Wednesday, 9 December 2015

Why a luxury London car dealership couldn't sell a car!


When my friend, a successful engineer, turned up at a London luxury car dealership ready to part with £40,000, she expected to have a few questions answered and then to put a downpayment, after all she had already built the car online.
When asked to give precise explanation surrounding two features, the “sales” person’s response was, “don't get this, you don't need it!” and “this option is a waste of money!”. The truth is, the “sales” person in question was probably unequipped to answer all of her questions and being a woman (as she felt) he probably thought she didn't need to understand every little detail, just the basic options and colours.
Frustrated and enraged, my friend complained to the head office who apologised and sent her to a dealership 20 miles away where a “specialist” would meet her. A “specialist” who is unavailable in all the branches of all the dealerships! When my friend sat two hours with the specialist, she ended up spending £2500 more than she had originally intended, out of which, she got reimbursed around £500 for a further mess up by the “specialist” who sold her an option incompatible with her iPhone.
Could this be the typical scenario of companies in pursuit of a lean machine, whereby cuts to staff are made in bid to increase profits by increasing productivity? Maybe maybe not, however, the wave of european and american companies looking to skim the hierarchy whereby the replacement is not technology, but humans taking on more responsibility, is undoubtedly detrimental to luxury. It is hard to imagine a sudden increase in workload not eroding the luxury service once delivered by the same person.
Such pursuits by suppliers of the masses maybe forgiven, but customisation in luxury is expected and customer deflection is inevitable if it is jeopardised. Once it occurs, customer deflection will raise the cost ratio of employee/output, hence reverting back to a higher cost whilst harming brand image.
In economics, the relationship between productivity and customer satisfaction is generally viewed as negative, this is especially true when the pursuit for customer satisfaction is directly linked with personnel efforts. Some even argue, that for a firm to make both customer satisfaction and productivity a top priority is only setting out to achieve the impossible.
When considering short term gain, it is obvious that cutting costs will increase profits, however when factoring in customer deflection in the long term, surely, customer loyalty in the service industry is a more accurate measure of future profits than costs are?

Monday, 12 October 2015

Travelling first class or with kids?


The American humorist Nathaniel Benchley pokes at the travel industry claiming that there are only two classes of travel - first class and with children; he does this to point out the burdens of travelling with children and how little the industry does in order to mitigate those burdens.

The hassle of travelling with children is often overlooked by the industry as the ‘child experience’ within tourism research is rare. Unlike the entertainment, food and toy industry, tourism has yet to cater effectively for the children in the travelling family unit. Furthermore, tourism is yet to treat the family as a unit where the decisions and outcomes are the result of negotiated and sometimes conflicting objectives. 



Holidays have a large spectrum of possibilities especially for families and the tourism industry is still treating it as a time whereby a “…radical divorce from everyday life…” (Obrador, 2012), takes place. This is probably one of the most critical factors affecting families with young children in leisure tourism, especially those who opt for a luxury stay at a four or five star hotel. Those families are left disappointed as they harbour all the expectations and receive none of the deliverables that cater for their children. Hotels are still providing a sewing and shaving kit to families who want inflatable pool toys and swim nappies.



In a recent research by Khoo-Lattimore, Prayag & Cheah (2015) published in the journal of hospitality marketing & management,  families interviewed want to see hotels provide toilet seats, bottle warmers, sterilisers, diapers, swim diapers, kids sunscreen, toddler snacks and drinks, inflatable toys for the pool even at a hire price. In essence families want to travel lighter and know that they don't have to pack the whole house before leaving on holiday…. the other end has it all. 


Apart from missing the basics, it is bewildering to some as to why any hotel would fail to design a child friendly pool as part of its offering. The minimal research that does exist on the ‘child experience’ constantly points to swimming in a pool or in the sea as occupying the first place in favourite child activity on holiday. 


Corporate hotels may do well for a number of years, but especially in cities that are rapidly expanding they may find themselves outshone by the new player in town, and therefore trying to target the leisure market with a less leisurely product, would it not make sense to build a pool from the onset that can accommodate families?


Food for thought:

According to travel weekly, family travel between 2001-2005 has increased by 20%. The UK holds 4th place as the most travelling nation. Almost 50%  of the British population lives in a household with dependant children and according to TripAdvisor, 9 out of 10 Britons planned a holiday abroad in 2013. 
As the baby boomers retire, spending money on holidays with grandchildren is also increasing, yet multigenerational travel is still overlooked. However, the leisure industry seems to have caught on with tickets to children theme parks now including a discounts 7 person families and senior citizen tickets.

Lastly, fathers have started taking a leading role in children entertainment on holiday, yet they are virtually non existent in leisure tourism research.



British Family travel, is the topic of my MSC Global Marketing Dissertation (University of Liverpool). Please contact me if you wish to receive the whole report once its completed.



Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Boring CEOs should get off Twitter!


Having spent the last couple of weeks reading & analysing the tweets of those who head large multinational corporations, it is my opinion, that many open the curtains to the windows of their life only to show us how they sit and watch paint dry! 
On their twitter profiles, they describe themselves as having interests and hobbies that include mountain climbing, fishing, photography, sailing, golfing, sky diving as well as being proud parents of an x number of children; In a nutshell,  they describe themselves as fun-loving rounded human beings and then do nothing but tweet randomly about the organisations they run!

Their tweets if favoured or shared are mostly favoured or shared by readily eager to please employees and they almost never answer to 'replies' even if they only have a triple digit following. They do know that ‘engaging’ seems to be the buzz word and yet they are seemingly ‘disengaged’. Essentially it seems that these rounded human beings are only an extension of their corporate brand and have somewhere lost the ability to communicate about other interests. Their brands have a Twitter account that we can follow, this is certainly not why we follow them!
People follow CEOs for the love of curiosity of what it’s like to run a large corporation, what they do for fun and mostly how they really are just humans like us! They have families and picnics, they play sports and go on holiday, they have controversial thoughts and bad days at work, they are just like us. Showing people the human side is precisely what makes CEOs interesting which in return reflects positively on their brand in the subconscious mind of the follower.

Traditionally, these people have been told to embrace privacy which I believe is the reason for them playing ‘safe’ on Twitter, but social media simply is not about pushing your corporate message its about being social. In fact many in the digital marketing industry have started to refer to Twitter as an online cocktail party; being on twitter and not tweeting or tweeting generic information only about your company is the digital equivalent of going to a party and either sitting awkwardly in the corner or basically spending the whole time telling us one story after another about the organisation you run! If that’s the case, its best to have an early night in and leave partying to those who enjoy it!

One leader who seems to have got it right is Richard Branson, he frequently tweets about people he met, lessons he learnt from various failures, his love of adventure and posts many photos of him engaging in ‘human’ activities
Social media is throwing a lot of people off balance, its important to get it right otherwise it ends up giving off exactly the opposite message one is trying to portray. I cannot put this any better than the American writer and futurist Alvin Toffler who has said “The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn. 
Conclusively, If you run a large corporation the chances are you have spent decades of dedication and hard work into successfully perfecting your game, we know your company, we now want to know you! 

Wednesday, 11 February 2015

The hotel that got flustered by my tweet!

Last December, my sister posted her location on Facebook indicating that she had just checked-in at a five star hotel in Chicago. So I, being the social media addict, LIKED her location and checked the hotel’s Twitter page. 
The hotel’s last tweet indicated that they had just launched a very special menu of Christmas cocktails, so I decided to use twitter to buy my sister one of those and tweeted the hotel to that effect. 

After two whole days -a century in cyber time, the hotel replied; they apologised about the delay (as they didn't see the tweet) and enquired if my sister was still staying at the hotel.
When I immediately responded positively they informed me that they needed to check with the hotel if my request is possible! with the hotel?!  I thought I was tweeting the hotel! obviously not!

I had been tweeting a subcontracted third party, who can only send messages but is completely lost when needing to engage in a dialogue that requires approvals. The person behind the tweet explained that my request is so unusual and that they were all flustered by it! 

Many tweets later, I went on to send my credit card authorisation form as directed by the person behind the tweet
, but in fact my sister never did receive the drink even though she was in the hotel for one whole week! by the end of it all I figured that I deserved the drink much more than she did!


Lon Safko the author of The Social Media Bible said that businesses who fail to include twitter in their marketing efforts, are like those trying to bake a cake with all the ingredients and yet no oven.
Hotels who have a twitter account need to follow experts who discuss food and beverage, subscribe to communities who discuss the industry and form dialogue around their central interest, i.e. hotels, lifestyle, travel and so forth. Yes they will face the ‘unusual’ requests today, but tomorrow this may become the normal request, so it depends how pro-active they wish to be. 

Furthermore, twitter is not the mail service, its instant and doesn't understand working hours, companies need to understand this. No one is interested in a cocktail one week from now in a city where thousands of cocktails are made everyday. Twitter is the here and now communication channel.

Granted, the Japanese girl who tweeted over 36 million tweets (before the company suspended her account) may not be the norm, however with 300 million active monthly users who tweet 500 million tweets per day, twitter has become a powerful tool to share information instantly. A business can take advantage of this fact or can wait 200 million tweets later to respond to a customer, like the hotel in Chicago did.

The instant dimension to this technology has prompted some restaurants in Europe to encourage customers to tweet their food orders;  the advantages to the restaurants are very real and include a decreased labour cost, a reduction in human error surrounding order taking (especially due to accents in touristic hubs) and a faster table turn around time.

Spending time and effort to build a twitter community is essential for businesses and should not be left to a part-time third party individual. An abundance of effort is needed to stay relevant and engage in dialogue, but it has an incredible payoff. When the firm has a big announcement or sale the community responds speedily spreading the message through retweets like wild fire, however the first rule of social media is “give to take”, the community will only reward you if you have been active in dialogue but if you only use twitter to push messages, unless you are a celebrity, you can easily become irrelevant.
Companies need to invest in social media experts if they want to stay relevant in the cyber world.


Tuesday, 3 February 2015

Internal Marketing? Use Social Media

It makes absolutely no sense to promise customers excellent service if the firm’s employees are not ready to deliver it. Therefore continuous internal marketing needs to take place.

Different organisations have delivered their messages to employees in different ways, many have taken to hanging up posters on back of house walls, some, including South West airlines hang photos of staff parties, asserting that the airline is a fun place to work, others send email memos.

Yes, boards and back of house reminders of the core values the firm prides its self on are a great way to decorate, resulting in an enhanced ambience, however, today when most people walk glued to their smartphones, it is hard to believe that any of the posters ever get read.

If we claim that a photo speaks a thousand words, then at 25 frames per second, video adds up to 1.5 million words per minute, it would therefore be advantageous to be sending employees videos they can access on their smartphones during their commute to/from work, reinforcing the brand expectations and the services they are expected to deliver. The firm can create a series, a soap opera if you will to engage employees in a fun way with the brand. Here lies the key, a fun video on social media, will have comments from colleagues, likes, dislikes and shares.

Yammer, behind the firewall  can be used by employees, it will have no public appearances, management can tweet achievements, employees can tweet experiences and messages across the firm can be transported at a tweet of a second! 

Human resources can use podcasts to decipher complicated health insurance policies, give updates on benefits and retirement plans, announce competitions and winners, all information can be accessed at the employee’s convenience and during times they are fully focused on these messages.

It is a marketing firm that takes advantage of the new technologies that generation Y is obsessed with and hence through their engagement can send messages of expectations and of how the customer needs to be treated throughout their experience at the firm.

There is a lot of noise in the life of a typical employee, getting through the noise and reinforcing the brand values and expectations is becoming more of a pressing issue, therefore social media, short, fun videos, podcasts and internal tweeting have to be utilised, they are slowly becoming the only language that can filter through the noise.


Tuesday, 27 January 2015

Tiptoeing on the edge of ethical - Market Research




When Gillette conducted a focus group research that surrounded the usage of razor blades by women, they were told frequent blade changes took place, however, when they conducted observational research, they found that the same women rarely remembered to change the blade as they didn't keep a stock in the shower.
Perspective of action is rarely the same as perspective in action, what consumers
tell researchers is what they think they do, not what they actually do, so why do we continue to use surveys and focus groups? in short - they are a safe bet, we know what to expect and direct the line of thought, an ideology hardly conducive for innovation.
Observational research is exciting, it gives researchers a 3D view of the subject in question, it engages the researcher in the life of the subject and much can be recorded & analysed to uncover the subconscious behaviours; however failing to uncover the next big thing, is a risk that management simply has to accept.
The implications of using vidiography in observational research poses numerous ethical issues that researchers need to consider. 
In a recent survey of shopping motivations and habits, the shopping habits of people where observed for three hours in a mall by placing a camera on them, the mall management was aware of the experiment, but neither other customers nor shop clerks, that the subjects came into contact with, had any idea they were being videoed, which although not illegal is arguably an ethical misconduct.
Further complications occur when subjects forget about the camera (a marketeer's dream!) and therefore may engage in private behaviours, in this particular experiment some forgot to switch off the camera in the changing rooms!
Videography is a game changer, observational research is expensive and daring, its for those seeking innovation, however it needs to be handled with care, because until the technology is upgraded to black out other humans and interpret private behaviours switching off automatically, marketeers either undertake perspectives of action (i.e. just listen to what people think they do) or continuously tiptoe on the edge of ethical.

Friday, 23 January 2015

High Value Boundary Spanners - An overlooked Asset

Social Capital
Social capital is the sum of the potential and actual resources that can be leveraged by an individual through his various human connections.
Human resources management of the potential those individuals who are most likely to possess an abundance of social capital naming the high value boundary spanners (HVBS) is imperative for the success of the MNC.
HVBS are those individuals who infiltrate geographic and cultural boundaries regularly throughout their employment; they are located in any unit of the organisation but are in contact with others from different units

This infiltration of different organisational units allows HVBS to gain insight into different organisational behaviour, culture, norms and indeed dissipate knowledge and information and hence arguably can draw attention and curiosity from other employees.
Transferring knowledge throughout a firm’s global network is what gives  it a competitive advantage over local firms, therefore In order for the international human resources manager to be effective in implementing and achieving strategic corporate objectives they simply must master the ability to navigate individuals who essentially can reach formally and informally more employees at a closer distance than the International Human Resources personnel can, in essence HVBS can act as internal ambassadors of the directives of the HR department and if managed incorrectly can sabotage the HR initiatives. 

Managing culturally diverse social capital
Social capital has attributes that can be clustered into three dimensions naming, structural, relational and cognitive (Nahapiet & Ghoshal, 1998 p.243), considering these dimensions when managing culturally diverse social capital is essential and although these attributes maybe recognised individually they are in fact interrelated (Nahapiet & Ghoshal, 1998 p.243).
IHRM needs to consider the mental map of each individual they are placing in positions where information flow is essential.  This mental mapping is highly influenced by the individual’s ethnocentrism, the way they see things due to cultural influences and upbringing (Shenkar & Luo 2007, p.177).
Some may argue that globalisation can mitigate differences between cultures and that IHRM can afford to implement strategies that would suite all individuals however the cultural differences are apparent and hard to ignore, hence tailor made strategies should take place.
The IHRM should essentially be able to portray its message in a variety of ways in order to reach the maximum number of employees, some dimensions can be globalised such as health and safety regulations, anti-corruption disciplinary actions but others must be localised such as the respect of hierarchies in high power distance cultures and hence their directives must be glocalized. Glocal is the new buzz word and holds little evidence of being implemented to progress the organisational objectives. Many organisation personnel get overwhelmed with trying to follow the head office expectations and therefore never actually re-write the manual in the local language per se.  
When considering all three dimensions of social capital IHRM must be aware of the individuals individualism traits versus collectivism, this can influence their capability to interact positively with other units and different people. Individuals who lack the ability to build relationships may draw negative connotations to the information being dispersed if dealing with individuals from a collective culture, conversely those who suppress information whilst dealing with individualistic cultures (until they feel a relationship is built sufficiently) can hinder the progress of the organisation’s strategic goals. It is the IHRM’s role to train and develop those individuals on how to deal with those from other cultures dissimilar to theirs to realise maximum output.
It is important that IHRM does not take an ethnocentric approach on the power distance and its relevance in the organisation in different international subsidiaries. There are norms and protocols found in some cultures that simply must be abided by in order for HVBS to be able to co-ordinate tasks and knowledge. IHRM personnel from a western country or one with low power distance should be able to comprehend the strength of power distance and the barriers it may impose on offending parties and therefore must dissipate this knowledge to its employees from a low power distance country. It must not take a stance on free flow of information regardless of hierarchy attitude; some simply must follow the hierarchy protocols to reap the benefits of an ‘open door’ policy to different people in the organisation.
The relational dimension of social capital appeals to basic human instinct, those who come across as trust worthy are more likely to be able to extract information and dissipate it uncontested. Although IHRM cannot control a person’s demeanour, they can place those who have compelling trustworthiness attitude in positions, key to the flow of knowledge and hence key to the success of the organisation.

Conclusion
Whilst realising the power of leveraging knowledge and sharing information in an MNC, IHRM must recruit individuals that possess the capabilities to infiltrate numerous units of the organisation in a positive manner. Strategic HRM takes a long term view of the organisation’s staffing needs, opportunities and threats (Mead & Andrews, 2009, p327) hence must be proactive in identifying the correct individuals and not only start searching as and when a vacancy arises, keeping tabs on talent employed by competitors should be part of the HRM initiatives.
The recruitment of those with specialised skills and possibility the ability to develop a new language is beneficial to the role of HVBS, furthermore, individuals must be capable to effectively negotiate, mediate, coach and be assimilative, Individuals who possess these personal qualities of imagination, empathy, optimism and modesty are more likely to be successful at acquiring these skills (Tennyson 2003 p.19). Targeted recruitment and retention is key to IHRM when it comes to HVBS.


References: 
Booz R. (2000), 'Boundary spanners' perceptions of the nature of role and role performance: A study of socialization and communication strategies', Dissertation Abstracts International Section A, 60(8-A) pp. iii-194. PsycINFO, EBSCOhost, viewed 11 October 2013.
Mead, R. & Andrews, T. G. (2009) International management. 4th ed. Chichester, England: John Wiley & Sons
Nahapiet, J. & Ghoshal, S. (1998), 'SOCIAL CAPITAL, INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL, AND THE ORGANIZATIONAL ADVANTAGE', Academy Of Management Review, 23(2) pp. 242-266. Business Source Alumni Edition, EBSCOhost, viewed 10 October 2013.
Shenkar, O. & Luo, Y. (2007) International business. 2nd ed. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Taylor, S. (2007) 'Creating social capital in MNCs: the international human resource management challenge', Human Resource Management Journal, 17 (4), pp.336–354, Wiley InterScience [Online]. DOI:10.1111/j.1748-8583.2007.00049.x
http://dx.doi.org.ezproxy.liv.ac.uk/10.1111/j.1748-8583.2007.00049 (Accessed: 10th Oct 2013).

Saturday, 17 January 2015

Don't spin your wheels solving the wrong Puzzle......




General Mills Case

Defining the wrong marketing research problem is probably the single most detrimental factor to deriving sound findings.  

The marketing research road map starts by defining the problem, any mistakes at the start filter through the whole research leading to wrong findings, wasting resources and in extreme cases development of products that completely flop. 

Precise definition of the problem without management bias is imperative. 

BN a subsidiary of General Mills in France fell into the trap of defining their marketing problem as 'what the competitors are doing that we are not' after declining market share three years in a row of their cash cow product the gouter (chocolate filled cookie - a favourite after school snack for the French).

Management bias closely aligned their failures with the success of the competitors narrowly defining their marketing problem and research hence, disabling a wider view of the problem. The company decided to put more weight into their advertising to remedy their problem and to their chagrin the situation worsened. 

When a fresh pair of eyes from the head office came and looked at the research data, they realised that the product was no longer desirable, the French subsidiary had changed the ingredients to cut costs as they were directed to increase profit margins by the Americans. 

The Americans were surprised to find the product was altered and the French were surprised that the Americans were surprised, since it seemed obvious that cost cutting would change the product mix to a lower quality alternatives!

Once the problem was redefined as 'what taste do the customers favour' then a new selection was introduced reversing the decline in market share.


Common Mistake 

Decision makers often give researchers a verbal brief as they do not think it's their job to write down the problem and analyse all the factors that may have contributed to their problem and herein one of the main mistakes are made. 

When decision makers spend sufficient time writing and analysing, the market research brief becomes clearer, targeted and easier for the research team to navigate. 

The channels of communication between the research team and decision makers need to be open, honest and based on mutual cooperation in order to design the right market research survey and derive the right answers. Decision makers have to be ready to invest an abundance of time feeding the researchers information about the market, industry, products and competitor products as well as personal hunches in order for researchers to put the pieces of the right puzzle together!





Tuesday, 13 January 2015

Merging Subsidiaries - Is culture converging, diverging or crossverging?


Merging a subsidiary with headquarters

The theories surrounding convergence where cultures are supposedly becoming more alike due to shared technologies and economical advances, divergence where cultures are retaining their attributes regardless of external pressures and maybe changing but at a rate hardly relevant and crossvergence which demonstrates a combination of the two (Ralston 2008, p.28-29) are extremely important to an international manager trying to integrate a subsidiary closer to the headquarters.
Firstly, the organisation needs to recognise the similarities and differences between the headquarters and the subsidiary, hence analysing the cultural distance. It then needs to analyse the work values in order to conclude on the reliability of the control systems in place and finally continually monitor shifting in work values (Mead & Andrews 2009, p.418). Therefore understanding if there is a divergence, convergence or in fact crossvergence taking place can assist in formulating plans to integrate the subsidiary with headquarters. 
The headquarters will most likely need to expatriate a manager to the subsidiary if in fact it finds that the national culture is diverging and having an impact on the subsidiary’s corporate culture, one that is shifting away from headquarters values and culture. If however the analysis show a convergence, it can utilise the technologies used that assist in convergence to bring about the change needed to integrate. The crossvergence theory will enable the organisation to identify those aspects that need tweaking to fit into the headquarters culture and those that are already somewhat in tune.
In conclusion, understanding of the above concepts assists in formulating a targeted plan whereby different traits of the organisational culture need different practices to integrate the subsidiary as a whole.

Cross cultural management and theories

Due to technological advances, market liberalisation and many parts of the world embracing direct foreign investment, successful business models are bound to be replicated whilst failing models become extinct as those harbouring them will eventually be taken over, merged or closed down. Therefore ‘...business practices are converging in some respects and to some degree...’ (Mead & Andrews 2009, p. 411) however this does not necessarily translate to individual’s private life, religious beliefs and cultural norms, which are bound to fester in the workplace sometimes and require understanding from the headquarters. For example in the Islamic holy month of Ramadan were Muslims fast, it is an excepted fact that things slow down in the Arabian gulf, not much business during the daylight hours takes place, which may frustrate those in the headquarters even if there is reasonable cultural coherence at other times. Appreciation of the religious culture even if convergence in other aspects of business dealings takes place is conducive to better work harmony between the subsidiary and head office.
Crossvergence compliments different cross-cultural frameworks because it lacks definitive borders, it does not view culture as remaining static nor does it hypothesise that the whole world will eventually identify with the same traits, nor is it one dimensioned, it takes into account different aspects of external and internal influences.
Hofstede’s (1997) seminal work on culture is indicative of differing traits of differing cultural groups and their influence on business behaviour, whilst also noting that employees of multi-national organisations  do not need to agree on each others’ cultural traits only on their work practices Hofstede et al., (1990 p.311) recognises that common grounds in the workplace is in fact possible and essential, even if individuals’ cultural traits differ due to age, nationality beliefs and morals. 
Crossvergence allows for the cultural ambiguity of those individuals who shift between two or more cultures and whose numbers according to Hong et al. (2000 p. 709) are on the rise, these individuals cannot be viewed to affiliate with one culture alone. Some may view this switch as a vehicle for transporting different cultural traits to different groups, hence decreasing the cultural distance in some aspects of the organisational culture.
Management theories, recognise that those who come from cultures that are exposed to other cultures on regular basis are more likely to have imported some traits from the foreign culture. Arguably, the cultural traits that are exported are mostly Anglo-Saxon through the wide spread of global American organisations and brands, pop music  and TV shows, hence we can conclude that those cultures who are exposed and are open to organisations from differing parts of the world and that they possibly identify to a large extend with the American culture. This fact is further enhanced when English is being used as the functional language of many organisations, hence bringing Anglo-Saxon corporate ideologies closer to foreign cultures.

Elements to be considered when merging subsidiary 

There are many aspects of the subsidiary’s culture that need to be evaluated in order to make a decision on the most effective theoretical framework to use in order to integrate a subsidiary.
Studying Hofstede’s (1997) model and understanding the cultural distance between the subsidiary and the headquarters is important, if the subsidiary culture is individualistic then rewards to individuals who conform to the ‘new’ standards maybe accepted however if collective culture prevails then group incentives and acceptance is more prevalent.
The language used at the subsidiary may impose a barrier, hence expatriating a manger who can speak the language, yet is part of the headquarters is key to changing the practices without him being viewed as a complete outsider and hence employees maybe more accepting of his new practices, this is especially important to collectivists.
Integrating is viewed as less empowerment for the subsidiary, some may appreciate it as the subsidiary staff may want standardised practices or resent it as change is often unwelcome, unless incentives are highlighted.  Therefore the level of control the headquarters assume may need to be gradually increased in order to be accepted, a sudden upheaval will especially in a collectivist culture, where stability is important pose risk to the morale of the employees that may impact negatively on the organisation’s performance and to shareholders wealth.
In conclusion, there is no one theory to be followed, an analysis of culture and desired control level needs to take place and strategies to reach the desired outcome must be implemented.


References:
Hofstede, G. (1997) ‘Cultures and Organizations: Software of the mind’ McGraw-Hill: New York

Hofstede, G, Neuijen, B, Ohayv, D, & Sanders, G (1990), 'Measuring Organizational Cultures: A Qualitative and Quantitative Study across Twenty Cases', Administrative Science Quarterly. 35(2) pp.286-316 

Hong, Y. Morris, M. Chiu, C. & Benet-Martínez, V. (2000), 'Multicultural minds: A dynamic constructivist approach to culture and cognition', American Psychologist, 55(7), pp.709-720.

Mead, R. & Andrews, T. G. (2009) International management. 4th ed. Chichester, England: John Wiley & Sons



Ralston, D.A. (2007) ‘The crossvergence perspective: reflections and projections’, Journal of International Business Studies, 39 (1), pp. 27–40, Palgrave Macmillan [Online]. DOI:10.1057/palgrave.jibs.8400333 (Accessed: 23 December 2009).
http://dx.doi.org.ezproxy.liv.ac.uk/10.1057/palgrave.jibs.8400333

Sunday, 11 January 2015

Money Is No Object - Employee Motivation Is Subjective!

Motivation is subjective!

Any economic organisation will seek to coordinate the actions of groups of people and to motivate those people to carry out certain tasks, hence motivation is a large part of a firm's ability to progress and achieve its overall objective and bottom line goals, therein lies the art & science of employee motivation!

Some multinationals (no less) have made the grave assumption that the planet is inhabited by essentially one race and culture and that we are all motivated in the same way. 
Ofcourse the seminal work of Maslow and many other motivational theorists are not to be underestimated but a deeper understanding of operating environment and culture is required by the international human resources manager.

To some its obvious, if there is a positive correlation between the hours worked and the money earned provided you like your job, then a recipe for motivation is found; the American style may work for some, mostly individualistic cultures but not for others, a hard lesson learnt by the giant Lincoln electric.

Lincoln's piecework & bonus reward system was exceptional and attracted those who were willing to work hard to earn big, hence turnover was below industry average, there was never any problem to get staff to work overtime, in fact the company had to make a rule that employees were disallowed from commencing work more than half an hour prior the start of their shift. A match made in heaven you could say!
To the company's horror in the early 1990s when it made a number of international acquisitions, this reward system didn't sit too well with the French and other nations, sick leaves were high, no willingness to work overtime and turnover was higher than industry average.
In a century of doing business, Lincoln made losses due to the failure of the acquisitions.

Lincoln would have faired well by employing a comprehensive study to truly understand what motivates employees in different countries. 

Some would rank flexibility higher than financial reward as their community requires their attendance to frequent functions and if pushed too far would rather find a different employer. 

Intrinsic rewards verses extrinsic rewards, self motivation and sense of belonging to an organisation all may play a role, motivation is essentially subjective, there is no one solution fits all across oceans! 

Friday, 9 January 2015

The $30 million mistake... Ethics in market research



Market Research 

Market research is central to filling the gaps that decision makers have with regards to marketing decisions, it allows for insight into consumers needs, demands and wants, after which, if handled correctly organisations can convert this information with sound business sense to profits.


Ethics & Brand Image

Consumers are often angry if they believe that they were manipulated, used or taken advantage of to increase organisational profits; this is even more so relevant with big multinational organisations where consumers believe that they make too much profits at the expense of the consumer anyway.
It is therefore detrimental to a brand if market research was conducted unethically, the brand that is undertaking the research or the market research company that is conducting the research on behalf of the brand can in fact harm it in the way of boycotts and bad publicity. 

Today, where word of mouth can spread easily with social media; no longer are dissatisfied consumers contained easily, therefore every brand contact they have has to be satisfactory including market research. Today a dissatisfied customers can tell of their experience on Facebook, Twitter, blogs unto 20,000 or even 200,000 people (Safko, 2012 p.7).

Ethics, Legislation & Motivation

Market research is already subject to legislation that include the respect of participants’ privacy, if organisations use information illegally, they can face hefty fines. Citi group was fined $30 million for leaking market research material to some clients giving them a heads up to trade on iPhone ahead of other investors (Macdonald, 2013) effecting their bottom line and reputation. A further concern is the age of the participant, if the market research company cannot verify the age, then they could in fact be talking to children without parental consent opening a flood gates of lawsuits. Verifying the age of participants is of extreme importance to market research (Malhotra, Birks, Wills 2012 p.31).
If the industry continuously abuse their participants’ rights the whole industry can face more and more legislation that can eventually cripple their ability to conduct effective market research.


The motivation for consumers to engage in market research can be effected if they feel that their answers are being manipulated. They may come to resent the research and tailor make answers or refuse to engage in research completely (Malhotra, Birks, Wills 2012 p.30). They may decide to withhold information if they feel that the researcher has an agenda with regards to the outcome or if they feel that that the research is likely to be used for more than its intended purpose, i.e. for marketing directly to clients. Withholding information or giving the researcher wrong information can be to the detriment of the research as the results no longer give a true picture.

The research participant can begin the process and then disengage if they feel they are not being treated fairly and given all relevant information, this would mean that the organisation spends money and resources only for them to be wasted due to unethical conduct.

An example of this is, a market research personnel who stand in a shopping mall and ask people to take a survey, telling them it would take five minutes when it actually takes thirty minutes. Many people will excuse themselves after ten minutes and say “I’m sorry, I have to go now” leaving research half empty and irrelevant to the researcher and the company. Many people who have this experience will refuse to answer questions again, therefore if the market research company is operating in a small town, this could have enormous impact on their ability to conduct future research for their clients.

Conclusion

Unethical market research effects results disallowing them from painting a true picture and insight into consumer’s thoughts and motivations. Incorrect results  can have a negative impact on marketing decisions harming bottom line.




References: 

Macdonald, S. (2013), 'Citi fined $30m for market research leaks', Fundweb, [online]. Available from: http://search.ebscohost.com.ezproxy.liv.ac.uk/login.aspx?direct=true&db=bth&AN=90680383&site=eds-live&scope=site (Accessed 9th January 2015)

Malhotra, N., Birks, D. & Wills, P. (2012) Marketing Research: An Applied Approach. 4th ed. Harlow: Financial Times/Prentice Hall


Safko, L. (2012) 'The Social Media Bible: Tactics, Tools and Strategies for Business Success', 3rd Edition. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Thursday, 8 January 2015

What's this marketing research then, Dave?

Is Marketing Research Necessary?

James Birks who founded and managed Kiln construction for forty years has been said to have asked his grandson Dave (who wrote a marketing research book) what marketing research was all about!

This alludes to the fact the James Birks has indeed never carried out any marketing research and yet managed to manufacture products for porcelain and ceramics internationally for names such as Wedgwood, Royal Doulton & Spode.

Could this really be possible?  

Successful organisations see market research as an ongoing function of marketing research, they continuously speak to their customers, suppliers and colleagues in the business as well as those who know the macro environment surrounding the business. James Birks was renowned in doing just that.

Marketing research is there to fill in some gaps, solidify hunches and give a starting point to a problem or understanding the perceived  image of a product, they are what is happening today.

What marketing research does not do is guarantee success of a decision and does not allow for innovation much. It is hard for people to realise they would buy something if they have never seen it or even identified the need for it. 
Dyson vacuum is an example of this whereby all research showed that people are uncomfortable buying a bag-less, see-through vacuum as they didn't want people to see all the dirt collected from their homes and retailers indicated they couldn't demonstrate such a product on the shop floor. Not only was Dyson a hit but it was sold at double the price of available vacuums with no problem!

Ethics, asking the right questions and evaluating return on investment are all factors to consider and will be discussed in future rants.

Marketing research - handle with care!







Monday, 5 January 2015

If cyberspace was a planet... Social Media, LIKE IT

Embracing Social Media

Social Media is great is it not? Why are so many companies drawing up policies as long as the River Thames prohibiting their employees from engaging on their behalf?

Organisations today, or at least those worth talking about have become so concerned with their publicity on social media that they tend to scare their employees off from using it whilst bringing up the organisation's name. Those organisations are obviously oblivious to the fact that they are indeed very much on social media, but prohibiting stakeholders from protecting the organisation's interests.

Lets consider cyberspace a planet, where messages in envelopes need to be sent to earth by shooting them from some type of machine that hopes to break through the atmosphere of cyberspace and then earth after which the messages get pulled to earth by gravity.

Do we have a better chance trying to shoot a million envelopes from the same island on planet cyberspace (all while the planet is rotating) or  are we more likely to succeed trying a million envelopes from various locations on planet cyberspace? 

Employees of multinationals shoot messages out all the time whether inside the premises of the organisation, out in a bar (what do you do? I work at....) and we trust them to safeguard proprietary information and reflect a positive image of the organisation, so why are we falling behind from allowing them to do just that on planet cyberspace?

Sure, there has to be guidelines to ensure that consumers are not misled for examples employees should declare they work for a company whilst talking about it, but should these guidelines, policies and procedures be too long, too boring and too complicated? No.

We should stop shooting only from the marketing department and start shooting from the organisation as a whole.

We trust employees to behave on planet earth, we should trust them to do just that on planet cyberspace! 





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Sunday, 4 January 2015

Big money makes big mistakes! Expatriation....

losing talent

It is estimated that only 10% of American multinationals bother training their staff prior to expatriation in comparison with 70% European and Japanese companies.

Some Japanese companies go as far as one year training prior to expatriation.

Expatriation has an enormous impact on employees and their family life, training to handle this change is essential to ensure employee productivity remains high. It is the job of the international human resources department to recruit and retain talented employees and expatriation causes stress large enough for employees that many end up resigning post repatriation.

Repatriation after five years of expatriation is likely to cause stress and lack of satisfaction among employees who have mastered by that point the 'way to do business' in their expat post and hence end up quitting the company within one year of returning to their home country.

Training and continuos assurance of employees by showing genuine empathy and understanding of stresses of expatriation ensures loyalty and loyalty ensures talented employees are retained.

Too many times organisations hire people with no people skills in key human resource  positions, people with no humility and understanding of an employee as a whole i.e. family situation etc into key human resources positions and then wonder what's going wrong!

Hire for humility, train for skill in human resources...

Simple? you would think...