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Building and Managing Global Strategic Alliances

Building and Managing Global Strategic Alliances. GSA: Motorola and Siemens AG Semiconductor 300 (SC300) is a Global Strategic Alliance (GSA) operated by Siemens and Motorola. SC300 is a 50/50 GSA that seeks to build on strategic success in producing 8” semiconductors …/….

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Building and Managing Global Strategic Alliances

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  1. Building and Managing Global Strategic Alliances GSA: Motorola and Siemens AG Semiconductor 300 (SC300) is a Global Strategic Alliance (GSA) operated by Siemens and Motorola. SC300 is a 50/50 GSA that seeks to build on strategic success in producing 8” semiconductors …/…

  2. Building and Managing Global Strategic Alliances and produce true state of the art 12” wafers that will provide vastly more powerful integrated circuits at truly competitive costs. Siemens has world-class technology; Motorola provides expertise in logic products and quality control. It’s a good match.

  3. Defining Global Strategic Alliances GSA’s are cross-border alliances and partnerships between two or more firms from different countries who pursue mutual interests through resource and capability sharing.

  4. Types of GSA • Equity Joint Ventures (EJV) form legally and economically separate organizations, created by two or more parent organizations that invest financial and other resources (like land, facilities, equipment, materials, intellectual property, or labor). These can be 50/50 or any other percentages of ownership • Cooperative Joint Ventures (CJV) are contractual arrangements where profits and responsibilities are assigned through contractual agreement. Most of these create business activities without creating new organizations. CJV types: Joint exploration, R&D, production, marketing, supply, or management

  5. CJV Types • Joint Exploration, non-equity alliances where exploration and development costs are shared, usually in extraction industries • Joint R&D, where R&D costs, rights, and profits are contractually shared • Joint Production, where production stages are shared, usually in technology and aerospace • Joint Marketing, shares marketing and distribution channels to reach a larger set of targets …/…

  6. CJV Types • Joint Supply, where supply chain and inputs are shared with an emphasis on stability and quality of supply • Joint Management, cross border partners share in management functions like HR, production, organizational design, IT development, or value chain integration

  7. Rationales for Building GSAs • GSA’s allow a company to enter activities that may be too costly or risky to assume alone • GSA’s allow the acquisition of partner knowledge and resources that build competitive strength • GSA’s allow the enhancement of scale economies and improve product rationalization • GSA’s allow the prevention or reduction of competition with a major rival, whether that competition is contemporaneous or anticipated …/…

  8. Rationales for Building GSAs • GSA’s help a firm boost local acceptance in the eyes of foreign consumers • GSA’s help firms bypass entry barriers in target countries

  9. Challenges Facing GSAs GSA’s involve complex relationships and expectations. They can be difficult to manage especially when firms have different strategic interests and objectives, different cultures, divergent expectations, and incongruent structures. …/…

  10. Challenges Facing GSAs • Loss Of Autonomy And Control • Risk Of Technology Or Property Leakage • Differing Strategic Goals • Chance That Partners May Become Global Competitors

  11. Building Global Strategic Alliances It is important to effectively: • Select Local Partners who have compatible goals, resources, cultures, commitment, and capabilities • Negotiate Alliance Contracts that are workable, involved and understood. This is a difficult cross cultural negotiating exercise • Structure Global Strategic Alliances to ensure effective and representative ownership, sharing of resources, and equity distributions …/…

  12. Managing Global Strategic Alliances It is important to be able to manage inter-partner learning, exercise effective managerial control, accentuate cooperation and trust, and establish effective exits.

  13. Managing GSA Learning When firms get together in a GSA, both firms have to “come up to speed” and learn about one another in order to effectively operate. Creating operational and managerial synergy and effective relationships requires a degree of openness that is difficult to obtain. Firms will seek to protect their intellectual and proprietary rights and technologies, write safeguards into contracts, agree on specific skills to be shared (and not shared), and mitigate leakage risk by avoiding undue dependence.

  14. Managing GSA Managerial Control Managerial control is achieved through equity ownership. Controlling entities will nominate and appoint key personnel, set agendas of the Board of Directors, establish major managerial policies and procedures, retain budget control, set contract stipulations, allocate resources, and shape interpersonal relationships.

  15. Managing GSA Cooperation & Trust This is performed by accentuating personal attachment and reducing conflicts, • Personal attachment is accentuated through personal contact, socialization, longer appointments, and careful selection of people and expatriates • Conflicts are reduced through pursuing mutual understanding of actions and positions, having alliance executives jointly set milestones, clearing the alliance of parent goals and strategies, maintaining flexibility, and promoting understand and empathy among HR groups

  16. Managing GSA Exit There are many reasons for exit. When goals are not being met, this is a good reason for alliance exiting. Among chief reasons for exit: • Differences In Strategic Or Operational Objectives • Differences In Managerial Styles • Differences In Conflict Resolution Styles • Inability To Meet Shifting Targets • Inability To Meet Financial Requirements • Acquisition Of One Or More Of The Partners • Bankruptcy, Termination, Dissolution Of Liquidation Of One Or More Of The Partners

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