CIA pt. 3
Firm Orientations
1) product-centered firms 2) competitor-centered firms mainly base moves on competitors' actions and reactions 3) customer-centered firms focus on customer developments and delivering value to customers 4) market-centered firms watch both customers and competitors.
Boston Consulting Group's model for portfolio strategy
1. Business Growth Rate: maturity/attractiveness of the market and relative need for cash to finance expansion 2. Market Share
Elements of Cultural Intelligence
1. Cognitive understanding 2. Emotional 3. Physical (tone, gestures, behavior)
Operations Strategies
1. Cost Strategy - Low-cost, undifferentiated, large market 2. Quality Strategy - product and process 3. Delivery Strategy 4. Flexibility Strategy - offer many products, ability to shift product lines rapidly 5. Service Strategy
two-factor theory of motivation
1. Dissatisfiers - absence leads to diminished performance 2. Satisfiers - addition/availability motivates employees
Balanced Scorecard
1. Financial Performance 2. Customer Service 3. Internal Business Processes 4. Learning and growth
Free trade and globalization advantages
1. Lower prices 2. Expand markets and employment 3. Increase profts
Dimensions of Cultural Differences
1. Power distance 2. Individualism-collectivism 3. Masculinity vs Femininity 4. Uncertainty Avoidance 5. Long-term orientation
Classical Perspective of Management
1. Scientific Management - emphasizes production efficiencies 2. Bureaucratic - Efficient military principals 3. Administrative Principles
Competitive Advantage Aspects
1. Target specific customers 2. Take advantage of core competencies 3. Managers think synergistically 4. Provide value to customers
How to minimize risks of expanding into foreign markets and maximize growth potential:
1. Understand how diverse markets connect and capitalize on similarities 2. Build awareness of the product and create sources of brand equity 3. Establish marketing infrastructure 4. Integrate marketing communications 5. Create branding partnerships 6. Determine ratio of standardization and customization 7. Balance global and local control
Theory X and Theory Y
A motivation theory that suggests that management attitudes toward workers fall into two opposing categories based on management assumptions about worker capabilities and values. Autocratic vs permissive management
Multilocal strategy
A strategy in which the organizations in host countries are subsidiaries with their own control of operations.
high context communication
A style of communication in which much of the information is contained in the contexts and nonverbal cues rather than expressed explicitly in words.
low context communication
A style of communication in which much of the information is conveyed in words rather than in nonverbal cues and contexts.
job enlargement (horizontal loading)
A technique to relieve monotony and boredom that involves assigning workers additional tasks at the same level of responsibility to increase the number of tasks they have to perform.
Risks of cost leadership
Advances in technology, imitation by competitors, failure to consider product/marketing changes
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
Agreement that created a free-trade area among the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
Polycentric MNC
An MNC that places local nationals in key positions and allows these managers to appoint and develop their own people.
Ethnocentric MNC
An MNC that stresses nationalism and often puts home-office people in charge of key international management positions
Serving the Bottom of the Pyramid
An approach for multinationals to do good Corporations can alleviate problems and make large profits by selling to the world's poor There are more than 4 billion people at the lowest level of the economic pyramid Many companies are adopting BOP strategies
Management by means (MBM)
An approach that focuses people on the methods and processes used to attain results, rather than on the results themselves.
job enrichment (vertical loading)
Any effort that makes an employee's job more rewarding or satisfying by adding more meaningful tasks and duties. Increasing complexity, challenge, and opportunities
Commitment to a group depends on
Attractiveness (view from outside) and Cohesiveness (members adhere to group and unite against outside pressures)
Risks of Cost Focus Strategy
Competitors better at serving their niches, changes in narrow market
Benefits of a Greenfield Venture
Complete control of every aspect of the venture from the beginning and potentially high profits
Regional Strategy
Create regional products and a regional value chain
Strategic control at the business-operating-system level
Customer satisfaction and flexibility (external and internal)
Division of Work (Specialization)
Dividing work into components and specialized tasks to improve efficiency and output
Mission statement
Explain an organization's purpose, values, and competitive scopes
Licensing
Gives firms in foreign countries the right to produce or market products or services within a geographical area for a fee
Star business
High MS, high BGR - strong competitors in high growth market. profitable with large amounts of cash
Cash Cow business
High MS, low BGR - strong competitor; cash generator. high profit margins and economies of scale (hold)
Risks of Differentiation Strategy
Imitation by competitors, change in consumer taste, decrease in brand loyalty
Humanistic Perspective
Individual, social, and group needs and behaviors
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
International treaty that committed signatories to lowering barriers to the free flow of goods across national borders and led to the WTO
Economic Integration
Joining of markets from 2 + countries into a free-trade zone
Management Complacency
Lack of innovation, faulty perception, failure to observe, not focusing on daily objectives
Operations Strategy
Long-term plan for using resources to reach strategic objectives
Question Mark business
Low MS, high BGR - need cash infusion; become a star or dog depending on MS change (build)
Dog business
Low market share, low BGR - candidate for disposal (divest)
Strategic control at the business-unit level
Performance in the marketplace (external) Financial results (internal)
Strategic control at the departmental or work-center level
Quality and delivery (external) Cycle time and waste (internal)
Favorable effects of informal groups
Reduce tension, encourage production, improve coordination, reduce supervision, assistance in problem solving, faster channel of communication
Cost Synergy
Savings from combinations of common-base operations, resources, and facilities
Operational goals
Set by lower managers and supervisors: short-term, detailed, and measurable
Tactical plans compared to strategic
Shorter-term and more detailed
Performance improves when goals are:
Specific, difficult, and accepted by employees
Functions of norms
Survival of group Defined role Self-image Reinforce values and common identity
Nonconformance costs
The combination of internal failure and external failure costs; the costs incurred when a product is defective and therefore does not conform to its intended design.
Conformance costs
The combination of prevention and appraisal costs; the costs incurred to make sure a product or service is not defective and therefore conforms to its intended design
Sector, industry, segment of Transportation
Transportation Sector Automobile Industry Sedan Segment
Scalar Chain
a chain of authority extends from the top to the bottom of the organization and should include every employee
Greenfield Venture
a foreign subsidiary that the owning organization has built from scratch
formal work group
a group established by management to help the organization achieve its goals
Unity of command
a management principle that workers should report to just one boss
World Trade Organization (WTO)
a permanent global institution to promote international trade and to settle international trade disputes
Groupshift
a phenomenon in which the initial positions of individual group members become exaggerated because of the interactions of the group
Growth-share matrix
a portfolio-planning method that evaluates a company's SBUs in terms of market growth rate and relative market share
Management by Objectives (MBO)
a process of setting mutually agreed upon goals and using those goals to evaluate employee performance
leading indicators
a set of key economic variables that economists use to predict future trends in a business cycle
Strategic Business Unit
a subgroup of a single business or collection of related businesses within the larger organization. Separate planning is possible and it has its own competitors.
Management defined
achieving organizational goals effectively and efficiently by planning, organizing, leading, and controlling
multinational/transnational corporations
an organization that owns or controls productions of goods or services in one or more countries other than the home country. Product is customized for each market
ERG Theory
assumes that three basic needs influence behavior: 1. existence - physical needs 2. relatedness - satisfying relationships 3. growth - needs for development
Glocal strategy
attends to differences in local markets but also carries out some activities on a global basis
Posturing
behave in a way that is intended to impress or mislead others to gain superiority
Positive political behaviors
coalition building, networking, seeking mentors
Key element of crisis prevention
creating strong relationships with stakeholders
Critical Success Factors
crucial steps companies perform to achieve their goals and objectives and implement their strategies
lagging indicators
indicators that seem to lag behind changes in overall business activity (output and financial measures)
Technological Synergy
involves transferring technology from one application to another, thus opening up new markets.
Cost Focus Strategy
keep the costs of a product below those of competitors and to target a narrow market
cost leadership strategy
keep the costs, and hence prices, of a product or service below those of competitors and to target a wide market
Boundary Spanning
links to and coordinates the organization with key elements in the external environment
Vicarious Learning (Observational Learning)
occurs when an individual sees others perform certain behaviors and get rewarded for them
Focused Differentiation
offer products that are of unique and superior value compared to those of competitors and to target a narrow market
Leadership emphasizes
people in the organization
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
physiological, safety, love/belonging, esteem, self-actualization
social reinforcement
praise, attention, approval, and/or affection from others
Market Synergy
products or services have positive complementary effects
Political risk
risk of economic loss from the politically motivated actions of governments
Negative political behaviors
sabotage, threats, taking credit for others' work
Global strategy
selling the same standardized product and using the same basic marketing approach in each national market
Disadvantages of Group Decision Making
social pressure, few people dominate, goal displacement, groupthink
Management emphasizes ___________________
stability, reliability, efficiency
Acquired Needs Theory
states that three needs - achievement, affiliation, and power - are major motives determining people's behavior in the workplace
contingency perspective
suggests that appropriate managerial behavior in a given situation depends on, or is contingent on, unique elements in a given situation
Leadership defined
the ability to influence a group toward the achievement of a vision or set of goals
Span of control
the optimal number of subordinates a manager supervises or should supervise. Recent trend - increased span and decreased hierarchy (flatter org chart)
Avoidance Learning (Negative Reinforcement)
the removal of an unpleasant consequence following a desired behavior
unity of direction
the singleness of purpose that makes possible the creation of one plan of action to guide managers and workers as they use organizational resources
Expectancy Theory
the theory that people will be motivated to the extent to which they believe that their efforts will lead to good performance, that good performance will be rewarded, and that they will be offered attractive rewards
Porter's Five Forces
threat of entry, threat of substitute, supplier power, buyer power, and competitive rivalry
The Edisonian approach
to improving creativity is a trial-and-error method. It typically should not be applied unless other approaches have been unsuccessful.
Differentiation Strategy
to offer products or services that are of unique and superior value compared with those of competitors but to target a wide market
geocentric companies
truly world oriented and favor no specific country
Rational Persuasion (Influence Tactic)
trying to convince someone with reason, logic, or facts
International strategy
value chain controlled and marketed in org's home country; products are sold globally
Management Synergy
when a management team is more productive because its members have complementary rather than identical skills. Also involves knowledge transfer