Glossary
- Page ID
- 54083
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Words (or words that have the same definition) | The definition is case sensitive | (Optional) Image to display with the definition [Not displayed in Glossary, only in pop-up on pages] | (Optional) Caption for Image | (Optional) External or Internal Link | (Optional) Source for Definition |
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(Eg. "Genetic, Hereditary, DNA ...") | (Eg. "Relating to genes or heredity") | ![]() |
The infamous double helix | https://bio.libretexts.org/ | CC-BY-SA; Delmar Larsen |
Word(s) | Definition | Image | Caption | Link | Source |
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“global” branding | The formulation of an effective brand strategy that transcends national boundaries. | ||||
“global” branding | The formulation of an effective brand strategy that transcends national boundaries. | ||||
“nice-to-be-in” markets | Markets in which participation is desirable but not critical. | ||||
“nice-to-be-in” markets | Markets in which participation is desirable but not critical. | ||||
“pull” model | The new customer-driven process where all supply chain participants are directly connected to the end customer. | ||||
“pull” model | The new customer-driven process where all supply chain participants are directly connected to the end customer. | ||||
“think local and act global” mind-set | The assumption that global expansion is best served by a firm adopting a bottom-up approach in adapting its products, services, and practices to local needs and preferences. | ||||
“think local and act global” mind-set | The assumption that global expansion is best served by a firm adopting a bottom-up approach in adapting its products, services, and practices to local needs and preferences. | ||||
AAA | The “AAA” approach to strategy seeks to implement the three “A” strategies (adaptation, aggregation, arbitrage) simultaneously. | ||||
AAA | The “AAA” approach to strategy seeks to implement the three “A” strategies (adaptation, aggregation, arbitrage) simultaneously. | ||||
Adaptation strategies | Strategies that seek to increase revenues and market share by tailoring one or more components of a firm’s business model to suit local requirements or preferences. | ||||
Adaptation strategies | Strategies that seek to increase revenues and market share by tailoring one or more components of a firm’s business model to suit local requirements or preferences. | ||||
administrative arbitrage | Strategies that attempt to derive competitive advantage from legal, institutional, and political differences between countries or regions. | ||||
administrative arbitrage | Strategies that attempt to derive competitive advantage from legal, institutional, and political differences between countries or regions. | ||||
Administrative Distance | The barrier to international trade relations that is created by differences in the laws, policies, and institutions of different countries. (also Political Distance) | ||||
administrative heritage | Reflects the effects of past management decisions on the present organizational structure of a firm. | ||||
administrative heritage | Reflects the effects of past management decisions on the present organizational structure of a firm. | ||||
administrative heritage | A firm’s strategic and organizational history, management philosophies, core competencies, and culture. | ||||
administrative heritage | A firm’s strategic and organizational history, management philosophies, core competencies, and culture. | ||||
Aggregation | Strategies that focus on achieving globalized economies of scale or scope by creating efficiencies based on exploiting similarities among geographies or markets. | ||||
Aggregation | Strategies that focus on achieving globalized economies of scale or scope by creating efficiencies based on exploiting similarities among geographies or markets. | ||||
Agility | The ability to respond quickly and cost-effectively to unexpected change. | ||||
Agility | The ability to respond quickly and cost-effectively to unexpected change. | ||||
arbitrage | Strategies that exploit economic or other differences between national or regional markets, usually by locating separate parts of the supply chain in different places. | ||||
arbitrage | Strategies that exploit economic or other differences between national or regional markets, usually by locating separate parts of the supply chain in different places. | ||||
Assessing | Incorporating new knowledge into and optimizing an existing innovation network. | ||||
Assessing | Incorporating new knowledge into and optimizing an existing innovation network. | ||||
brand architecture | Provides a coherent set of principles to guide the effective use of brands in the global marketplace. | ||||
brand architecture | Provides a coherent set of principles to guide the effective use of brands in the global marketplace. | ||||
brand champion | Position responsible for approving brand extensions and monitoring brand positioning. | ||||
brand champion | Position responsible for approving brand extensions and monitoring brand positioning. | ||||
Brand strength | Measures a brand’s ability to secure demand and earnings over time. | ||||
Brand strength | Measures a brand’s ability to secure demand and earnings over time. | ||||
Brand value | A financial representation of a firm’s earnings due to the superior demand created for its products and services through the strength of its brand. | ||||
Brand value | A financial representation of a firm’s earnings due to the superior demand created for its products and services through the strength of its brand. | ||||
BRIC countries | Populous countries with emerging economies that are experiencing rates of growth in gross domestic product (GDP), trade, and disposable income that are unprecedented in the developed world. | ||||
BRIC countries | Populous countries with emerging economies that are experiencing rates of growth in gross domestic product (GDP), trade, and disposable income that are unprecedented in the developed world. | ||||
business models | The conceptual framework that summarizes how a firm creates, delivers, and extracts value while doing business. | ||||
business models | The conceptual framework that summarizes how a firm creates, delivers, and extracts value while doing business. | ||||
chaebol | A large South Korean conglomerate firm, typically family-owned. | ||||
chaebol | A large South Korean conglomerate firm, typically family-owned. | ||||
colocation | The centralized location of cross-functional teams in corporate research and product development centers to facilitate their close collaboration with other organizational units. | ||||
colocation | The centralized location of cross-functional teams in corporate research and product development centers to facilitate their close collaboration with other organizational units. | ||||
commoditization | Occurs when all competing products or services have adopted the same or similar features or attributes, making them appear virtually identical to consumers. | ||||
commoditization | Occurs when all competing products or services have adopted the same or similar features or attributes, making them appear virtually identical to consumers. | ||||
competitive environment | The competitive environment of a country or region is affected by the number, size, and quality of competitive firms already present in a particular target market. | ||||
competitive market structure | The relative strength of local (national) versus global competitors in a given product market. | ||||
competitive market structure | The relative strength of local (national) versus global competitors in a given product market. | ||||
connectivity | The effect of corporate brand endorsement across different products and product lines and at lower levels of the brand hierarchy. | ||||
connectivity | The effect of corporate brand endorsement across different products and product lines and at lower levels of the brand hierarchy. | ||||
consistency | The balance in a firm’s brand architecture between brand names that differentiate product lines and those that establish a common identity across different products. | ||||
consistency | The balance in a firm’s brand architecture between brand names that differentiate product lines and those that establish a common identity across different products. | ||||
consumer mobility | The capability of consumers to move across national boundaries and engage in international travel. | ||||
consumer mobility | The capability of consumers to move across national boundaries and engage in international travel. | ||||
Cooperative strategies | Strategies used by firms to complement outsourcing, share risks, and optimize investments while obtaining the benefits that normally accrue from internal development and acquisition. | ||||
Cooperative strategies | Strategies used by firms to complement outsourcing, share risks, and optimize investments while obtaining the benefits that normally accrue from internal development and acquisition. | ||||
Core competencies | Unique capabilities that allow a firm to build a competitive advantage. | ||||
Core competencies | Unique capabilities that allow a firm to build a competitive advantage. | ||||
corporate brand | The “face of the company,” portraying what it wants to do and what it wants to be known for in the marketplace. | ||||
corporate brand | The “face of the company,” portraying what it wants to do and what it wants to be known for in the marketplace. | ||||
corporate identity | The public-facing image that a firm adopts to identify itself favorably to customers and distributors. | ||||
corporate identity | The public-facing image that a firm adopts to identify itself favorably to customers and distributors. | ||||
corporate mind-set | The aggregated mind-set of all of the firm’s members. | ||||
corporate mind-set | The aggregated mind-set of all of the firm’s members. | ||||
creative tension | A firm’s constructive efforts to break away from established patterns of thinking by analyzing and discussing local and global perspectives to discover new strategic opportunities. | ||||
creative tension | A firm’s constructive efforts to break away from established patterns of thinking by analyzing and discussing local and global perspectives to discover new strategic opportunities. | ||||
cultural arbitrage | Strategies that are based on exploiting the favorable effects related to country or place of origin on consumer preferences. | ||||
cultural arbitrage | Strategies that are based on exploiting the favorable effects related to country or place of origin on consumer preferences. | ||||
cultural distance | The barrier to interpersonal interactions created by cultural differences in religious beliefs, race, social norms, and language. | ||||
customer intimacy | Strategy that focuses on segmenting and targeting markets precisely and then tailoring offerings to exactly match the demands of those niches. | ||||
customer intimacy | How consumers relate to the specific features and benefits of a product or the way in which a service is delivered. | ||||
customer intimacy | Strategy that focuses on segmenting and targeting markets precisely and then tailoring offerings to exactly match the demands of those niches. | ||||
customer intimacy | How consumers relate to the specific features and benefits of a product or the way in which a service is delivered. | ||||
design | Strategies that focus on design flexibility and standardization to reduce the cost of variation. | ||||
design | Strategies that focus on design flexibility and standardization to reduce the cost of variation. | ||||
domestic “power” | Products with strong consumer loyalty that hold large shares of a domestic market segment or product category. | ||||
domestic “power” | Products with strong consumer loyalty that hold large shares of a domestic market segment or product category. | ||||
economic arbitrage | Strategies that are focused on leveraging differences in the costs of labor and capital, industry-specific inputs, or the availability of complementary products. | ||||
economic arbitrage | Strategies that are focused on leveraging differences in the costs of labor and capital, industry-specific inputs, or the availability of complementary products. | ||||
economic distance | The barrier to international relations created by differences in the wealth profiles and economic health of trading nations. | ||||
economies of scope | Efficiencies associated with demand-side changes, such as increasing or decreasing the scope of marketing and distribution by entering new markets or regions or by increasing the range of products and services offered. | ||||
economies of scope | Efficiencies associated with demand-side changes, such as increasing or decreasing the scope of marketing and distribution by entering new markets or regions or by increasing the range of products and services offered. | ||||
Exporting | The marketing and direct sale of domestically produced goods in another country. | ||||
Exporting | The marketing and direct sale of domestically produced goods in another country. | ||||
externalization strategies | Strategies that transfer responsibility for specific parts of a firm’s business model to partner firms to accommodate local requirements, lower cost, or reduce risk. | ||||
externalization strategies | Strategies that transfer responsibility for specific parts of a firm’s business model to partner firms to accommodate local requirements, lower cost, or reduce risk. | ||||
fast follower | A firm that uses the benefits from prior market development by a pioneering firm to achieve profitability more quickly. | ||||
fast follower | A firm that uses the benefits from prior market development by a pioneering firm to achieve profitability more quickly. | ||||
Financial or economic risk | Risk associated with the volatility of a country’s macroeconomic performance and the country’s ability to meet its financial obligations directly. | ||||
Financial or economic risk | Risk associated with the volatility of a country’s macroeconomic performance and the country’s ability to meet its financial obligations directly. | ||||
first-mover advantage | The competitive advantages gained by an early entrant into a market. | ||||
first-mover advantage | The competitive advantages gained by an early entrant into a market. | ||||
flat world | A global, web-enabled platform for multiple forms of sharing knowledge and work, irrespective of time, distance, geography and increasingly, language. | ||||
flat world | A global, web-enabled platform for multiple forms of sharing knowledge and work, irrespective of time, distance, geography and increasingly, language. | ||||
focus | Strategies that focus on particular products, geographies, value chain stages, or market segments as a way of reducing differences across regions. | ||||
focus | Strategies that focus on particular products, geographies, value chain stages, or market segments as a way of reducing differences across regions. | ||||
foreign direct investment (FDI) | A firm’s direct ownership of facilities in a target country market. | ||||
foreign direct investment (FDI) | A firm’s direct ownership of facilities in a target country market. | ||||
geographic arbitrage | Strategies that focus on gaining competitive advantage through the leveraging differences in transportation and communication costs due to geographic differences. | ||||
geographic arbitrage | Strategies that focus on gaining competitive advantage through the leveraging differences in transportation and communication costs due to geographic differences. | ||||
geographic distance | The barrier to international trade relations that is created by the geophysical attributes of a country. | ||||
Global change strategies | Strategies that define a “best fit” approach to markets that require local adaptation of a firm’s value proposition and message. | ||||
Global change strategies | Strategies that define a “best fit” approach to markets that require local adaptation of a firm’s value proposition and message. | ||||
global collaboration | Describes how skilled development teams that are dispersed around the world collaborate to develop new products. | ||||
global collaboration | Describes how skilled development teams that are dispersed around the world collaborate to develop new products. | ||||
global company | A firm with globally integrated operations designed to take maximum advantage of economies of scale and scope by following a strategy of standardization and efficient production. | ||||
global company | A firm with globally integrated operations designed to take maximum advantage of economies of scale and scope by following a strategy of standardization and efficient production. | ||||
global corporation | A firm that operates in a number of countries, and sells the same products and services in the same way everywhere. | ||||
global corporation | A firm that operates in a number of countries, and sells the same products and services in the same way everywhere. | ||||
global management submodel | Summarizes a firm’s choices about a suitable global organizational structure and management policies. | ||||
global management submodel | Summarizes a firm’s choices about a suitable global organizational structure and management policies. | ||||
global market segment | A worldwide consumer market segment that has relatively homogeneous needs and preferences. | ||||
global market segment | A worldwide consumer market segment that has relatively homogeneous needs and preferences. | ||||
Global message strategies | Strategies that use the same message worldwide but allow for local adaptation of the offer. | ||||
Global message strategies | Strategies that use the same message worldwide but allow for local adaptation of the offer. | ||||
global mind-set | The ability to avoid the simplicity of assuming all cultures are the same, and at the same time, not being paralyzed by the complexity of the differences. | ||||
global mind-set | The ability to avoid the simplicity of assuming all cultures are the same, and at the same time, not being paralyzed by the complexity of the differences. | ||||
Global mix or pure aggregation strategies | Value proposition strategies that can be used in global markets. | ||||
Global mix or pure aggregation strategies | Value proposition strategies that can be used in global markets. | ||||
Global offer strategies | Strategies that allow the same value proposition offer to be advantageously positioned differently in different parts of the world. | ||||
Global offer strategies | Strategies that allow the same value proposition offer to be advantageously positioned differently in different parts of the world. | ||||
global product or communication platform | A modularized approach to global product design that can be adapted efficiently to different markets. | ||||
global product or communication platform | A modularized approach to global product design that can be adapted efficiently to different markets. | ||||
global segments | Comprised of consumers who evaluate global brands in “cultural” terms and factor global brand attributes into their purchase decisions. | ||||
global segments | Comprised of consumers who evaluate global brands in “cultural” terms and factor global brand attributes into their purchase decisions. | ||||
global strategy | Describes a firm’s intention to change or adapt its core (domestic) business model to achieve a competitive advantage as the firm engages in globalized operations. | ||||
global strategy | Describes a firm’s intention to change or adapt its core (domestic) business model to achieve a competitive advantage as the firm engages in globalized operations. | ||||
global value chain activities | Activities that provide strategic flexibility and contribute to an international firm's competitive advantage. | ||||
global value chain activities | Activities that provide strategic flexibility and contribute to an international firm's competitive advantage. | ||||
Globality | The concept of competing with everyone from everywhere for everything. | ||||
Globality | The concept of competing with everyone from everywhere for everything. | ||||
globalization of the capital base | The degree to which a company has globalized its financial structure. | ||||
globalization of the capital base | The degree to which a company has globalized its financial structure. | ||||
Government drivers | Include such factors as favorable trade policies, a benign regulatory climate, and common product and technology standards. | ||||
Government drivers | Include such factors as favorable trade policies, a benign regulatory climate, and common product and technology standards. | ||||
green movement | A movement that promotes recycling and the use of renewable energy to conserve resources and protect the environment. | ||||
green movement | A movement that promotes recycling and the use of renewable energy to conserve resources and protect the environment. | ||||
greenfield start-ups | Wholly-owned subsidiaries created by firms to gain entry in foreign markets. | ||||
greenfield start-ups | Wholly-owned subsidiaries created by firms to gain entry in foreign markets. | ||||
horizontal position | The position that a firm occupies within the overall supply chain. | ||||
horizontal position | The position that a firm occupies within the overall supply chain. | ||||
hybrid | A multinational firm that offers a mix of global (corporate), regional, and national product-level brands or different structures for different product divisions. | ||||
hybrid | A multinational firm that offers a mix of global (corporate), regional, and national product-level brands or different structures for different product divisions. | ||||
industrial clustering | Occurs as a result of a relative competitive advantage that is created by the industry itself. | ||||
industrial clustering | Occurs as a result of a relative competitive advantage that is created by the industry itself. | ||||
Industry factors | Those opportunities for economies of scale and scope, global sourcing, and lower costs that push firms toward a global efficiency mind-set. | ||||
Industry factors | Those opportunities for economies of scale and scope, global sourcing, and lower costs that push firms toward a global efficiency mind-set. | ||||
innovation | Strategies that are characterized by their focus on improving the effectiveness of adaptation efforts. | ||||
innovation | Strategies that are characterized by their focus on improving the effectiveness of adaptation efforts. | ||||
institutional contexts | Comprised of a country or region’s political and social systems, openness, product markets, labor markets, and capital markets. | ||||
institutional contexts | Comprised of a country or region’s political and social systems, openness, product markets, labor markets, and capital markets. | ||||
integration mechanisms | Those strategic elements and activities that work together to produce organizational fit in a firm’s value chain activities. | ||||
integration mechanisms | Those strategic elements and activities that work together to produce organizational fit in a firm’s value chain activities. | ||||
international model | Characterizes firms that are strongly dependent on their domestic sales and that export opportunistically. | ||||
international model | Characterizes firms that are strongly dependent on their domestic sales and that export opportunistically. | ||||
joint ventures | Methods by which firms share the resources and risks required to enter international markets. | ||||
joint ventures | Methods by which firms share the resources and risks required to enter international markets. | ||||
key global strategic drivers | Competitive capabilities and factors required for a firm to compete effectively in global markets. | ||||
key global strategic drivers | Competitive capabilities and factors required for a firm to compete effectively in global markets. | ||||
Legal risk | Risk that multinational companies encounter in the legal arena in a particular country. | ||||
Legal risk | Risk that multinational companies encounter in the legal arena in a particular country. | ||||
Licensing | Permits a firm (licensee) in the target country to use the intangible property of the licensor for a fee. | ||||
Licensing | Permits a firm (licensee) in the target country to use the intangible property of the licensor for a fee. | ||||
management function | Integrates key business processes and functions across the supply chain into an effective value delivery network. | ||||
management function | Integrates key business processes and functions across the supply chain into an effective value delivery network. | ||||
management model | A model that summarizes a firm’s choices about its global organizational structure and decision-making framework. | ||||
management model | A model that summarizes a firm’s choices about its global organizational structure and decision-making framework. | ||||
market participation dimension | Dimension of a firm’s business model that describes the markets it serves; its distribution methods; and how it promotes and advertises its value proposition to customers. | ||||
market participation dimension | Dimension of a firm’s business model that describes the markets it serves; its distribution methods; and how it promotes and advertises its value proposition to customers. | ||||
metric system | An internationally-accepted decimalised system of measurement for units of force, weight, volume, and density. | ||||
metric system | An internationally-accepted decimalised system of measurement for units of force, weight, volume, and density. | ||||
Mobilizing | Integrating knowledge from different sources into a virtual melting pot from which new products or technologies can emerge. | ||||
Mobilizing | Integrating knowledge from different sources into a virtual melting pot from which new products or technologies can emerge. | ||||
modern global company | Characterized by a high level of global integration due to low-cost sourcing opportunities, factor cost efficiencies, global scale and scope, product standardization, globalized technology sharing and information technology services, global branding, and a global corporate strategy. | ||||
modern multidomestic model | A matrix structure with a strong culture of operational decentralization, local adaptation, product differentiation, and local responsiveness. | ||||
modern multidomestic model | A matrix structure with a strong culture of operational decentralization, local adaptation, product differentiation, and local responsiveness. | ||||
multidomestic organizational model | Describes firms with a portfolio of independent subsidiaries operating in different countries as a decentralized federation of assets and responsibilities under a common corporate name. | ||||
multidomestic organizational model | Describes firms with a portfolio of independent subsidiaries operating in different countries as a decentralized federation of assets and responsibilities under a common corporate name. | ||||
national diamond | Seeks to fully explain "clustering," why particular regions attract certain global industries. | ||||
national diamond | Seeks to fully explain "clustering," why particular regions attract certain global industries. | ||||
networking culture | Created through the extensive use of multicultural project teams, career path systems that encourage international mobility, intensive training courses and internal conferences. | ||||
offshoring | The transfer of component manufacturing and support services to foreign locations to reduce value chain costs so that a firm can focus on its core business activities. | ||||
offshoring | The transfer of component manufacturing and support services to foreign locations to reduce value chain costs so that a firm can focus on its core business activities. | ||||
operational excellence | The relentless focus on providing customers with reliable products or services at competitive prices and delivered with minimal difficulty or inconvenience. | ||||
operational excellence | How consumers define value on the basis of price, convenience, and quality, with price the dominant factor. | ||||
operational excellence | The relentless focus on providing customers with reliable products or services at competitive prices and delivered with minimal difficulty or inconvenience. | ||||
operational excellence | How consumers define value on the basis of price, convenience, and quality, with price the dominant factor. | ||||
outsourcing | The performance of a functional or value-adding activity by an outside firm. | ||||
outsourcing | The performance of a functional or value-adding activity by an outside firm. | ||||
Parsimony | The brand architecture principle that the brand architecture should incorporate all existing brands, whether developed internally or acquired, and provide a framework for consolidation to reduce the number of brands and strengthen the role of individual brands. | ||||
Parsimony | The brand architecture principle that the brand architecture should incorporate all existing brands, whether developed internally or acquired, and provide a framework for consolidation to reduce the number of brands and strengthen the role of individual brands. | ||||
payback period | The length of time required for a firm to recoup its initial investment in a project or activity. | ||||
payback period | The length of time required for a firm to recoup its initial investment in a project or activity. | ||||
political and economic integration | The removal or reduction of national political and economic barriers to business transactions and international trade. | ||||
political and economic integration | The removal or reduction of national political and economic barriers to business transactions and international trade. | ||||
Political competition | The indirect effect on global competition of government policies that pit one country or region of the world against another. | ||||
Political competition | The indirect effect on global competition of government policies that pit one country or region of the world against another. | ||||
Political Distance | The barrier to international trade relations that is created by differences in the laws, policies, and institutions of different countries. (also Administrative Distance) | ||||
Political risk | The risk from politically induced actions and policies initiated by a foreign government that global organizations encounter. | ||||
Political risk | The risk from politically induced actions and policies initiated by a foreign government that global organizations encounter. | ||||
positioning | Involves managing elements of the firm’s marketing mix to influence product or category concepts held by consumers. | ||||
positioning | Involves managing elements of the firm’s marketing mix to influence product or category concepts held by consumers. | ||||
premium pricing | The use of pricing to signal consumers that a firm’s products or services are superior to competitors’ products or services. | ||||
premium pricing | The use of pricing to signal consumers that a firm’s products or services are superior to competitors’ products or services. | ||||
product leadership | Strategy that focuses on offering leading-edge products and services that enhance the customer’s use or application of the product, thereby making rivals’ goods obsolete. | ||||
product leadership | The demand preference of consumers who desire to be the first to adopt new technologies or possess new, different, and unusual products. | ||||
product leadership | Strategy that focuses on offering leading-edge products and services that enhance the customer’s use or application of the product, thereby making rivals’ goods obsolete. | ||||
product leadership | The demand preference of consumers who desire to be the first to adopt new technologies or possess new, different, and unusual products. | ||||
product specialization | The transfer by firms of the full production process of a particular product to a single, low-cost location and the export of the goods to various consumer markets. | ||||
product specialization | The transfer by firms of the full production process of a particular product to a single, low-cost location and the export of the goods to various consumer markets. | ||||
product-level brand strategies | Strategies used by firms to gain competitive advantage when customer interests and desired product attributes are similar worldwide and brand image is an important cue for the consumer. | ||||
product-level brand strategies | Strategies used by firms to gain competitive advantage when customer interests and desired product attributes are similar worldwide and brand image is an important cue for the consumer. | ||||
Prospecting | Involves finding valuable new pockets of knowledge to spur innovation. | ||||
Prospecting | Involves finding valuable new pockets of knowledge to spur innovation. | ||||
regulated competition | Occurs in oligopolistic industries where the direct effect of extensive government intervention creates a global competitive climate. | ||||
regulated competition | Occurs in oligopolistic industries where the direct effect of extensive government intervention creates a global competitive climate. | ||||
relative advantage | A firm’s ability to maximize the economic value of its distinctive competitive capabilities or proprietary access to resources. | ||||
relative advantage | A firm’s ability to maximize the economic value of its distinctive competitive capabilities or proprietary access to resources. | ||||
Societal or cultural risk | The risk associated with operating in a different sociocultural environment. | ||||
Societal or cultural risk | The risk associated with operating in a different sociocultural environment. | ||||
supply chain | The flow of physical goods and associated information from the source to the consumer. | ||||
supply chain | The flow of physical goods and associated information from the source to the consumer. | ||||
Supply-chain management (SCM) | The total business-process concept of capturing synergies by attaining excellence in integrating and managing a firm’s network of relationships among and between all of its supply chain members. | ||||
Supply-chain management (SCM) | The total business-process concept of capturing synergies by attaining excellence in integrating and managing a firm’s network of relationships among and between all of its supply chain members. | ||||
theory of comparative economic advantage | Theory that holds that as a result of natural endowments, some countries or regions of the world are more efficient than others in producing particular goods. | ||||
theory of comparative economic advantage | Theory that holds that as a result of natural endowments, some countries or regions of the world are more efficient than others in producing particular goods. | ||||
transnational model | Characterizes firms that attempt to simultaneously achieve high global integration and high local responsiveness. | ||||
transnational model | Characterizes firms that attempt to simultaneously achieve high global integration and high local responsiveness. | ||||
up-market strategy | Used by firms when positioning a local product in global markets where products must meet world-class standards. | ||||
up-market strategy | Used by firms when positioning a local product in global markets where products must meet world-class standards. | ||||
value chain disaggregation | The stage in globalization in which firms start to disaggregate the production process and focus each activity in the most advantageous location. | ||||
value chain disaggregation | The stage in globalization in which firms start to disaggregate the production process and focus each activity in the most advantageous location. | ||||
value chain infrastructure dimension | Dimension of a firm’s business that deals with how a firm uses its internal resources and capabilities and partner network to support the market delivery of its value proposition. | ||||
value chain infrastructure dimension | Dimension of a firm’s business that deals with how a firm uses its internal resources and capabilities and partner network to support the market delivery of its value proposition. | ||||
value chain reengineering | The fourth stage in globalization in which firms seek to increase cost savings by reengineering processes to suit local market conditions. | ||||
value chain reengineering | The fourth stage in globalization in which firms seek to increase cost savings by reengineering processes to suit local market conditions. | ||||
value discipline | A statement of strategic focus that describes different ways a firm can differentiate itself from competitors. | ||||
value discipline | A statement of strategic focus that describes different ways a firm can differentiate itself from competitors. | ||||
value proposition | Consists of the full range of tangible and intangible benefits that a company provides to its customers (stakeholders). | ||||
value proposition | Consists of the full range of tangible and intangible benefits that a company provides to its customers (stakeholders). | ||||
Value proposition adaptation | Modification of a product or service to meet the physical, social, or mandatory requirements of a new market. | ||||
Value proposition adaptation | Modification of a product or service to meet the physical, social, or mandatory requirements of a new market. | ||||
value proposition globalization matrix | A construct for analyzing the need to adapt the offer and message (positioning) dimensions. | ||||
value proposition globalization matrix | A construct for analyzing the need to adapt the offer and message (positioning) dimensions. | ||||
Variation strategies | Strategies that involve making changes in products and services, policy adjustments, business positioning, and expectations for success. | ||||
Variation strategies | Strategies that involve making changes in products and services, policy adjustments, business positioning, and expectations for success. | ||||
Western “imperialist” mind-set | The tendency of multinational firms to target only those affluent buyers in emerging markets who most resemble Western consumers. | ||||
Western “imperialist” mind-set | The tendency of multinational firms to target only those affluent buyers in emerging markets who most resemble Western consumers. |