scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

The End of Corporate Imperialism

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
To compete in the big emerging markets, multinationals must reconfigure their resources, rethink their cost structures, redesign their product development processes, and challenge their assumptions about who their top-level managers should be, the authors say.
Abstract
As they search for growth, multinational corporations will have no choice but to compete in the big emerging markets of China, India, Indonesia, and Brazil. But while it is still common to question how such corporations will change life in those markets, Western executives would be smart to turn the question around and ask how multinationals themselves will be transformed by these markets. To be successful, MNCs will have to rethink every element of their business models, the authors assert in this seminal HBR article from 1998. During the first wave of market entry in the 1980s, multinationals operated with what might be termed an imperialist mind-set, assuming that the emerging markets would merely be new markets for their old products. But this mind-set limited their success: What is truly big and emerging in countries like China and India is a new consumer base comprising hundreds of millions of people. To tap into this huge opportunity, MNCs need to ask themselves five basic questions: Who is in the emerging middle class in these countries? How do the distribution networks operate? What mix of local and global leadership do you need to foster business opportunities? Should you adopt a consistent strategy for all of your business units within one country? Should you take on local partners? The transformation that multinational corporations must undergo is not cosmetic--simply developing greater sensitivity to local cultures will not do the trick, the authors say. To compete in the big emerging markets, multinationals must reconfigure their resources, rethink their cost structures, redesign their product development processes, and challenge their assumptions about who their top-level managers should be.

read more

Citations
More filters
Posted Content

Strategy Research in Emerging Economies: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom

TL;DR: A review and introduction to the Special Issue on Strategy Research in Emerging Economies as mentioned in this paper considers the nature of theoretical contributions thus far on strategy in emerging economies and classify the research through four strategic options: (1) firms from developed economies entering emerging economies; (2) domestic firms competing within emerging economies, (3), firms from emerging economies entering other emerging economies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reinventing strategies for emerging markets: beyond the transnational model

TL;DR: In this paper, an exploratory analysis, involving interviews with MNC managers, original case studies, and archival material, indicates that the transnational model of national responsiveness, global efficiency and worldwide learning may not be sufficient.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transforming disadvantages into advantages: developing-country MNEs in the least developed countries

TL;DR: In this article, the advantages and disadvantages of developing-country multinational enterprises (MNEs) in comparison with developed-country MNEs are analyzed in the least developed countries (LDCs) with poorer regulatory quality and lower control of corruption.
Journal ArticleDOI

Globalisation, Economic Geography and the Strategy of Multinational Enterprises

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the literature linking ownership and location strategies to economic geography and theories of globalisation and explore new areas of research, and suggest that the differential pace of globalization across markets presents a number of challenges to policy makers in local, national and regional governments, and in international institutions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Globalisation, economic geography and the strategy of multinational enterprises

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the literature linking ownership and location strategies to economic geography and theories of globalisation and explore new areas of research, and suggest that the differential pace of globalization across markets presents a number of challenges to policy makers in local, national and regional governments, and in international institutions.