
Growth strategy
Strategy designed to increase the scale (size of activities) or scope (kinds of activities) of a corporation's operations.
Combination strategy
Strategy designed to mix growth, retrenchment, and stability strategies across a corporation's business units.
Retrenchment strategy
Strategy designed to reduce the scale or scope of a corporation's businesses.
Differentiation strategy
Strategy in which a company designs its products to be perceived as unique by buyers throughout its industry.
Low-cost leadership strategy
Strategy in which a company exploits economies of scale to have the lowest cost structure of any competitor in its industry.
Focus strategy
Strategy in which a company focuses on serving the needs of a narrowly defined market segment by being the low-cost leader, by differentiating its product or both.
Cross-functional team
Team composed of employees who work at a similar levels in different functional departments.
Self-managed team
Team in which the employees from a single department take on the responsibilities of their former supervisors.
Global team
Team of top managers from both headquarters and international subsidiaries who meet to develop solutions to company-wide problems.
Organizational structure
Way in which a company divides its activities among separate units and coordinates activities among those units.
Mission Statement
Written statement of why a company exists and what it plans to accomplish.