Organisational Structures Flashcards
Pressures for economic integration
often mean a centralised & hierarchical structure (Locate where strong CSAs reduce costs)
National responsiveness may mean
a decentralised structure with autonomous local subsidiaries (strong FSAs in marketing & customisation)
Other firms may try both
leading to sophisticated structures (mixing FSAs & CSAs)
Early organisation Structure
- First internationalisation often just extends domestic operations
- Main focus still local market
More internationalisation may mean:
Marketing or export department handle international sales (e.g. Command Alkon)
Or use of overseas subsidiary (e.g. Sanofi-Aventis)
INTERNATIONAL DIVISION
Centralises all international activities in one division/SBU (Home Replication)
Pros for International division:
Easier for CEO since international & domestic divisions now separate; raises status of overseas operations, with dedicated managers & supporting systems
Cons for International division
Rival divisions; HQ (Home Office) might not have global outlook or allocate resources fairly to International Division
What are the 6 sophisticated global structures
- Global Product Structure
- Global Area Structure
- Global Functional Structure
- Matrix Structure
- Mixed Structure
- Transnational Network Structure
Global Product structure
Each domestic division has worldwide responsibility for product groups with countries subservient (Global Standardisation)
Each division an autonomous profit centre
Pro’s and Con’s of Global Product structure
Pros: Each division focuses on customer needs; develops experienced managers; manages life cycles; gives feedback to HQ
Cons: Duplicating functions/ staff; focus on best-sellers; domestic managers developing international knowledge; coordinating activities; cooperation/communication
Global Area Structure
Decentralised: Each area manager autonomous & responsible for all region’s products (Localisation, Multidomestic)
Pros and Cons of Global Area Structure
Pros: Nationally responsive to local tastes & regulations; allows regional economies of scale; avoids imports, so reduces transport costs
Cons: Lack of product knowledge; smaller factories duplicate costs; lack of international cooperation & synergies; ‘anti-new product drift’
Global Functional Structure
Builds around the firm’s basic tasks (e.g. Manufacturing firms need production, marketing and finance)
Highly centralised – Each function head responsible for domestic & foreign business (Global Standardisation – narrow product line)
Pros and Cons of Global Functional Structure
Pros: Controlled by fewer managers; little duplication
Cons: Coordinating independent functions; CEO responsible for profit