ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGNS FOR INTERNATIONAL OPERATIONS
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Transcript ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGNS FOR INTERNATIONAL OPERATIONS
ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN
How organizations structure
subunits and coordination and
control mechanisms to achieve
their strategic goals.
BASIC QUESTIONS OF
ORGANIZATION DESIGN
(1) How to divide work among the
organization's subunits?
(2) How to coordinate and control
the efforts of the units created?
EX 8.1 FUNCTIONAL
STRUCTURE
Headquarters
Research &
Development
Production
Marketing
Accounting &
Finance
THE FUNCTIONAL
STRUCTURE WORKS BEST
When organization has:
Few
products
Few locations
Few types of customers
A stable environment
Routine technology
PRODUCT AND GEOGRAPHIC
STRUCTURES
Usually
less efficient than the
functional organization
Allow a company to serve
customer needs that vary by
region or product
EX 8.2 PRODUCT STRUCTURE
HQ
Product
Group A
Product
Group B
Product
Group C
Product
Group A
R&D
R&D
R&D
R&D
Mft
Mft
Mft
Mft
Marketing
Marketing
Marketing
Marketing
Acct &
Finance
Acct &
Finance
Acct &
Finance
Acct &
Finance
EX 8.3 GEOGRAPHIC STRUCTURE
Headquarters
North
Area
South
Area
East Area
West Area
Manufacturing
Manufacturing
Manufacturing
Manufacturing
Marketing
Marketing
Marketing
Marketing
Acct. &
Finance
R&D
Acct. &
Finance
R&D
Acct. &
Finance
R&D
Acct. &
Finance
R&D
WHEN?
Product
or an area sufficiently
unique to require focused
functional efforts on one type of
product or service
PRACTICALITIES
Organizations
mix structures to
best implement strategies
Mixed form organizations called
hybrid structures
ORGANIZATIONAL
STRUCTURES FOR
INTERNATIONAL STRATEGIES
EXPORT DEPARTMENT
Created
when:
– Exports become significant
– A company wishes greater
control over export operations
Deals with international sales of
all products
EX 8.4 AN EXPORT DEPARTMENT
Headquarters
R&D
Production
Marketing
Export
Department
Overseas
Sales Force
Accounting
& Finance
INTERNATIONAL DIVISION
Usual
step after export
department
Deals with all products
Manages overseas sales force
and manufacturing sites
EX 8.5 INTERNATIONAL DIVISION
Staff w ith Country or
Region Expertise
Domestic
Division Product A
Headquarters
Domestic
Division Product B
Domestic
Division Product C
Domestic
Division Product D
International
Division All Products
Foreign SubsidiariesEurope
Foreign SubsidiariesJapan
Foreign SubsidiariesSales in Asia
PRESSURES TO ABANDON
THE INTERNATIONAL
DIVISION
Diverse products too complex
Not close enough to local
markets
Cannot take advantage of global
economies of scale or global
sources of knowledge
TWO SOLUTIONS
Worldwide
Geographic
Structure
Worldwide Product Structure
A WORLDWIDE GEOGRAPHIC
STRUCTURE
Implements
a multilocal or
regional strategy
Country-level divisions
Separate divisions for large
market countries
A WORLDWIDE PRODUCT
STRUCTURE
Implements
strategies that
emphasize global products
Each product division assumes
responsibility to produce and sell
its products or services though
out the world
EX 8.6 APPLE’S GEOGRAPHIC
STRUCTURE
Global
Headquarters
Apple
Products
Apple
U.S.A.
Sales,
Service, and
Marketing to
Regions
Apple
Europe
Apple
Pacific
France
Canada
Europe West
Australia
Europe North
Japan
Europe
South
Latin
America
Far East
EX 8.7 WORLDWIDE PRODUCT
STRUCTURE
Headquarters
Worldwide
Product
Group A
Worldwide
Product
Group B
Worldwide
Product
Group C
R&D
R&D
R&D
Finance &
Accounting
Domestic and
World Production
Domestic Sales
Finance &
Accounting
Domestic and
World Production
Domestic Sales
Finance &
Accounting
Domestic and
World Production
Domestic Sales
Foreign Subsidiaries
for Sales, Production,
or Raw Material
Sourcing
Foreign Subsidiaries
for Sales, Production,
or Raw Material
Sourcing
Foreign Subsidiaries
for Sales, Production
or Raw Material
Sourcing
EX 8.8 P&G’S INTL. DIVISION
CEO
President
P&G
USA
President
P&G Intl.
Division
European
Technical
Center
Industrial
chemicals
Health
Laundry &
cleaning
detergents
Beverages
and food
Beauty
care
Food
services/
lodging
Paper
Richardson Vicks
Asian
Pacific
Latin
America/
Canada
HYBRIDS AND WORLDWIDE
MATRIX STRUCTURE
Support
strategies that include
local adaptation and concern for
globalization.
Mix geographic units with
product or function units
THE MATRIX STRUCTURE
Balances
the benefits produced
by area and product structures
Creates lines of authority for
products and areas
Requires near equal demands
from the environment
Requires
extensive resources for
communication and coordination
Requires middle and upper level
managers with good human
relations skills
THE TRANSNATIONAL
NETWORK STRUCTURE
Implements
the transnational
strategy
Combines functional, product,
and geographic subunits in
networks
Has
no symmetry or balance in
its structural form
Resources, people, and ideas
flow in all directions
Nodes or centers in the network
coordinate product, functional,
and geographic information
NETWORK STRUCTURES
HAVE
Dispersed
subunits
Specialized operations
Interdependent relationships
EX 8.10 EXAMPLE
GEOGRAPHIC LINKS
Portugal
El
Salvador
Nordic
Ecuador
Canada
Austria
Peru
Chile
Brazil
Switzerland
U.S.A.
Bolivia
Belgium
Venezu
ela-la
Mexico
U.K.
Greece
Argentina
Holland
Columbia
Uruguay
Ireland
Spain
South
Africa
Kenya
Egypt
France
Zaire
Tunisia
Luxemburg
Zimbabwe
Germany
Zambia
Morocco
Nigeria
Tanzania
Italy
Japan
Indonesia
Bangladesh
Pakistan
Turkey
Taiwan
Philippines
India
Israel
Australia
Korea
Malaysi
a
Iran
Syria
Thailand
New
Zealand
Singapore
Hong
Kong
Iraq
Lebanon
Source: Sumantra Ghoshal & Christopher A. Bartlett, "The multinational corporation as
an international network," Academy of Management Review, 15, 1990, 605.
EX 8.11 EXAMPLE PRODUCT LINKS
Board of
M anage m e nt
Dom e s tic
appliance s
& pe rs onal
care
Cons um e r
e le ctronics
United States,
United Kingdom,
Netherlands,
France, Italy,
Germany, Japan
"Key Countri es"
Local
m anufacturing
and Sale s
World Wide
Production
M e dical
s ys te m s
e.g.,
Nigeria,
Tunisia,
Peru
Products
Indus trial
& Ele ctric
Acous tic
s ys te m s
"Loca l
Busi ness
Countries"
Sale s
Products
Inform ation
s ys te m s
Austria,
Belgium,
Brazil,
Canada,
Mexico,
Nordic, Spain
Switzerland,
Taiwan
Products
Com m unication
s ys te m s
Lighting
"La rge
Countries"
Local Sale s
Som e
M anufacturing
Som e World Wide
Production
EMPHASIS ON GLOBAL STRATEGIES
EX 8-12 STRATEGY AND STRUCTURE
WORLDWIDE
PRODUCT
STRUCTURE
Common paths of
historical
evolution
TRANSNATIONAL
NETWORK
STRUCTURE
WORLDWIDE
MATRIX
STRUCTURE
EXPORT
DEPARTMENT OR
INTERNATIONAL
DIVISION
WORLDWIDE
GEOGRAPHIC
STRUCTURE
EMPHASIS ON LOCATION BASED STRATEGIES
CONTROL AND
COORDINATION SYSTEMS
Top
managers must design
organizational systems to control
and coordinate the activities of
their subunits.
BASIC FUNCTIONS OF
CONTROL
Measure
or monitor the
performances of subunits
Provide feedback to subunit
managers regarding the
effectiveness of their units
COORDINATION SYSTEMS
Provide
information flows
among subsidiaries
Link the organization
horizontally
CONTROL SYSTEMS
Output
Bureaucratic
Decision
Cultural
making
Exhibit 8.11 shows the
relationship between the
control mechanisms and basic
multinational organizational
structures.
Multinational
Structures
International
Division
Structure
Worldwide
Geographic
Structure
Worldwide
Product
Structure
Matrix
Structure
Transnation
al Network
Structure
Output
Control
Most likely
profit control
Profit center
most common
Unit output for
supply; Sales
volume for
sales
Shared profit
responsibility
Used for
supplier units
and some
independent
profit centers
Control Systems
Bureaucratic
Decision
Control
Making Control
Must follow
Some
company
centralization
policies
possible
Some policies Local units
and
have autonomy
procedures
Tight process Centralized at
controls
product
division
Cultural
Control
Treated like
other divisions
Local
subsidiary
culture
Possible for
some
companies
Less important Balanced
Culture must
support
sharing
Less important Decisions
centralized in
key network
nodes
Organizational
culture
transcends
national
cultures
COORDINATION SYSTEMS
Paperwork
(memos, reports)
Direct contact
Liaison roles
Task forces
Full-time integrator
Teams
CONCLUSIONS
Strategy+Organizational
Design
= Effectiveness
Basic Structures
Structures for multinational
operations
Coordination and control