Becoming a global company once meant penetrating markets around the world. But the demands of the knowledge economy are turning this strategy on its head. Today, the challenge is to innovate by learning from the world . This book provides a blueprint for companies ready to embrace this new globalization challenge. In From Global to Metanational , international business and strategy experts Yves Doz, Jose Santos, and Peter Williamson introduce a radically different kind of company--the metanational--defined by three core capabilities: being the first to identify and capture new knowledge emerging all over the world; mobilizing this globally scattered knowledge to out-innovate competitors; and, turning this innovation into value by producing, marketing, and delivering efficiently on a global scale. The authors explain why traditional global strategies are no longer sufficient to differentiate leading competitors, what the knowledge economy means for managers, and why opportunities to leverage globally dispersed knowledge are growing. Most important, they outline exactly how managers can build a metanational advantage for their own organizations by: prospecting for and accessing untapped pockets of technology and emerging consumer trends from around the world; leveraging knowledge imprisoned in a multinational's local subsidiaries; and, mobilizing this fragmented knowledge to generate innovations, profits, and shareholder value. Drawing from the experiences of pioneering metanationals including STMicroelectronics, ARM, Acer, Nokia, Shiseido, and PolyGram, the book shows how today's multinationals can use their existing global networks to gain an important head start in the global game--and how newcomers can leapfrog traditional competitors by rapidly building a new-style metanational corporation. Must-reading for every leader--from the CEO of a new global venture, to the executive of a currently successful multinational, to the founder of an e-business startup getting ready to 'go global'--this pathbreaking book shows how to reshape strategies to compete and win in the global knowledge economy.
STMicroelectronics, a semiconductor company, is a firm that is at home in the world. Its headquarters are scattered across Europe, split between Geneva, Paris, Milan, and Amsterdam. STM's units and subsidiaries carry the name of town or cities in which their are located, not of countries or continents. Indeed, there are no national subsidiaries, and national flags are conspicuously absent. When the CEO was asked by the authors where his company's home base was, he hesitated for a moment then replied, half-jokingly, "Perhaps the world?" Nation-states and their capitals are rather irrelevant when what the company needs to access are pockets of knowledge clustered around localities like Grenoble, Silicon Valley, or Bangalore. Companies like STMicroelectronics see the world as a set of three interconnected planes. Imagine at the top level a map dotted with pockets of technology, market intelligence, and operational know-how, like bright spots representing cities as seen from a satellite at night. This is the map of the knowledge infrastructure that the company needs to access. The bottom plane is the map of operations representing production sites, logistics chains, and distribution channels, like the hubs and spokes between airports as viewed by an airline company. This map will be familiar to traditional multinationals, which have become proficient in managing a global network of production, distribution, and sales. Connecting these two maps is an intermediary plane, where devices described as "magnets" translate new knowledge into innovative products or specific market opportunities. Magnets can take different forms and importance, and they do not necessarily have a physical locus. They are teams of experts built around selected lead customers, global platforms, or global activities, and their mission is to bring together specialist knowledge accessed around the world and to "meld" this knowledge into innovative products or services. These three planes--the bright spots of knowledge, the hubs and spokes of operations, and the magnets connecting them--in turn describe three capabilities--sensing, mobilizing, operating--that a company needs to develop in order to compete in the global knowledge economy. The stakes involved in managing these three planes go beyond the traditional tension between global integration and local responsiveness. They require new forms of organizational structure and strategy, a new breed of multinational firm that the authors describe under the term "metanational". Indeed, exploring this new universe requires a new vocabulary different from the standard terms used in strategic management. Along with "magnets", readers will discover a world of "knowledge hotspots" and "sensing units", where knowledge can be "sticky" and needs to be "melded" into innovative products or services. When I first read this book, I didn't pay it much attention. I thought that the metanational model that was heralded by the authors as the
The new small world
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
I was delighted to grab a better understanding on global competitiveness and the new productive opportunities provided by the Metanationals.You don't know about it yet?? God, your business is under great danger...
Must reading for international business
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
This is one of the most refreshing books about managing multinationals that I have read. It goes one step beyond the idea of a transnational, proposing a new model of how a company can succeed by prospecting the world for new knowledge about technologies and customer behaviour and using this to innovate. It won't be easy to implement, but the last three chapters provide a good starting point about how to make it happen. I was convinced that if we didn't try and build a metanational we would simply be left behind.
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