INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Instructors: Phone: e-mail: Office: Office hours: Hermann Juergens 514-398-4000 hermann.juergens@mcgill.ca Bronfman 501 Bronf. 501 by appointment Nicholas Matziorinis 514 398- 4000 nicholas.matziorinis@mcgill.ca Bronfman 501 Bronf. 501 by appointment Secretary: Office: Gina Ceolin Bronfman 110 e-mail: gina.ceolin@mcgill.ca Phone: 514-398-4000‚ #09662 Semester: Course Number: Section CRN: 1010 Teaching Assistants: Fall 2012 MGCR 382 Section 001 TBA MW 16:05-17:25
Premium International trade
Management MGMT3101 International Business Strategy Session 2‚ 2012 Case Study Assignment The Formation and Evolution of Sony Ericsson Joint Venture 5 October 2012 Contents Synopsis 3 1. Introduction 4 1.1. The Sony Ericsson Joint Venture 1.2. Motivations for Joint Venture 1.2.1. Technology Exchange 1.2.2. Risk Reductions 1.2.3. International Expansions 1.2.4. Financial Goals 2. Strategic Alliances 7 2.1. Alternative Strategies 2.1.1. Licensing
Premium Mobile phone Joint venture
use the same mode of entry into all international markets? Introduction This paper well examines the role of what Multinational Company is and how they enter markets with verity of entry modes. Well look at theories of market entry and Dunning’s theory that can motivate firms to enter new markets‚ as well using two case studies on entering the Chinese market of Coke-Cola and Foster’s to see if a company should use all the same entry modes to international markets. Multinational Companies
Premium Multinational corporation Globalization Marketing
key management positions in an international business with parent-country nationals” (p. 531). The advantages of the ethnocentric approach are: Overcomes lack of qualified managers in host country‚ unified culture‚ and helps transfer core competencies. The disadvantages of the ethnocentric approach are: Produces resentment in host country‚ and can lead to cultural myopia. An ethnocentric approach is typically appropriate for firms utilizing an international strategy. A polycentric staffing policy
Premium Policy Management Employment
Foreign Direct Investment Foreign direct investment (FDI) is a direct investment into production or business in a country by an individual or company of another country‚ either by buying a company in the target country or by expanding operations of an existing business in that country. The accepted proportion for a foreign direct investment relationship‚ as defined by the OECD Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development‚ is 10%. That is‚ the foreign investor must own at least 10%
Free Foreign direct investment Investment
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS AND THE FACTORS AFFECTING ITS GROWTH International business and the global economy play a prominent role in the society. Both have assisted in improving the communication between various countries‚ both the poor and rich economies of the world. _International business _consists of business transactions‚ which involves various countries‚ whereby they exchange different goods or services through the process of buying and selling. (Hill‚ 2006). International business also
Premium Globalization Affect Corporation
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Pham To Mai Faculty of Economics National University of HCMC Part II INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL TRADE THEORY AND POLICY INTERNATIONAL TRADE THEORY Mercantilism Gold and silver were mainstays of national wealth. It was in a country‟s best interests to maintain a trade surplus maximize exports and minimize imports. Limitation: “Zero-sum game” Theory of Absolute Advantage Adam Smith (1776) Countries should produce
Premium International trade
The Motives for International Acquisitions: Capability Procurements‚ Strategic Considerations‚ and the Role of Ownership Structures Author(s): Shih-Fen S. Chen Reviewed work(s): Source: Journal of International Business Studies‚ Vol. 39‚ No. 3 (Apr. - May‚ 2008)‚ pp. 454471 Published by: Palgrave Macmillan Journals Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25483277 . Accessed: 28/02/2013 12:46 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use‚ available at .
Premium Subsidiary Goodwill Investment
announc software orientation to one of service provi Case study 2.2: that it had sold its personal computer sion‚ which will require greater flexibility and IBM and Lenovo: a ? ~ business to Lenovo‚ a Chinese company more of a solutions approach than its tradi --’:e known outside China. The takeover even tional hardware business. Reflecting its new tale of globalization :‚’acted the attention of the US Congress‚ outsourcing orientation‚ the company has : se Committee on Foreign Investment in reorganized
Premium Personal computer Computer Mainframe computer
Introduction International business is commercial transactions involve private company or government between two or more countries‚ regions and nations outside their political boundary. Business activity being take place such as goods‚ services‚ resources‚ capital‚ skills‚ people and etc. Usual company trade for profits and mostly refers to all those business activities which involves cross border transactions of goods‚ services and resources. International manufacturing refers to physical goods
Premium International trade Tariff Southeast Asia