
Solved by verified expert:read the case 3-1 on the textbook, called “tMarketing the “$100 Laptop” (A)and write 2 pages by those 2 questions1. in your opinion, what were the top 3 problems faced by OLPC2. of the 3 problems you selected, which one was the most difficult to overcome and why?
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Transnational Management
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Transnational Management
TEXT, CASES , AND READINGS IN CROSS – BORDER MANAGEMENT
SIXTH EDITION
Christopher A. Bartlett
Harvard Business School
Paul W. Beamish
Ivey Business School
The University of Western Ontario
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TRANSNATIONAL MANAGEMENT, SIXTH EDITION
Published by McGraw-Hill, a business unit of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1221 Avenue of the Americas,
New York, NY 10020. Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Previous
editions © 2008, 2004, and 2000. No part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or
by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written consent of The McGraw-Hill
Companies, Inc., including, but not limited to, in any network or other electronic storage or transmission, or
broadcast for distance learning.
Some ancillaries, including electronic and print components, may not be available to customers outside the
United States.
This book is printed on acid-free paper.
With respect to IVEY cases, Ivey Management Services prohibits any form of reproduction, storage or transmittal
without its written permission. This material is not covered under authorization from any reproduction rights
organization. To order copies or request permission to reproduce materials, contact Ivey Publishing, Ivey
Management Services, c/o Richard Ivey School of Business, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario,
Canada, N6A 3K7; phone (519) 661-3208, fax (519) 661-3882, email cases@ivey.uwo.ca
One time permission to reproduce Ivey cases granted by Ivey Management Services on 07/08/2009
The copyright on each case in this book unless otherwise noted is held by the President and Fellows of Harvard
College and they are published herein by express permission. Cases may not be digitized, photocopied, or otherwise
reproduced, posted, or transmitted without the permission of Harvard Business School Publishing. Permissions
requests to use individual Harvard copyrighted cases should be directed to permissions@hbsp.harvard.edu
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ISBN 978-0-07-813711-2
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bartlett, Christopher A., 1943–
Transnational management : text, cases, and readings in cross-border management /
Christopher A. Bartlett, Paul W. Beamish. — 6th ed.
p. cm.
ISBN-13: 978-0-07-813711-2
ISBN-10: 0-07-813711-X
1. International business enterprises–Management. I. Beamish, Paul W.,
1953– II. Title.
HD62.4.B365
658′.049–dc22
2011
2009054449
www.mhhe.com
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About the Authors
Christopher Bartlett is the Thomas D. Casserly, Jr., Professor Emeritus of Business
Administration at Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration. He received an
economics degree from the University of Queensland, Australia, and both masters and
doctorate degrees in business administration from Harvard University. Prior to his
academic career, he was a marketing manager with Alcoa in Australia, a management
consultant in McKinsey and Company’s London office, and country general manager of
Baxter Laboratories’ subsidiary company in France.
He joined the faculty of Harvard Business School in 1979, and over the following
30 years his interests focused on strategic and organizational challenges confronting
managers in multinational corporations and on the process of managing transformational change. While at HBS, he served as faculty chair of the International Senior
Management Program, area head of the School’s General Management Unit, faculty
chairman of the Program for Global Leadership, and as chair of the Humanitarian
Leadership Program.
He is the author or co-author of nine books, including Managing Across Borders: The
Transnational Solution (coauthored with Sumantra Ghoshal), named by Financial Times
as one of the 50 most influential business books of the century. The Individualized Corporation, his subsequent major research book with Ghoshal, was the winner of the Igor
Ansoff Award for the best new work in strategic management and was named one of the
Best Business Books for the Millennium by Strategy⫹Business magazine. Both books
have been translated into over 10 foreign languages. His articles have appeared in journals such as Harvard Business Review, Sloan Management Review, Strategic Management Journal, Academy of Management Review, and Journal of International Business
Studies. He has also researched and written over 100 case studies and teaching notes,
and their sales of over 3 1/2 million copies make him the best-selling case author ever.
He has been elected by his colleagues as a fellow of the Academy of Management, the
Academy of International Business, the Strategic Management Society, and the World
Economic Forum.
Paul Beamish is the Donald Triggs Canada Research Chair in International Business
at the Ivey Business School, University of Western Ontario. He is the author or coauthor
of numerous books, articles, contributed chapters, and teaching cases. His articles have
appeared in Academy of Management Review, Academy of Management Journal, Strategic Management Journal, Journal of International Business Studies (JIBS), Organization Science, and elsewhere. He has received best research awards from the Academy of
Management and the Academy of International Business (AIB). In 1997 and 2003, he
was recognized in the Journal of International Management as one of the top three contributors worldwide to the international strategic management literature in the previous
decade. He served as Editor-in-Chief of JIBS from 1993–97. He worked for Procter &
Gamble and Wilfrid Laurier University before joining Ivey’s faculty in 1987.
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About the Authors
He has supervised 25 doctoral dissertations, many involving international joint ventures and alliances. His consulting, management training, and joint venture facilitation
activities have been in both the public and private sector.
At Ivey, he has taught in a variety of school programs, including the Executive MBA
offered at its campus in Hong Kong. From 1999–2004, he served as Associate Dean of
Research. He currently serves as Director of Ivey Publishing, the distributor of Ivey’s
collection of over 2,400 current cases; Ivey’s Asian Management Institute (AMI); and
the cross-enterprise center, Engaging Emerging Markets.
He is a Fellow of the Academy of International Business, Royal Society of Canada,
and Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada.
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Preface
This book grew out of the authors’ strongly held belief that the best international business research did more than capture the challenges, activities, perceptions, and best
practices from the field. It also translated those findings into practical and relevant
lessons for managers and students of management. Although one of the original authors,
our late friend and colleague Sumantra Ghoshal, passed away six years ago, that founding philosophy fits very comfortably with his successor co-author on this volume, Paul
Beamish, and lives on in this sixth edition.
In preparing this new edition, we have done all we can to ensure that the frameworks,
concepts, and practical examples we have included are topical, relevant, and of importance to practitioners working in today’s global business environment. We believe that
those are the issues that are described in the case studies, illuminated by the articles, and
embedded in the conceptual chapters that provide the framework for this course-long
voyage in transnational management.
In the 20 years since the first edition of Transnational Management appeared, much
has changed in the field of cross-border business management—new external demands
have emerged, new strategic responses have been developed, new organizational capabilities have evolved, and new managerial competencies have become necessary. But old
international hands will insist that these differences are largely superficial, and beyond
such ongoing adjustments at the margin, the basics of managing a worldwide operation
remain much as they have always been—understanding one’s host country environment,
being sensitive to cross-cultural differences, seeing the world as an integrated strategic
reality, and being able to deal with the complexities of managing operations separated
by the barriers of distance, language, time, and culture.
In many ways, both views are correct, and we are reminded of this with each revision
of this volume, as we deal with conflicting pressures and demands that we must resolve
with every new edition. On one hand we receive passionate input from teaching faculty
anxious to keep up with the latest developments to keep the material fresh, reflecting the
vibrancy of the field. But we also hear from those who recognize the importance of
teaching the timeless international management issues that are often best captured in
classic favorites. Based on input we received from the users of this text who are represented on our Editorial Advisory Board, we have sought to maintain this balance, retaining the most powerful existing cases and articles, while adding new material that
captures the emerging issues that will keep courses fresh and students challenged. The
end result is that, as in all previous editions, around half the cases and readings included
in the sixth edition have been retained, and about half are new.
Distinguishing Characteristics of the MNE
What makes the study of the multinational enterprise (MNE) unique? The most fundamental distinction between a domestic company and an MNE derives from the social,
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political, and economic context in which each exists. The former operates in a single national environment where social and cultural norms, government regulations, customer
tastes and preferences, and the economic and competitive context of a business tend to
be fairly consistent. Although within-country local variations do exist for most of these
factors, they are nowhere near as diverse or as conflicting as the differences in demands
and pressures the MNE faces in its multiple host countries.
The one feature that categorically distinguishes these intercountry differences from
the intracountry ones, however, is sovereignty.1 Unlike the local or regional bodies, the
nation-state generally represents the ultimate rule-making authority against whom no
appeal is feasible. Consequently, the MNE faces an additional and unique element of
risk: the political risk of operating in countries with different legal systems, social attitudes, and political philosophies regarding private property, corporate responsibility,
and free enterprise.
A second major difference relates to competitive strategy. The purely domestic company can respond to competitive challenges only within the context of its single market;
the MNE can, and often must, play a much more complex competitive game. Globalscale or cross-border sourcing may be necessary to achieve a competitive position,
implying the need for complex international logistical coordination. Furthermore, on
the global chessboard, effective competitive strategy might require that a competitive
challenge in one country might call for a response in a different country—perhaps the
competitor’s home market. These are options and complexities a purely domestic
company does not face.
Third, a purely domestic company can measure its performance in a single comparable unit—the local currency. Because currency values fluctuate against each other, however, the MNE is required to measure results with a flexible measuring stick. In addition,
it is exposed to the economic risks associated with shifts in both nominal and real
exchange rates.
Finally, the purely domestic company must manage an organizational structure and
management systems that reflect its product and functional variety; the MNE organization is intrinsically more complex because it must provide for management control over
its product, functional, and geographic diversity. Furthermore, the resolution of this
three-way tension must be accomplished in an organization that is divided by barriers of
distance and time and impeded by differences in language and culture.
The Management Challenge
Historically, the study of international business focused on the environmental forces,
structures, and institutions that provided the context within which MNE managers had
to operate. In such a macro approach, countries or industries rather than companies were
the primary units of analysis. Reflecting the environment of its time, this traditional
approach directed most attention to trade flows and the capital transfers that defined the
foreign investment patterns.
❚ 1This difference is elaborated in J. N. Behrman and R. E. Gross, International Business and Governments: Issues and
Institutions (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1990). See also J. J. Boddewyn, “Political Aspects of MNE
Theory,” Journal of International Business Studies 19, no. 3 (1988), pp. 341–63.
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Preface
ix
During the 1970s and 1980s, a new perspective on the study of international management began to emerge, with a far greater emphasis on the MNE and management behavior rather than on global economic forces and international institutions. With the
firms as the primary unit of analysis and management decisions as the key variables,
these studies both highlighted and provided new insights into the management challenges associated with international operations.
This book builds on the company- and management-level perspective. More specifically, in order to make sense of the practice of managing the MNE, we tend to adopt a
management perspective that views the world through the eyes of the executive who is in
the thick of it—whether that is the CEO of the corporation, the global account manager,
the country subsidiary manager, or the frontline business manager. The most powerful
way to do this is to employ cases that require decisions to be made, and most of those in
this book provide the reader not only with data on the business context but also with detailed information about the key actors, their roles, their responsibilities, and their personal motivations. In many instances, videos and follow-up cases lead to further insight.
It would be easy to build our structure around the traditional functions of the
company—R&D, manufacturing, marketing, etc.—and many texts have done so. But
we find such an approach limiting because almost all real-world problems cut across
these functional boundaries. They require executives to understand all the disparate
parts of the organization, and they demand integrative solutions that bring together,
rather than divide, the people working in their traditional functional silos. So we have
also chosen to focus on the core organizational processes that executives must create
and manage—the entrepreneurial process (identifying and acting on new opportunities),
the integrative learning process (linking and leveraging those pockets of entrepreneurial
initiative), and the leadership process (articulating a vision and inspiring others to
follow). This process perspective is sometimes more difficult to grasp than the compartmentalized functional view, but ultimately it provides a more fulfilling and realistic
approach to the management of today’s MNE.
By adopting the perspective of the MNE manager, however, we do not ignore the important and legitimate perspectives, interests, and influences of other key actors in the international operating environment. However, we do view the effects of these other key actors
from the perspective of the company and focus on understanding how the various forces
they influence shape the strategic, organizational, and operational tasks of MNE managers.
The Structure of the Book
The book is divided into three parts (see figure on page xiii). Part 1 consists of three chapters that examine the development of strategy in the MNE. In Chapter 1, we focus on the
motivations that draw—or drive—companies abroad, the means by which they expand
across borders, and the mind-sets of those who built the worldwide operations. Understanding what we call a company’s “administrative heritage” is important because it shapes
both the current configuration of assets and capabilities and the cognitive orientations of
managers toward future growth—attitudes that can either enable or constrain such growth.
In Chapter 2, we examine the political, economic, and social forces that shape the
business environment in which the MNE operates. In particular, the chapter explores the
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tension created by the political demands to be responsive to national differences, the
economic pressures to be globally integrated, and the growing competitive need to develop and diffuse worldwide innovation and learning.
In Chapter 3, the focus shifts from the global business environment to MNEs’ competitive responses to those external pressures. Building on the themes developed in
Chapter 2, we examine the various approaches an MNE can use to generate competitive
advantage in its international context. We identify three traditional strategic approaches—
global, international, and multinational—each of which focuses on a different source of
competitive advantage. We then go on to describe the transnational strategy, which
combines the benefits of the other three models.
Part 2 changes the focus from the MNE’s strategic imperatives to the organizational
capabilities required to deliver them. Chapter 4 examines the organizational structures
and systems that need to be put in place to be effective in a complex and dynamic world.
Mirroring the three traditional strategic approaches, we explore three organizational
models that all appear to be evolving toward the integrated network form required to
manage transnational strategies.
Chapter 5 focuses on one of the most important processes to be developed in a
transnational organization. The need to manage effective cross-border knowledge transfer and worldwide learning is creating additional organizational demands, and in this
chapter, we explore how such processes are built and managed.
Then, in Chapter 6, we lift our organizational analysis up a level to examine the
boundary-spanning structures and processes needed to create joint ventures, alliances,
and interfirm networks in a global context. In this chapter, we explore how such partnerships can be built and managed to develop strategic capabilities that may not be available
inside any single MNE.
Part 3 focuses on the management challenges of operating a successful MNE. In
Chapter 7, the focus is on those who must implement the transnation …
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