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MK006 - I n t e r n a t i o n a l M a r k e t i n g

MODULE 3
Culture, Management Style, and Business Systems

Compiled by: Prof. PAUL MARIA A. PESITO


Source: International Marketing by Cateora, Gilly and Graham
Chapter Learning Objectives

1. The necessity for adapting to cultural


differences
2. How and why management styles vary around
the world
3. The extent and implications of gender bias in
other countries
4. The importance of cultural differences in
business ethics

5. The differences between relationship-oriented and information-


oriented cultures

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Introduction
Recognize business culture, management values, and business
methods and behaviors as important for success in international
market
Knowledge of foreign business practices and
successful business relations
Importance of developing friendship, human
relations, and attaining a level of trust before
beginning business negotiations
Thus, management style has to be adapted in
international marketing

Need to recognize that patterns of thinking, local business tempo,


religious practices, political structure, and family loyalty, are
different and impact business transactions

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Global Perspective

Culture, including all its elements, profoundly affects management


style and overall business systems.

• Americans
– Individualists
• Japanese
– Consensus oriented & committed to
the group
• Central & Southern Europeans
– Elitists and rank conscious

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Global Perspective
Knowledge of the management style existing in a country and a
willingness to accommodate the differences are important to
success in an international market.

– Business culture
– Management values
– Business methods
– Behaviors

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Required Adaptation
• Adaptation is a key concept in international marketing
• To successfully deal with individuals, firms, or authorities in
foreign countries, managers should exhibit:
1. open tolerance,
2. flexibility,
3. humility,
4. justice/fairness,
5. ability to adjust to varying tempos,
6. curiosity/interest,
7. knowledge of the country,
8. liking for others,
9. ability to command respect, and
10. ability to integrate oneself into the environment

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Cultural Imperatives, Electives
and Exclusives
• Cultural imperatives are the business customs and
expectations that must be met, conformed, recognized and
accommodated if relationships are to be successful

• Cultural electives relate to areas of


behavior or to customs that cultural
aliens may wish to conform to or
participate in but that are not
required

• Cultural exclusives are those customs or behavior patterns


reserved exclusively for the locals and from which the foreigner
is barred and must not participate

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The Impact of American Culture

• Ways in which U.S. culture has influenced management style


include, but are not limited to, the following:

1. “Master of destiny” viewpoint


2. Independent enterprise as the instrument of
social action
3. Personnel selection and reward based on
merit
4. Decisions based on objective analysis
5. Wide sharing in decision making
6. Never-ending quest for improvement
7. Competition yielding efficiency

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Management Styles Around the World

• Management values, and behaviors vary around the world.

• Differences in the contact level,


communications emphasis, tempo,
and formality of foreign businesses
are encountered from culture to
culture.

• Ethical standards and sales interactions and negotiation styles


differ substantially.

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Management Styles Around the World

• Cross-cultural differences influence management styles in the


following areas:

1. Authority and Decision Making


2. Management Objectives and
Aspirations
3. Communication Styles
4. Formality and Tempo
5. P-Time versus M-Time
6. Negotiations Emphasis

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Differences in Management Styles
Around the World
1. Differences in Authority and Decision Making
• In high-PDI countries subordinates are not likely to contradict bosses, but in
low-PDI countries they often do

Three typical patterns exist:


• top-level management decisions,
• decentralized decisions, and
• committee or group decisions

2. Differences in Management Objectives and Aspirations towards:


• Security especially of lifetime employment
• Affiliation and Social Acceptance by neighbors and fellow
workers
• Power and Achievement Orientation sought by managers
• Importance of personal/family life over work and profit

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Annual Hours Worked

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Differences in Management Styles
Around the World

3. Differences in Communication Styles

• According to Edward T. Hall, the symbolic meanings of time,


space, things, friendships, and agreements, vary across cultures
• “In some cultures, messages are explicit; the words carry most of
the information. In other cultures ... less information is contained
in the verbal part of the message since more is in the context”
• Communication in a high-context culture depends heavily on
the contextual (who says it, when it is said, how it is said) or
nonverbal aspects of communication
• Communication in a low-context culture depends more on
explicit, verbally expressed communications
• Hall places eleven cultures along a high-context/low-context
continuum

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Differences in Management Styles
Around the World
4. Differences in Communication Styles

• Level of formality in addressing business clients by first name


• Level of formality in addressing your boss by first name
• Tempo or speed in getting “down to business”
• Perception of time varies in many cultures

Internet communications

• 78% of today’s Web site content is written in English


• An English e-mail message cannot be understood by 35%
of all Internet users

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Differences in Management Styles
Around the World

5. Differences in Negotiations Emphasis

• Differences with respect to the product, its price and terms,


services associated with the product, and finally, friendship
between vendors and customers

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Differences in Management Styles
Around the World

6. P-Time versus M-Time

• M-time, or monochronic time, typifies most North


Americans, Swiss, Germans, and Scandinavians
• Most low-context cultures operate on M-time
concentrating on one thing at a time
• P-time, or polychronic time, is more dominant in
high-context cultures
• P-time is characterized by multi-tasking and by “a
great involvement with people”

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Marketing Orientation

A company’s marketing orientation has been positively related to


profits (U.S.)

Other countries have more traditional approach


Production orientation consumers will prefer products that are
widely available
Product orientation consumers will favor products that offer
the most quality performance, or innovative features
Selling orientation consumers and businesses alike will not
buy enough without prodding

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Gender Bias in International Business

• The gender bias against women managers exists in some


countries

• Women are not accepted in upper level


management roles in Asian, Middle Eastern,
and Latin American
• Women represent only 18% of the employees
who are chosen for international assignments
• Prejudices toward women in foreign countrie

• Gender bias poses significant challenges in cross-cultural


negotiations

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Gender Bias in International Business

Few and Far


Between –
Female Directors
on Corporate
Boards

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Business Ethics

Business ethics is complex in the international marketplace


because value judgments differ widely among culturally diverse
groups

Corruption varyingly defined from culture to


culture

Existence of different levels of corruption,


bribery, and fraud

The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act 1997:


Imprisonment for bribery

Bribery creates a major conflict between ethics and profitability

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Bribery: Variations on a Theme

Bribery:

• Voluntarily offered payment by someone seeking


unlawful advantage

Extortion:

• Payments are extracted under duress by someone in


authority from a person seeking only what they are
lawfully entitled

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Bribery: Variations on a Theme

Lubrication:

• Involves a relatively small sum of cash, a gift, or a service given


to a low-ranking official in a country where such offerings are
not prohibited by law

Subornation:

• Involves giving large sums of money—frequently not properly


accounted for—designed to entice an official to commit an
illegal act on behalf of the one offering the bribe; involves
breaking the law

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Ethical and Socially Responsible Decisions

• Areas of decision making where ethical issues arise:

1. employment practices and policies,


2. consumer protection,
3. environmental protection,
4. political payments and involvement
in political affairs of the country,
and
5. basic human rights and fundamental
freedoms

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A Framework for Ethical Precepts
• Three ethical principles that provide a framework for
distinguishing between right and wrong:

(1) Utilitarian ethics Does the action optimize the “common good”
or benefits of all constituencies? And, who are
the pertinent constituencies?

(2) Rights of the parties Does the action respect the rights of the
individuals involved?

(3) Justice or fairness Does the action respect the canons of justice or
fairness to all parties involved?

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Culture’s Influence on Strategic Thinking

• Culture influences managers’ thinking about business strategy

• The British-American “individualistic” view of capitalism


typifies adversarial relationships among labor, management, and
government

• The “communitarian” form of capitalism in Japan and Germany


are typified by cooperation among government, management,
and labor, particularly in Japan

• The Chinese emphasis on guanxi (one’s network of personal


connections) is a kind of capitalism manifested by culture

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MK006 - I n t e r n a t i o n a l M a r k e t i n g

MODULE 3
The Political Environment: A Critical Concern

Compiled by: Prof. PAUL MARIA A. PESITO


Source: International Marketing by Cateora, Gilly and Graham
The Political Environment:
A Critical Concern

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Intended Learning Objectives
1. What does the sovereignty of nations mean and how can it affect
the stability of government policies, political parties and
nationalism.

2. The political risks of global business and


the factors that affect stability

3. The importance of the political system to international marketing


and its effect on foreign investments

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Chapter Learning Objectives

4. The impact of political and social activists, violence and


terrorism on international business

5. Assessing and reducing the effect of political


vulnerability

6. How and why governments encourage foreign investment

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Introduction

• The political environment of countries is a critical


concern for the international marketer

• International law recognizes the sovereign right of


a nation to allow or deny foreign firms to conduct

• Sovereignty refers to both the powers exercised


by a state in relation to other countries and the
supreme powers exercised over its own members

• A sovereign state is independent and free from all


external control; enjoys full legal equality with
other states; and governs its own territory

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Political causes of Instability
1. Some forms of government seem to be
inherently unstable
2. Changes in political parties during elections
can have major effects on trade conditions
3. Nationalism
4. Animosity• targeted toward specific
countries
5. Trade disputes themselves.

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Forms of Government

Circa 500 BC, the ancient Greeks conceived


of and criticized three fundamental forms of
government:

rule by one •- monarchy (or dictatorship),


rule by few - aristocracy (or oligarchy)
rule by many - democracy.

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Forms of Government

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Stability of Government Policies
• The stability or instability of prevailing government policies is
a major concern of foreign businesses
• A change in government, whether by election or coup, does not
always mean a change in the level of political risk

• Conversely, radical changes in


policies toward foreign business
can occur in the most stable
governments as well

• The ideal political climate for a multinational firm to conduct


business is a stable, friendly government
• Be knowledgeable about the philosophies of all major political
parties and their attitudes towards trade

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Nationalism

• Nationalism refers to feelings of national pride and unity

Feelings of nationalism are


manifested by:
1. Call to “buy our country’s
products only,” e.g., “Buy
American”
2. Restrictions on imports,
restrictive tariffs, and other
barriers to trade

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Political Risks of Global Business

• Risks of global business include:

1. Confiscation, Expropriation,
and Domestication
2. Economic Risks, and
3. Price Controls

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Confiscation, Expropriation, and Domestication

• Confiscation, the most severe political risk, is the seizing of a


company’s assets without payment

• Expropriation is where the government


seizes an investment, but some
reimbursement for the assets is made;
often the expropriated investment is
nationalized to become a government run
entity

• Domestication occurs when the government mandates local


ownership and greater national involvement in a foreign
company’s management

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Economic Risks

• International firms face a variety of economic risks

Governments can impose restraints


on business activity to:
a) Protect national security
b) Protect an infant industry
c) To conserve scarce foreign
exchange
d) Raise revenue
e) Retaliate against unfair trade
practices

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Forecasting Political Risk

• Decide if risk insurance is necessary


• Devise an intelligence network and an early warning system

• Develop contingency plans for


unfavorable future political events

• Build a database of past political events


for use in predicting future problems

• Interpret the data gathered by a company’s


intelligence network in order to advise
and forewarn corporate decision makers
about political and economic situations

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Other Political Risks of Global Business

1. Political Sanctions 2. Political and Social


Activists

3. Violence and 4. Cyberterrorism


Terrorism

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Assessing Political Vulnerability

• No absolute guidelines to assess if a firm faces political risks


• No specific guidelines to determine a product’s political
vulnerability, but there are some generalizations

• Politically sensitive products include


those that:
1. effect on the environment,
2. exchange rates
3. national and economic security
4. affect public health, e.g., genetically
modified (GM) foods

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Reducing Political Vulnerability
Relations between governments and MNCs are generally
positive if the investment:

improves the balance of payments by increasing


exports or reducing imports through import
substitution

uses locally produced resources

transfers capital, technology, and/or skills

creates jobs, and/or

makes tax contributions

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Reducing Political Vulnerability
MNC’s can use the following strategies to minimize political
vulnerability and risk:

Joint Ventures

Expanding the Investment Base

Licensing

Planned Domestication

Political Payoffs and Political Bargaining

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QUESTIONS?

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REFERENCES
• Cateora, P. R., Gilly, M.C., Graham, J.L. (2020)
International Marketing. USA : McGraw-
Hill/Irwin

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