THE RIGHT FIT
The challenges a multinational
faces when entering a new market are just like being a start-up says
Harvard's Stephen Bradley
Stephen Bradley, Professor,
Author, Strategist When online retailer eBay decided to enter China in 2002,
it acquired Eachnet.com, a home grown C2C company with a 75% market share in
the country. It was a solid business, run by local management who'd studied
at Harvard Business School and was all set to get bigger. Five years on, the
picture was completely different with Alibaba having almost driven eBay out
of the country. What went wrong? “eBay failed in China because they were
unable to customise their strategy for the local market. They were so
convinced that they had to follow the same business model that had worked for
them in the US that they couldn't be there for the long haul,“ says Stephen
Bradley, the William Ziegler Professor of Business Administration Emeritus at
Harvard Business School.
Bradley is also the faculty chair of two executive programmes on strategy at Harvard. Ebay insisted on imposing a charge on every transaction and listing because that's how it operated in the US. Meanwhile, Alibaba decided to make transactions free on Taobao, their C2C portal, to protect their B2B business from eBay. “Had eBay also kept its service free initially, waiting a few years to monetise their business, they'd have a strong position in what is a huge market today,“ says Bradley.
According to him, it's a clear
case of a company not getting its competitive advantage right when entering a
new market. “The challenges a company faces when entering a new market are
not very different from those faced by a start-up. You need to understand
local market needs and idiosyncrasies and tailor your product to meet these
needs,“ he says. You have to recruit a team that understands the
organization's global strategy and at the same time has experience in the
local market which is crucial to building the brand. These are the basic
challenges a start-up faces, and these aren't very different for an
established corporation venturing into a new geography. The key thing is
getting your value proposition or competitive advantage right.
Understanding the transition from
designing strategy to actually executing it, especially the problems that
come during implementation, is at the heart of the Aligning Strategy and
Execution programme he chairs along with Bruce Harreld, the former head of
strategy at IBM. Having studied companies in the US, India and China like
Alibaba's Taobao, Schindler India and Apple among others on how they executed
their global strategy, Bradley says that the key to getting your strategy
right in a new market is to be clear as to what your competitive advantage
is. Whether it's a lower cost structure or a form of sustainable
differentiation, a competitive advantage is essential. If you go into a
market imitating what someone else is already doing, you are unlikely to be
successful. “You need a unique value proposition or a really good cost
structure to serve that local market. If you don't, then you are likely to
have a difficult time. Several com panies go into markets without having
clearly figured out what is really going to make them win there. The may grow
revenues but often end up with profitless growth,“ says Bradley.
At the same time, companies must
realise that a blanket global strategy doesn't work.
He uses the example of elevator company Schindler. The company studied the Indian market and realised that a me-too strategy wouldn't deliver a competitive advantage. The market was ripe for a standardised offering in elevators and escalators and they tailored their products for India and brought in one of their best global leaders to head operations. The rest of the team was from India which brought in a strong local perspective. “The company understood what kind of a competitive advantage they'd have to create in terms of positioning their product and services to do well here,“ says Bradley.
While the country of origin of the
company does impact how exactly it needs to tailor its strategy, the broader
issues of establishing a competitive advantage remain the same. For instance
for a company looking at setting up shop in India has to contend with a
multiple level approval process and working with slow response times which
can be daunting to someone unfamiliar with the region.
Similarly, while low level bribery to get things moving is almost a part of the eastern culture, it's something that companies from the US and EU are particularly uncomfortable with. For Indian companies, the challenge can often be understanding the new market and gaining access. Bradley points out Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) as an example of how Indian companies can do well globally. Similarly, IBM in India is another great example of a company having to tailor its competitive advantage to be successful in a new environment. “The company was lagging behind TCS and it tailored its cost structure and offerings to serve local clients in India, but did so within the framework of its broader global strategy,“ he says.
As a final word of caution,
Bradley points out that for some companies there will always be a temptation
to change their positioning and key value proposition when entering a new
market. However, while it's important to tailor competitive advantage to meet
local needs, it's equally important that it fit within the broader set of
your core competencies for it to remain a competitive advantage.
by Priyanka SanganiCD
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Sunday, June 22, 2014
MANAGEMENT SPECIAL .......................THE RIGHT FIT
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1 comment:
It will be interesting to see what strategies Wal-Mart will adopt after entering Indian Markets if Retail sector opens completely for them.
Great Post Sir, Thanks for Sharing it
- Deepak Doddamani
www.deepakdoddamani.com
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