The document discusses the challenges that multinational corporations face in balancing standardization versus localization of practices. It presents evidence that MNCs manage three forces: standardization towards headquarters practices, standardization towards global best practices wherever they originate, and localization. The authors refer to balancing these three forces as the "Golden Triangle for MNCs." Survey results from American, Japanese, and German MNCs and their subsidiaries support that standardization towards global best practices, particularly American practices, is becoming more prevalent than strictly following headquarters or local practices. As perceptions of best practices evolve over time, MNCs must navigate standardizing, localizing, or combining approaches depending on the situation.
Merkl-Davies and Brennan A Conceptual Framework of Impression Management: New...Prof Niamh M. Brennan
In this paper we develop a conceptual framework, based on the concepts of rationality and motivation, which uses theories and empirical research from psychology/behavioural finance, sociology and critical accounting to systematise, advance and challenge research on impression management. The paper focuses on research which departs from economic concepts of impression management as opportunistic managerial discretionary disclosure behaviour resulting in reporting bias or as ‘cheap talk’. Using alternative rationality assumptions, such as bounded rationality, irrationality, substantive rationality and the notion of rationality as a social construct, we conceptualise impression management in alternative ways as (i) self-serving bias, (ii) symbolic management and (iii) accounting rhetoric. This contributes to an enhanced understanding of impression management in a corporate reporting context.
Uday salunkhe managing work force diversityudaysalunkhe
This article talks about managing work force diversity within the organisation. It has been co- authored by Dr. Uday Salunkhe, Director of the prestigious Welingkar Institute of Management and Research.
This study aimed to examine the moderating effect of Environment Uncertainty (EU) on the Relationship between Distinctive Capabilities (DC) and Performance of SMEs (PS).Interestingly, only a few empirical researches wereexploredon theeffect of business environment onthe Distinctive Capabilities and Performance
A company that has multiple, unrelated businesses. Unrelated businesses are those which (1) require unique management expertise, (2) have different end customers and (3) produce different products or provide different services.
Organizing for an emerging worldThe structures, processes,.docxalfred4lewis58146
Organizing for an
emerging world
The structures, processes, and communications approaches of
many far-flung businesses have been stretched to the breaking point.
Here are some ideas for relieving the strains.
The problem
Rising complexity is making
global organizations more difficult
to manage.
Why it matters
Organizational friction can hamper
growth, especially in emerging
markets; undermine strategic decision
making; and make it harder to
manage costs, people, and risks.
Toby Gibbs, Suzanne Heywood, and Leigh Weiss
What to do about it
Revisit the case for regional orga-
nizational layers and consider
grouping activities according to
nongeographic criteria, such
as growth goals.
Streamline processes without
standardizing more than is
necessary, force-fitting rigid
technology solutions, or creating
overly detailed rules.
Consider moving the corporate
center (or creating a “virtual head-
quarters”) closer to high-growth
markets, and ensure a constant flow
of talent between the business
units and the center.
Find out how and why people share
information, and then decide which
connections to drop, keep, or add.
J U N E 2 0 1 2
o r g a n i z a t i o n p r a c t i c e
2
As global organizations expand, they get more complicated
and difficult to manage. For evidence, look no further than the inter-
views and surveys we recently conducted with 300 executives at
17 major global companies. Fewer than half of the respondents believed
that their organizations’ structure created clear accountabilities,
and many suggested that globalization brings, as one put it, “cumula-
tive degrees of complexity.”
However, our research and experience in the field suggest that even
complex organizations can be improved to give employees around
the world the mix of control, support, and autonomy they need to do
their jobs well. What’s more, redesigning an organization to suit
its changing scale and scope can do much to address the challenges
of managing strategy, costs, people, and risk on a global basis.
Our goal in this article isn’t to provide a definitive blueprint for the
global organization of the future (there’s no such thing), but rather
to offer multinationals fresh ideas on the critical organizational-
design questions facing them today: how to adjust structure to sup-
port growth in emerging markets, how to find a productive balance
between standardized global and diverse local processes, where
to locate the corporate center and what to do there, and how to deploy
knowledge and skills effectively around the world by getting the
right people communicating with each other—and no one else.
Rethinking boundaries
Global organizations have long sought to realize scale benefits by
centralizing activities that are similar across locations and tailoring
to local markets any tasks that need to differ from country to coun-
try. Today, as more an.
International Business Strategy Material as per Bharathiar University Syllab...JisjissyChandran
Unit I;International Business,MNC,FDI
Unit II:International Finance,Economic Integration etc
Unit III:Human Resource Management Strategy etc
Unit IV:Corporate Strategy,Doing Business in Japan etc
Unit V:International Joint Venture, Challenges of International Business
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Citation
Title:
The global company's challenge.
Authors:
Dewhurst, Martin1
Harris, Jonathan2
Heywood, Suzanne
Aquila, Kate
Source:
McKinsey Quarterly. 2012, Issue 3, p76-80. 5p.
Document Type:
Article
Subject Terms:
*International business enterprises
*Emerging markets
*Economies of scale
*Contracting out
*Risk management in business
*Business models
*Executives
*Financial leverage
*Globalization
*Research & development
Developing countries
Company/Entity:
International Monetary Fund DUNS Number: 069275188
Aditya Birla Management Corp. Pvt. Ltd.
International Business Machines Corp. DUNS Number: 001368083 Ticker: IBM
NAICS/Industry Codes:
919110 International and other extra-territorial public administration
928120 International Affairs
541712 Research and Development in the Physical, Engineering, and Life Sciences (except Biotechnology)
541711 Research and Development in Biotechnology
Abstract:
The article focuses on the management of risks, costs, and strategies by international businesses in emerging markets. It states that the International Monetary Fund reported that the ten fastest-growing economies after 2012 will all be in developing countries. It mentions that technology company International Business Machines expects by 2015 to earn 30 percent of revenues in emerging markets compared to 17 percent in 2009, while Indian multinational conglomerate Aditya Birla Group earns over half of its revenue outside India and has operations in 40 nations. It talks about the benefit of economies of scale in shared services enjoyed by large global companies and comments that the ability to outsource business services and manufacturing is benefiting local businesses.
Author Affiliations:
1director in McKinsey's London office
2director in the New York office
Full Text Word Count:
1632
ISSN:
0047-5394
Accession Number:
78031780
Database:
Business Source Complete
PlumPrintNo Results Found
Translate Full Text:
Translation in Progress:
Translations powered by Language Weaver Service
The global company's challenge
Contents
1. St.
Merkl-Davies and Brennan A Conceptual Framework of Impression Management: New...Prof Niamh M. Brennan
In this paper we develop a conceptual framework, based on the concepts of rationality and motivation, which uses theories and empirical research from psychology/behavioural finance, sociology and critical accounting to systematise, advance and challenge research on impression management. The paper focuses on research which departs from economic concepts of impression management as opportunistic managerial discretionary disclosure behaviour resulting in reporting bias or as ‘cheap talk’. Using alternative rationality assumptions, such as bounded rationality, irrationality, substantive rationality and the notion of rationality as a social construct, we conceptualise impression management in alternative ways as (i) self-serving bias, (ii) symbolic management and (iii) accounting rhetoric. This contributes to an enhanced understanding of impression management in a corporate reporting context.
Uday salunkhe managing work force diversityudaysalunkhe
This article talks about managing work force diversity within the organisation. It has been co- authored by Dr. Uday Salunkhe, Director of the prestigious Welingkar Institute of Management and Research.
This study aimed to examine the moderating effect of Environment Uncertainty (EU) on the Relationship between Distinctive Capabilities (DC) and Performance of SMEs (PS).Interestingly, only a few empirical researches wereexploredon theeffect of business environment onthe Distinctive Capabilities and Performance
A company that has multiple, unrelated businesses. Unrelated businesses are those which (1) require unique management expertise, (2) have different end customers and (3) produce different products or provide different services.
Organizing for an emerging worldThe structures, processes,.docxalfred4lewis58146
Organizing for an
emerging world
The structures, processes, and communications approaches of
many far-flung businesses have been stretched to the breaking point.
Here are some ideas for relieving the strains.
The problem
Rising complexity is making
global organizations more difficult
to manage.
Why it matters
Organizational friction can hamper
growth, especially in emerging
markets; undermine strategic decision
making; and make it harder to
manage costs, people, and risks.
Toby Gibbs, Suzanne Heywood, and Leigh Weiss
What to do about it
Revisit the case for regional orga-
nizational layers and consider
grouping activities according to
nongeographic criteria, such
as growth goals.
Streamline processes without
standardizing more than is
necessary, force-fitting rigid
technology solutions, or creating
overly detailed rules.
Consider moving the corporate
center (or creating a “virtual head-
quarters”) closer to high-growth
markets, and ensure a constant flow
of talent between the business
units and the center.
Find out how and why people share
information, and then decide which
connections to drop, keep, or add.
J U N E 2 0 1 2
o r g a n i z a t i o n p r a c t i c e
2
As global organizations expand, they get more complicated
and difficult to manage. For evidence, look no further than the inter-
views and surveys we recently conducted with 300 executives at
17 major global companies. Fewer than half of the respondents believed
that their organizations’ structure created clear accountabilities,
and many suggested that globalization brings, as one put it, “cumula-
tive degrees of complexity.”
However, our research and experience in the field suggest that even
complex organizations can be improved to give employees around
the world the mix of control, support, and autonomy they need to do
their jobs well. What’s more, redesigning an organization to suit
its changing scale and scope can do much to address the challenges
of managing strategy, costs, people, and risk on a global basis.
Our goal in this article isn’t to provide a definitive blueprint for the
global organization of the future (there’s no such thing), but rather
to offer multinationals fresh ideas on the critical organizational-
design questions facing them today: how to adjust structure to sup-
port growth in emerging markets, how to find a productive balance
between standardized global and diverse local processes, where
to locate the corporate center and what to do there, and how to deploy
knowledge and skills effectively around the world by getting the
right people communicating with each other—and no one else.
Rethinking boundaries
Global organizations have long sought to realize scale benefits by
centralizing activities that are similar across locations and tailoring
to local markets any tasks that need to differ from country to coun-
try. Today, as more an.
International Business Strategy Material as per Bharathiar University Syllab...JisjissyChandran
Unit I;International Business,MNC,FDI
Unit II:International Finance,Economic Integration etc
Unit III:Human Resource Management Strategy etc
Unit IV:Corporate Strategy,Doing Business in Japan etc
Unit V:International Joint Venture, Challenges of International Business
Loading...Top of Formcitation_instructionAccessibility Inf.docxjeremylockett77
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Citation
Title:
The global company's challenge.
Authors:
Dewhurst, Martin1
Harris, Jonathan2
Heywood, Suzanne
Aquila, Kate
Source:
McKinsey Quarterly. 2012, Issue 3, p76-80. 5p.
Document Type:
Article
Subject Terms:
*International business enterprises
*Emerging markets
*Economies of scale
*Contracting out
*Risk management in business
*Business models
*Executives
*Financial leverage
*Globalization
*Research & development
Developing countries
Company/Entity:
International Monetary Fund DUNS Number: 069275188
Aditya Birla Management Corp. Pvt. Ltd.
International Business Machines Corp. DUNS Number: 001368083 Ticker: IBM
NAICS/Industry Codes:
919110 International and other extra-territorial public administration
928120 International Affairs
541712 Research and Development in the Physical, Engineering, and Life Sciences (except Biotechnology)
541711 Research and Development in Biotechnology
Abstract:
The article focuses on the management of risks, costs, and strategies by international businesses in emerging markets. It states that the International Monetary Fund reported that the ten fastest-growing economies after 2012 will all be in developing countries. It mentions that technology company International Business Machines expects by 2015 to earn 30 percent of revenues in emerging markets compared to 17 percent in 2009, while Indian multinational conglomerate Aditya Birla Group earns over half of its revenue outside India and has operations in 40 nations. It talks about the benefit of economies of scale in shared services enjoyed by large global companies and comments that the ability to outsource business services and manufacturing is benefiting local businesses.
Author Affiliations:
1director in McKinsey's London office
2director in the New York office
Full Text Word Count:
1632
ISSN:
0047-5394
Accession Number:
78031780
Database:
Business Source Complete
PlumPrintNo Results Found
Translate Full Text:
Translation in Progress:
Translations powered by Language Weaver Service
The global company's challenge
Contents
1. St.
Loading...Top of Formcitation_instructionAccessibility Inf.docxcroysierkathey
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· Direct Export to RefWorks
· Direct Export to EndNote Web
· Direct Export to EasyBib
· Download CSV
Citation
Title:
The global company's challenge.
Authors:
Dewhurst, Martin1
Harris, Jonathan2
Heywood, Suzanne
Aquila, Kate
Source:
McKinsey Quarterly. 2012, Issue 3, p76-80. 5p.
Document Type:
Article
Subject Terms:
*International business enterprises
*Emerging markets
*Economies of scale
*Contracting out
*Risk management in business
*Business models
*Executives
*Financial leverage
*Globalization
*Research & development
Developing countries
Company/Entity:
International Monetary Fund DUNS Number: 069275188
Aditya Birla Management Corp. Pvt. Ltd.
International Business Machines Corp. DUNS Number: 001368083 Ticker: IBM
NAICS/Industry Codes:
919110 International and other extra-territorial public administration
928120 International Affairs
541712 Research and Development in the Physical, Engineering, and Life Sciences (except Biotechnology)
541711 Research and Development in Biotechnology
Abstract:
The article focuses on the management of risks, costs, and strategies by international businesses in emerging markets. It states that the International Monetary Fund reported that the ten fastest-growing economies after 2012 will all be in developing countries. It mentions that technology company International Business Machines expects by 2015 to earn 30 percent of revenues in emerging markets compared to 17 percent in 2009, while Indian multinational conglomerate Aditya Birla Group earns over half of its revenue outside India and has operations in 40 nations. It talks about the benefit of economies of scale in shared services enjoyed by large global companies and comments that the ability to outsource business services and manufacturing is benefiting local businesses.
Author Affiliations:
1director in McKinsey's London office
2director in the New York office
Full Text Word Count:
1632
ISSN:
0047-5394
Accession Number:
78031780
Database:
Business Source Complete
PlumPrintNo Results Found
Translate Full Text:
Translation in Progress:
Translations powered by Language Weaver Service
The global company's challenge
Contents
1. St ...
EY Real Estate & Facilities Management Outsourcing Poin of View 2016Henrik Jarleskog
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Historically, the approach to drive REFM outsourcing has been quite consistent across
industries and organizations. “The classic approach” with competitive sourcing,
transactional business models and transactional contracts has been the most widespread.
However, if you look at the most common pitfalls, there are many inherent flaws in this
approach. It is our experience that yesterday’s best practices will not equal tomorrow’s next
great innovations within value-enabling REFM.
At EY, we believe that the classic way to conduct REFM business is still useful when a
company wants to buy commoditized services at the lowest cost. However, if your objective
is to create strategic results and generate value beyond savings and transformation, the
classic approach falls short.
Your choice of business model is fundamental to achieving your strategic objectives.
Similarly, your choice of sourcing business model strategy is integral to orchestrating the
system that will enable you to achieve strategic objectives. Last but not least, the rules
you choose to follow in the relationship with your business partners are crucial for joint
success.
In this report, we have combined EY’s insights as a leading provider of REFM advisory
services with viewpoints from workplace executives and opinion leaders in outsourcing. We
aim to describe current challenges in the REFM market, the most evident future trends and - last but not least – how to respond to the upcoming changes. In other words, our theme is just as logical as it is exiting.
Best regards,
Henrik Järleskog
There are few constants in this world, but the way in which we do business is not one of them. Instead, companies must actively adapt to change within the marketplace. As the international landscape continues to grow smaller due to advances in technology, businesses are realizing the importance of operating on a global scale. As with any equally ambitious venture, although there is great potential for a strong return on investment (ROI), moving to a global model – or even strengthening one’s current global infrastructure – comes with a unique set of challenges. Among the most prevalent are the needs to operate around-the-clock, extend influence within emerging markets and implement a global vision throughout the enterprise.
View the original Blog post: http://www.eprentise.com/blog/the-changing-enterprise/preparing-for-tomorrows-market/
Website: www.eprentise.com
Twitter: @eprentise
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/+Eprentise/posts
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/eprentise
There are few constants in this world, but the way in which we do business is not one of them. Instead, companies must actively adapt to change within the marketplace. As the international landscape continues to grow smaller due to advances in technology, businesses are realizing the importance of operating on a global scale.
View the original Blog post: http://www.eprentise.com/blog/the-changing-enterprise/preparing-for-tomorrows-market/
Website: www.eprentise.com
Twitter: @eprentise
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/+Eprentise/posts
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/eprentise
Ensure your data is Complete, Consistent, and Correct by using eprentise software to transform your Oracle® E-Business Suite.
Diagnostics and Interventions for the Global Human Capital Manager.docxlynettearnold46882
Diagnostics and Interventions for the Global Human Capital Manager
DUE ON 10/31/2017 AT 23:00PM
750 - 1,000 words
The board of directors at AGC needs a status update on your change management project. Shawn asks you to write an executive report for John and the board of directors about the change management process and the progress being made toward resolving the global human capital management problems at AGC. This report will be shared at an upcoming investor meeting. Because the future success of AGC depends on achieving its human capital management goals, the board of directors wants to ensure that investors understand that it has changed its strategy to align human capital goals with its organizational goals.
Review the AGC scenario for this course and prepare a 750–1000-word executive report that describes the steps in your change management plan, including the following:
· Diagnosis: A summary of AGC’s problems, how they were diagnosed, and your conclusions regarding the root causes.
· Intervention: A description of human capital management strategies that you recommended to create change at AGC and how they were implemented.
· Evaluation: How did you measure the effectiveness of your change management plan? What were the effects on the employees and the organization’s market performance?
MUST USE SOURCES & NOTES BELOW
http://www.ahrd.org/
http://blog.iese.edu/reiche/files/2010/08/Inpatriates-and-the-role-of-interpersonal-trust1.pdf
http://journals.sagepub.com/home/jom
http://horizon.unc.edu/
Introduction: Lessons from Experience: Diversity and Cultural Sensitivity
The story that you are about to read is from actual events that occurred in the field. Its purpose is to provide you with a real-world example from a seasoned professional in the business world.
Diversity and Cultural Sensitivity
My company, Elite Global Engineering, Inc. (EGE) is a multinational organization with international subsidiaries in eight locations. Project management is an important component at EGE. Individuals are chosen to lead large change initiatives. Depending on the project, these changes often affect our home base in Florida as well as one or more of our global subsidiaries. I was asked to lead a large project for our home base and two of our international locations in Italy and in China. The project involved the integration of a new informational management (IM) system. My core team was crosscultural and included members from all locations. As the manager of this project, I employed key components of change management principles and steps; I followed a combination of Kotter’s and Lewin’s basic steps. Well into the project, I felt pleased about my team's performance until I received a phone call from one of the senior directors in China. He told me that team members in China had concerns about the team and their involvement. He said that they felt their opinions were not taken seriously and that they did not feel like equal partners. This came as a s.
Sodexo's Tribute to World Facilities Management Day 2013:
We dedicate this tribute to facilities professionals worldwide. You truly make every day a better day!
Running head DETERMINING LEADERSHIP AND TALENT OPTIONS AT TOYOTA.docxsusanschei
Running head: DETERMINING LEADERSHIP AND TALENT OPTIONS AT TOYOTA
8
DETERMINING LEADERSHIP AND TALENT OPTIONS AT TOYOTA
DETERMINING LEADERSHIP AND TALENT OPTIONS AT TOYOTA
Richard K. Hairston
GM543.01
Organizational Diagnosis and Design
1/1/18
Professor
Dr. Rebecca Herman
Introduction
As part of a continuum on the best practices in organizational design and diagnosis, milestone three of this series concentrated on the concept of strategy at Toyota Corporation. The paper outlined various quantitative indices as part of a proposal to the best approach for managing strategy within the company. Among others, concepts revolving around operating models and decisional analysis were comprehensively explored as part of creating a substantive argument that had been taken at that point. As part thereof and forming part of the argument presented in these series of papers hitherto, it was conclusively determined that work specialization, decentralization, a span of control and chain of command are integral components of decisional analysis. This series seeks to determine the talent and leadership possibilities at Toyota, with a keen emphasis towards the design of the concept in its entirety as opposed to giving a “report” about what should possibly be done within the company.
Top level reporting
General President
CEOn-1
CEO1
CEO2
CEO3
CEO0
General Managers under each CEO
The top-level reporting structure shall include a company president at the very top, Chief executive officers for the various brands of Toyota. It must be noted that Toyota operates various autonomous companies which produce the various types of the car such as Toyota Wish, Toyota Prado, etc (Russel, 2006). This justifies the need to have these two powerful positions, with the only need for a CEO reporting to a president being the fact that various aspects of the Company’s beliefs need to be maintained constant- such as the design of the company’s logo.
Regional managers will directly report to the CEOs. Since the company mostly exports its products to offshore markets (Cusumano, 2008), it is logical to have managers who understand how the market structures in these regions work so as to improve the company’s sales worldwide.
Executive Team
The executive team, as illustrated by the positions in the “top-level reporting” shall consist of the general president, chief executive officers, and regional managers. The designation of these individuals in terms of role play within the company will heavily hinge on the principles of networks, diagnostics, beliefs, and boundaries (four governance levers). The general president of the company will mostly coordinate and enforce the beliefs of the company, issues such as why the logo should be kept round and its relevance in the modern market. The chief executive officers will need to undertake all rol ...
How is COVID-19 Reshaping the role of Institutional strategy? By.Dr.Mahboob KhanHealthcare consultant
While workers around the globe are keeping essential services running, it is imperative for business leaders, particularly senior strategy executives, to reflect on the lasting implications of COVID-19 and what they can do to best position their people, their businesses, and society to recover and thrive in the long term. Five key shifts can help chief strategy officers (CSOs) successfully guide their organizations through the pandemic.
2. The Golden Triangle for MNCs:
Standardization towards Headquarters Practices,
Standardization towards Global Best Practices and Localization
Markus Pudelko, Anne-Wil Harzing
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
One of the most complex challenges that multinational corporations (MNCs) face is harmonizing
the opposing forces of standardization versus localization. Based on a large-scale survey of head-
quarters (HQs) and subsidiaries of American, Japanese and German MNCs, we provide evidence
that MNCs can no longer afford to define standardization simply as the worldwide adoption of HQ
practices. Standardization can take place towards two different poles: HQ practices and global best
practices, wherever they originate from. As we believe managing the challenge of localization ver-
sus standardization towards either HQ or global best practices is the key to MNC success we call
it the Golden Triangle for MNCs. We also argue that it is often standardization towards global best
practices that is more relevant than either standardization towards HQ practices or localization.
Hence our study supports what have been called geocentric or transnational corporate models,
where worldwide learning and knowledge transfer is paramount, regardless of where the knowl-
edge in question originates.
Introduction
Globalization and MNCs are two closely interlinked phenomena. On the one hand, the growing
importance of MNCs is considered to be a key ingredient of the globalization process. On the oth-
er hand, MNCs need to become more and more competitive in order to survive in an increasingly
globalized world economy. As the importance of MNCs continues to grow, so does the relevance
of arguably the most central debate around the management of MNCs: the perpetual conflict be-
tween global integration and local responsiveness, or to use another dichotomy, between standard-
ization and localization.
2
3. The integration versus responsiveness terminology is most frequently used to characterize
MNC strategies in general as, for example, in the seminal contributions of Prahalad & Doz and
Bartlett & Ghoshal in the late 1980s. It refers to the level of central coordination by headquarters
(HQ) to closely integrate operations worldwide in order to achieve global efficiency through scale
and scope economies, versus the influence of subsidiaries in strategic and operational decisions to
ensure responsiveness to local conditions in terms of product and strategies. Many Japanese com-
panies – such as Toyota, Canon, and Matsushita – have traditionally emphasized global integration
and efficiency, whilst the main proponents of local responsiveness were European companies –
such as Unilever, Philips and Nestlé.
Standardization versus localization is the terminology more commonly employed to refer to
functional areas such as marketing and human resource management (HRM), the latter being the
focus of our attention in this paper. Standardization of MNCs in this context is usually defined as
standardization of overseas subsidiaries’ management practices towards HQ practices. Global
franchises such as McDonalds and Starbucks have standardized both products (though some local
variation is allowed) and management practices across the world. In contrast, localization refers to
the adoption by overseas subsidiaries of those management practices commonly employed by do-
mestic companies in the respective host countries. Most MNCs will for instance localize promo-
tion and distribution practices, even if they have a global advertising strategy. Since Bartlett &
Goshal’s seminal work we know that the integration/responsiveness debate cannot be resolved by
declaring one position as more important than the other. To the contrary: in order to remain com-
petitive in a truly globalized world, MNCs are required to integrate these opposite approaches into
one overall strategy. Herein then lies the true challenge of the management of MNCs.
Moving to our specific context of HRM, we can observe that in order to more closely inte-
grate company operations worldwide, MNCs attempt to ensure standardized HRM practices by
3
4. transferring their HQ practices to overseas subsidiaries. As a result, practices at subsidiary level
will bear a closer resemblance to practices in the home country than to practices of local firms.
American MNCs such as Proctor & Gamble or IBM are usually portrayed as having relatively
standardized HRM practices, for instance with regards to recruitment and training. On the other
hand, the transfer of HRM practices to overseas subsidiaries is limited by differences in national
cultural and institutional characteristics, which might force MNCs to localize their HRM practices.
Japanese subsidiaries in the USA such as,for instance, Canon, tend to be much more performance
oriented in their incentive structures than their parent companies, ignoring largely the traditional
Japanese concept of seniority. German manufacturing subsidiaries in the USA such as BMW or
Mercedes tend to cluster in the largely non-unionized South, even though in Germany their parent
companies work in close cooperation with the unions. And conversely, American subsidiaries in
Germany largely show respect, not only for the regulations, but also for the underlying philosophy
of the German concept of codetermination (and if they don’t, such as Wal-Mart for example, they
frequently suffer from low performance). Given these contradicting demands, the two key ques-
tions for MNCs are: how to strike the delicate balance between standardization and localization
and which factors determine if a specific management practice should be standardized or local-
ized?
In this paper, we will demonstrate that reality is even more challenging and complex than is
usually argued, and show that the classical dichotomy between standardization towards HQ prac-
tices and localization is an oversimplification. We claim – and present supporting empirical evi-
dence – that companies are not only confronted with the two opposing challenges of standardiza-
tion towards HQ practices and localization, but that there is in fact a third factor at play which we
call “standardization towards global best practices”. Furthermore, we argue that it is standardiza-
tion towards global best practices that is often more relevant than either standardization towards
4
5. HQ practices or localization. Consequently, we argue that the standardization-localization debate
requires a major extension as the successful management of MNCs is not about a dual but about a
triangular challenge. And since we believe meeting this challenge is the key to MNC success we
call it the Golden Triangle for MNCs, or more specifically the Golden Triangle between standard-
ization towards headquarters practices, standardization towards global best practices and localiza-
tion.
After briefly outlining the context of our study, our findings will demonstrate that what we
call the Golden Triangle for MNCs is not merely a theoretical concept, but already very much a re-
ality in the corporate world. Subsequently, we will outline in more detail that in particular stan-
dardization towards global best practices matters. Finally, we specify the circumstances under
which MNCs should standardize around HQ practices, localize their HR practices or standardize
towards global best practices.
Our study
Our study’s original objective was to investigate whether MNCs from different countries put dif-
ferent emphases on the extent of standardization (towards HQ practices) versus localization (to-
wards host country practices) of the HRM practices of their foreign subsidiaries. For this purpose
we studied companies from the same three countries (the USA, Japan and Germany) both at HQ-
level in the home country and at subsidiary-level in the two other countries. Through the use of a
mail survey directed at high-ranking HR managers (usually at VP level) we collected data from a
total of 849 companies from a large variety of industries, in both manufacturing and services. As a
result we were able to compare the HRM practices of nine different groups of companies: HQs in
the USA, Japan and Germany, subsidiaries of Japanese and German MNCs in the USA, sub-
sidiaries of American and German MNCs in Japan, and subsidiaries of Japanese and American
5
6. MNCs in Germany. By employing this very carefully matched design, we were able to understand
the interplay between standardization and localization to a far greater extent than was possible in
previous studies. It was not until we took a close look at our results, however, that we realized that
there was in fact another factor at play: standardization towards global best practices. Hence, this
paper provides an illumination of the importance of all three aspects of what we have labeled the
Golden Triangle for MNCs.
Results
HRM at headquarters: Expected outcome – clear country differences
In order to obtain information about the HRM practices at HQ level, we presented our respondents
at HQ with a series of pairs of opposing statements concerning HRM practices. For each of these
pairs we asked them to classify their own HRM practices on a six-point scale. The pairs of oppos-
ing statements covered seven categories, capturing the major elements of HRM. Once aggregated
across the three countries, the answers revealed a very clear pattern: the USA, Japan and Germany
have distinctly different HRM models and – more specifically – typical American practices were
situated close to the poles on the left-hand side of our bipolar scales and typical Japanese practices
close to the poles on the right-hand side, while typical German practices were found in-between.
Table 1 provides an overview over these findings.
Table 1 about here
HRM practices at subsidiary level: Surprising outcome – standardization towards American HRM
practices
The distinctiveness of the three HQ HRM models provided us with an ideal baseline to subse-
quently investigate HRM practices of the six subsidiary groups and to compare those with the HQ
6
7. findings. Our assumption was simple: management practices of all six subsidiary groups should be
some kind of a combination model of parent and host country practices. However, to our consider-
able surprise, this assumption turned out to be significantly flawed. Subsidiaries did not necessari-
ly position their HRM practices in between those of parent and host country. This became particu-
larly evident with German subsidiaries in Japan and Japanese subsidiaries in Germany. Figure 1 il-
lustrates this.
Figure 1 about here
Given our assumption that subsidiaries would follow a combination model, we expected HRM
practices of Japanese subsidiaries in Germany (and HRM practices of German subsidiaries in
Japan) to be “in between” those of German and Japanese HQ. But in neither case this turned out to
be true. HRM practices of Japanese subsidiaries in Germany had no resemblance to Japanese
HRM practices (no standardization towards HQ practices), but also did not approximate German
HRM practices (no localization). Instead they even “surpassed” the German model in “short-term
performance efficiency based on flexible market structures and profit orientation” and aligned
themselves much more towards a third country model, that of the USA. With regards to the HRM
practices listed in Table 1 this became particularly (but not exclusively) apparent with regards to
the following HRM practices: job- (not people-) oriented recruitment criteria, selection mainly
based on performance and experience, a higher labor turnover, a more specialized training content
and larger pay differences between top management and average workers.
Even more radical was the case of German subsidiaries in Japan. They also chose to distance
themselves from their own, German model (no standardization towards HQ practices) and did not
adopt Japanese practices which we summarized as “long-term behavioral effectiveness based on
cooperative clan structures and growth orientation” (no localization). Instead, and similar to the
7
8. Japanese subsidiaries in Germany, they apparently decided to follow more American style prac-
tices. By doing so their HRM practices “moved into the opposite direction” of their host country,
Japan. More specifically, the following HRM practices of German subsidiaries in Japan resembled
the American model particularly strongly: job- (not people-) oriented recruitment criteria, a higher
labor turnover, more specialized training content, more specialized career paths and larger pay dif-
ferences between top management and average workers.
Evidently, Japanese subsidiaries in Germany and German subsidiaries in Japan chose HRM
practices which cannot simply be explained by the standardization-localization debate as we have
known it for the last two decades. We interpret what happened here as follows: MNCs are not con-
vinced that either their own HRM model or that of their subsidiaries’ respective host countries rep-
resents the optimal model for their subsidiaries to follow. Instead, they choose to standardize their
subsidiaries’ HRM practices around that model which – at least according to their perceptions –
corresponds most to the so-called “global best practices” and that is the American model. German
and Japanese subsidiaries in the USA also followed the American model, but here we cannot de-
termine with certainty whether this is due to standardization towards perceived global best prac-
tices or due to localization efforts. Finally, American subsidiaries in Germany were adapting to a
significant extent to German practices (the only case of clear localization), while the HRM prac-
tices of American subsidiaries in Japan were half way “in between” those of American and
Japanese HQ practices. Here we observe a partial localization but also partial standardization,
whereby we can’t determine whether this is standardization towards perceived best practices or
standardization towards HQ practices. (All reported results were highly statistically significant.)
To summarize the data so far, we have two cases of evident standardization towards per-
ceived best practices, one case of clear localization and three cases where we can’t be certain
whether standardization towards best practices is the determining force. Yet, further data from our
8
9. study lead us to believe that even in these three ambiguous cases standardization towards best
practices plays at least a partial role, and one that is increasing over time.
Current trend in Japanese and German MNCs: Standardization towards American HRM practices
To include a dynamic perspective into our analysis, we asked respondents at subsidiaries to indi-
cate whether their subsidiary’s HRM practices were more similar to parent country practices or to
host country practices. This question was repeated three times, referring to the past, the present
and the future, respectively. Interestingly, the answers of Japanese and German subsidiaries in the
USA indicated that moving from the past, to the present, to the future they were increasingly will-
ing to adopt practices of their host country, the USA. By contrast, American subsidiaries in Japan
and Germany were less and less willing to adapt to their respective host environments. This sug-
gests that Japanese, German and also American companies increasingly see the American model
as the model that represents “best practices”.
This finding was also corroborated by additional interviews at subsidiary level. HR man-
agers of Japanese subsidiaries, both in the US and in Germany, confirmed that the Japanese man-
agement model was clearly in crisis and that they were looking increasingly for inspirations from
the US. Possibly even more revealing was the following observation that came out very strongly in
our interviews with Japanese managers in the US: Japanese expatriates who are now in their for-
ties and fifties adapted to a significant degree American manners, perceptions and beliefs. When
confronted with this observation in one of our interviews, one interviewee, the president of the
New York office of a Japanese MNC jokingly responded: “I’ve a split personality. Of course I be-
have completely different when I am back in Japan. … The older generation was different, still be-
ing 100 percent Japanese, even while abroad, but the younger ones enjoy having more individual
freedom.” This “new openness” might be an important factor explaining why Japanese subsidiaries
9
10. are embracing “new”, i.e. American practices much more readily than in the past.
German managers also indicated that shortcomings of their own, German, model would be-
come increasingly apparent. German HR managers based at subsidiaries in Japan also mentioned
that they have become increasingly disillusioned with Japanese-style HRM. Both Japanese and
German subsidiary managers pointed to the increased performance orientation with regards to both
promotion and compensation - a feature that has been identified with American-style HRM - as the
single most important change in the HRM policies of their subsidiaries. More flexibility in recruit-
ment practices was the second most frequently mentioned change in HRM practices, and again one
that is typical for the American model. Finally, American managers, in particular those in Japan,
described their declining willingness to follow local practices which they perceive as increasingly
dated.
Our study does not claim that the American model is necessarily the best model to follow,
but we do suggest that there are good reasons for managers to at least have this perception. Due to
the dominant position of American business schools in the development and dissemination of new
management knowledge, the dominance of consultancies of American origin such as McKinsey,
Boston Consulting and Accenture in further spreading this knowledge and, most importantly, the
muscle of the American economy and American MNCs that are known worldwide for their sophis-
ticated management practices such as Procter & Gamble, General Electric and Goldman Sachs,
best practices in management are often, explicitly or implicitly, equated with management prac-
tices employed by successful American MNCs. This was not always the case. In particular in the
1980s a relative weakness of the American economy coincided with a strong position of not only
the Japanese but also German economy. Not surprisingly, in the 1980s best practices were often
defined by Japanese management techniques, employed by companies such as Sony, Suntory and
Toyota, and, at least in the European context, by German ones, such as Siemens, Daimler Benz
10
11. and Deutsche Bank. However, in the current situation, the American dominance in defining state
of the art management techniques appears undisputed, at least in the perception of most managers.
The bottom-line: “Standardization towards global best practices” matters
A review of the strategies followed by MNCs headquartered in different countries clearly shows
that standardization towards global best practices matters and that the American model seems to
represent those best practices. Our data revealed that HRM practices in subsidiaries of Japanese
MNCs are not only strikingly different from traditional Japanese HRM practices but appear to be
modeled on American practices. The practical relevance of this finding extends beyond the man-
agement of Japanese MNCs. If we find that Japanese MNCs themselves are increasingly moving
away from traditional Japanese HRM practices (which seems to be the case not only with compa-
nies under foreign influence, such as Nissan with Renault, but even with more traditional and fully
independent Japanese companies such as Matsushita and Hitachi), foreign MNCs should not at-
tempt to be “more Japanese than the Japanese” by localizing HRM practices. However, our study
shows that American and in particular German subsidiaries in Japan now avoid localizing prac-
tices that are increasingly disputed even in Japanese companies. Above we highlighted how vari-
ous HRM practices, in particular regarding recruitment, training, assessment & promotion and in-
centives of subsidiaries in Japan become increasingly “Americanized”. However, as Evans et al.
observe, there are still many foreign joint ventures in Japan which seem to represent “museums of
Japanese management” as they still employ obsolete HRM practices that local Japanese companies
have long abandoned.
German subsidiaries also show a clear tendency to follow the American HRM model al-
though – since German HRM practices were already closer to American practices – the change is-
n’t as striking as for their Japanese counterparts. This change was particularly evident regarding
11
12. recruitment, training and incentives. Given that American HRM practices are perceived to repre-
sent global best practices, it might at first sight appear counter-intuitive that American subsidiaries
actually localize their HRM practices to some extent in Japan and even more so in Germany. On
the other hand, in contrast to Japanese and German MNCs, American MNCs do demonstrate a cer-
tain extent of transfer of their HQ HRM practices, as is evidenced by the fact that HRM practices
are only partially localized.
Consequently, we find ample support for the presence of standardization towards best prac-
tices. We argue that this finding is of considerable significance since in the current MNC literature
the standardization of management practices is mostly associated with standardization towards HQ
practices and much less, if at all, by standardization towards best practices. In addition, our result
lead to the interesting observation that it is human resource management, a function that is often
considered to be one of the most locally embedded of business functions that shows strong signs of
converging towards global best practices.
Practical implications for MNCs: When to implement which strategy?
As we argued above, MNCs are not only making a choice between standardization towards HQ
practices and localization as usually suggested in the literature; they de facto take a third strategy
into consideration: standardization towards best practices. If all three strategies need to be consid-
ered, the key question that follows is: what determines which strategy should receive precedence?
We suggest two factors here: (internal) core competencies and the (external) environment.
In order to ensure global competitiveness, companies must ensure that whatever they per-
ceive as their core competencies will become standard practice throughout the entire organization,
as these core competencies are the key to corporate success. Without possessing unique corporate
competencies a company can only imitate what others already do well. In a highly competitive
12
13. global market this is an unsustainable position for long-term survival. Consequently, wherever
core competencies are at stake, standardization towards HQ practices should prevail. But the defi-
nition of what the core competencies of an organization are should be very selective (limited to the
“core” of its competencies) and it would be a complete misinterpretation of this concept to assume
that everything a company does or even does well belongs to its core competencies.
Whenever core competencies are not involved (and as we just have argued this is by defini-
tion the case with most activities) and when in addition subsidiaries have good reason to adapt to
specific local cultural and/or institutional circumstances in order to be successful in the environ-
ment they are operating in, subsidiaries should be permitted to localize their management prac-
tices. Our findings suggest, however, that the need to localize might be less encompassing than is
frequently assumed. After all, the subsidiaries in our study saw little need to localize practices,
even for HRM, one of the management areas that is most often associated with localization.
Ultimately, in all other cases, that is whenever corporate core competencies are not at stake
or there is no real need to localize practices, MNCs should strive for standardization towards glob-
al best practices. We are not arguing that standardization towards global best practices is more im-
portant than the other two strategies. However, we maintain that it is probably the most suitable
strategy in the majority of cases. Standardization towards HQ practices and localization are only
applicable in exceptions – exceptions that can make all the difference, but exceptions all the same.
In our study, HR managers from Japan, Germany and the USA apparently identified best practices
in HRM mostly with American practices. Of course, best practices could in principle derive from
any country model (including the parent country) or be a combination of various models. In addi-
tion, for different areas of management, different country models might be the point of reference
for defining best practices.
Our findings indicated that Japanese and German subsidiaries are aligning their HRM prac-
13
14. tices towards the American model in particular with regards to all aspects that we covered in the
area of recruitment (job-oriented recruitment, selection based on performance and high labor
turnover), larger pay differences between top managers and average workers and an increased per-
formance orientation with respect to pay and promotion. Consequently, the more immediate focus
on performance appears to be a global “best practice” that increasingly is accepted beyond the US.
This finding has considerable practical implications for subsidiary managers.
Furthermore, as a result of the intensification of global competition, companies are less and
less able to implement HQ practices on a global level just because the organization “grew up” with
them. We argue that organizational heritage (“that’s the way we do things around here”) is still far
too often the reason for standardization towards HQ practices. The focus in the management litera-
ture on HQ as the most relevant pole around which to standardize management practices is only
reinforcing this practice. Equally, reference towards the “unique” circumstances in a specific host
country environment might be used too frequently as an excuse by (local) managers of foreign
subsidiaries to follow local practices. In this case societal heritage might needlessly block manage-
rial innovations.
As it is likely that a globally operating company will have a foreign subsidiary in the country
where best practices can be found, reverse knowledge transfer becomes more and more important.
Local subsidiaries can best understand how to implement those practices and this knowledge needs
to be passed on to HQ. In most cases it will be up to HQ to ensure that this knowledge permeates
the entire organization, including both HQ itself and foreign subsidiaries in third countries.
Conclusion
As we have demonstrated, our study has significant practical and theoretical implications. MNCs
will continue to be confronted with the key challenge of achieving a delicate balance between
14
15. standardizing and localizing management practices. However, they can no longer afford to define
standardization simply as worldwide adoption of HQ practices. Furthermore, MNCs should be
wary not to localize management practices that local companies themselves increasingly regard as
obsolete. From a theoretical perspective, our study has shown that the standardization-localization
debate requires a major extension as standardization can take place towards two different poles: to-
wards HQ and towards global best practices, wherever they originate from. Additionally, our find-
ings can be seen as a clear warning that ethnocentric approaches to management are no longer sus-
tainable in today’s globalized corporate environment. Instead, our data seem to support what have
been called geocentric or transnational corporate models, where worldwide learning and knowl-
edge transfer is paramount, regardless of where the knowledge in question originates.
15
16. Tables and Figures
Table 1: HRM at HQ level
USA GERMANY JAPAN
Recruitment and release of personnel
Job-oriented People-oriented
Selection based on performance and In between Selection based on inter-personal
expertise skills
High labor turnover Low labor turnover
Training and development
Goal: to create a specialist Goal: to create a generalist
Tendency to be limited and focused on In between Tendency to be extensive and
the individual focused on the work group
Employee assessment and promotion criteria
Individual achievements Seniority and contribution to
Career path confined to one depart- collective achievements
In between
ment or area Career path encompassing several
departments and areas
Employee incentives
Primarily material incentives Mix of material and immaterial
incentives
Pay depends on individual perfor-
mance In between Pay depends on seniority
Very large difference in pay between Little difference in pay between top-
top-managers and average workers managers and average workers
Communication within the company
Vertical communication Horizontal communication
Brief, highly structured and efficient In between Detailed, extensive and harmony
enhancing
Decision making within the company
Based on hard facts In between Based on soft facts
Superior-subordinate-relationship
Task-oriented Person-oriented
Characterized by regulations In between Characterized by common values
Superior is concerned only with the Superior is also concerned with the
performance of the subordinate well-being of the subordinate
In total 20 opposing statements were presented to the HR managers. For reasons of clarity Table 1 depicts only those
16 statements in which the dominant pattern (USA and Japan at the opposites, Germany in the middle) became evi-
dent. In 13 out of these 16 cases the differences were statistically significant.
16
17. Figure 1: HRM of German subsidiaries in Japan and Japanese subsidiaries in Germany
Expected location of
German subsidiaries in Japan
Japanese subsidiaries in Germany
Real location of
German subsidiaries in Japan
Japanese subsidiaries in Germany
HQ ‘locations’ on our scale HQ USA HQ Germany HQ Japan
between opposing statements
17
18. Selected Bibliography
For information on the integration versus responsiveness controversy in an overall strategic con-
text, we suggest the following readings: C.A. Bartlett and S. Ghoshal, Managing Across Borders.
The Transnational Solution (Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 1989); C.K. Prahalad and
Y.L. Doz, The Multinational Mission: Balancing Local Demands and Global Vision (New York:
The Free Press, 1987); A. Morrison, D. Ricks and K. Roth, “Globalization versus Regionalization:
Which Way for the Multinational?”, Organizational Dynamics, 1991, 3, 17-29.
Texts that inform about the standardization-localization debate in the specific context of human re-
source management are: P.M. Rosenzweig “The Dual Logics behind International Human Re-
source Management: Pressures for Global Integration and Local Reponsiveness”, in G. Stahl and I.
Björkman (eds), Handbook on Research in International Human Resource Management (Chel-
tenham: Edward Elgar, 2006, 36-48); A. Ferner, “Country of Origin Effects and HRM in Multina-
tional Companies”, Human Resource Management Journal, 1997, 7, 19-37.
With regard to the modernization of both the Japanese and the German management models,
please see: R. Dore, Stock Market Capitalism: Welfare Capitalism. Japan and Germany versus the
Anglo-Saxons (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000); K. Yamamura and W. Streeck (eds), The
End of Diversity? Prospects for German and Japanese Capitalism (Ithaca: Cornell University
Press, 2003). Specifically on Japanese HRM, see: M. Pudelko, “Japanese Human Resource Man-
agement: From Being a Miracle to Needing One?”, in R. Haak and M. Pudelko (eds), Japanese
Management: The Search for a New Balance between Continuity and Change (Houndmills: Pal-
grave, 2005, 184-212). Specifically on German HRM, see: M. Müller, “Unitarism, Pluralism, and
Human Resource Management in Germany”, Management International Review, 1999, special is-
sue 3, 125-144; H. Wächter and M. Muller-Camen, “Co-determination and Strategic Integration in
German Firms”, Human Resource Management Journal, 2002, 3, 76-87.
Finally, information on the American management system as a role model for both Japan and Ger-
many can be obtained from: M. Pudelko and M. Mendenhall ”The Japanese Management Meta-
morphosis: What Western Executives Need to Know about Current Japanese Management Prac-
tices”, Organizational Dynamics, 2007, 3, 274-287; C. Dörrenbächer, “Fleeing or Exporting the
German Model? – The Internationalization of German Multinationals in the 1990s”, Competition
and Change, 2004, 8, 443-456.
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19. Bios
Markus Pudelko is Reader in International Business at the University of Edinburgh Management
School. He earned a Masters in Business Studies from the University of Cologne, a Masters in
Economics from the Sorbonne University, a Masters in International Management from the Euro-
pean university network ‘Community of European Management Schools’ (CEMS) and a PhD
from the University of Cologne. His current research is on headquarter-subsidiary relationships,
comparative HRM, Japanese management, management research in China and cross-cultural man-
agement. His latest co-edited book publication is Japanese Management: The Search for a New
Balance between Continuity and Change (2005, Palgrave).
Anne-Wil Harzing is Professor in International Management at the University of Melbourne. She
has a BA in Business & Languages from the Hogeschool Enschede; a MA in Business Administra-
tion & International Management from Maastricht University, both in the Netherlands and a PhD
in International Management from the University of Bradford. Her research interests include inter-
national HRM, expatriate management, HQ-subsidiary relationships, cross-cultural management
and the role of language in international management. She has published about these topics in
journals such as Journal of International Business Studies, Journal of Organizational Behaviour,
Strategic Management Journal, Human Resource Management, and Organization Studies. Since
1999 she also maintains an extensive website (www.harzing.com) with resources for international
and cross-cultural management. (Tel: +61 3 8344 3724, email:harzing@unimelb.edu.au)
19