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2014/2015  KAN-CCMVV4006U  Managing International Business in China

English Title
Managing International Business in China

Course information

Language English
Course ECTS 7.5 ECTS
Type Elective
Level Full Degree Master
Duration One Quarter
Course period Autumn, First Quarter
Timetable Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk
Study board
Study Board for MSc in Economics and Business Administration
Course coordinator
  • Administrator
    Gabriella Stephanie Munch - STU
  • Peter Ping Li - Department of International Economics and Management (INT)
Main academic disciplines
  • Globalization, International Business, markets and studies
  • Corporate and Business Strategy
Last updated on 29-05-2014
Learning objectives
At the end of the course, students should be able:

 To develop students’ ability to apply theoretical frameworks and models to the analysis of opportunities and challenges of managing international business in China;
 To enhance students’ understanding of current business and management practices of multinational companies operating in China;
 To foster students’ awareness and appreciation of the unique historical and current contexts in China.
Course prerequisites
Full Degree Master
Examination
Managing International Business in China:
Exam ECTS 7,5
Examination form Home assignment - written product
Individual or group exam Individual
Size of written product Max. 15 pages
Assignment type Report
Duration 2 weeks to prepare
Grading scale 7-step scale
Examiner(s) One internal examiner
Exam period Winter Term
Make-up exam/re-exam
Same examination form as the ordinary exam
Course content and structure
This course aims to enable students to better identify, understand, analyze, and critically assess the strategic and operational challenges facing multinational firms that seek to succeed in the Chinese market as the fast-growing emerging economy in the world. It will allow students to better engage in managerial and decision-making processes related to the operations by foreign firms in China, especially the specific opportunities and challenges of doing business in China and overall strategy and business model in China.
 
The topics to be covered in this course include the business context in China, entry mode selection, alliance management, negotiation with Chinese partners, human resource management, marketing, and protection of intellectual property rights. These issues and topics are discussed in the light of the relevant theoretical frameworks and models of international business and management, with reference to current business and management practices of multinational companies in the special context of China. In particular, one new phenomenon is the salience of China, as one of leading emerging economies, as a fertile context for developing disruptive innovations from the bottom of the pyramid.  
 
Further, this course will emphasize the critical implications of second-home strategy in the global context.
 
The course will be based on a mix of lectures, discussions, and group case studies in class. The course literature is challenging and students are encouraged to form reading groups.
Teaching methods
The course will be based on a mix of lectures, discussions, and group case studies in class. The course literature is challenging and students are encouraged to form reading groups.
Further Information
Changes in course schedule may occur
Wednesday 08.00-11.30, week 36-42
Wednesday 08.00-12.25, week 43
Expected literature
Tentative Topics for Eight Sessions
 
Session 1: The Unique Context of China: History and Culture
 
Discussion Questions
 
  • Comment on China’s unique history
  • Comment on China’s unique culture
  • How and why is Chinese philosophy distinctive from that from the West?
  • What are the impacts of history and culture on business practices in China?
 
Essential Reading
 
Li, P.P. (1998). Toward a Geocentric Framework of Organizational Form: A Holistic, Dynamic and Paradoxical Approach. Organization Studies, 19 (5): 829-861.
Li, P.P. (2013 forthcoming). The Frame of Yin-Yang Balancing as the Root of Chinese Traditional Culture: The Indigenous Sources and Geocentric Implications. The Psychological and Cultural Foundations of Dialectical Thinking. Peng, K-P. & Spencer-Rodgers, J. (Eds.).
Li, P.P. (2012). Exploring the unique roles of trust and play in private creativity: From the complexity-ambiguity-metaphor link to the trust-play-creativity Link. Journal of Trust Research, 2: 71-97.
 
Session 2: Opening Up and Reform in China
 
Discussion Questions
 
  • Comment on China’s gradual approach to opening up.
  • Why does China continue to limit foreign direct investment in certain sectors of the economy?
  • Why does China continue to maintain control over its foreign exchange rates than move to a floating exchange rate system?
  • What are the business implications for MNEs of the Chinese government’s policy of gradualism?
 
Essential Reading
 
Wang, Y. (2006). China in the WTO: A Chinese View. China Business Review, Sep/Oct, pp. 42-48
Overmyer, M. (2006). WTO: Year Five. China Business Review, Jan/Feb, pp. 26-31
Li, P.P. (2005). The Puzzle of China’s Township-Village Enterprises: The Paradox of Local Corporatism in a Dual-track Economic Transition. Management and Organization Review, 1 (2): 197-224.
Williamson, P. and Zeng, M. (2004). Strategies for Competing in a Changed China, MIT Sloan Management Review, 45 (4): 84-91.
 
Session 3: The Importance of China: Second-Home Strategy
                     
Discussion Questions
 
  • What are the key characteristics of the Second-Home Model?
  • Why do most MNEs need the Second-Home Model as their new business model or strategy?
  • Why is China the best “Second-Home” forthe established MNEs?
  • How should different MNEs address thedistinctive challenges in the process?
 
Essential Reading
 
Ghemawat, P. (2001). Distance still matters: The hard reality of global expansion. Harvard Business Review, 79 (8): 137–147.
Li, P.P. 2012. Second-home strategy for both global incumbents and local challengers. Copenhagen Business School Working Paper.
Li, P.P. (2012). Entrepreneurial leapfrogging in the context of ISE: The Salience of Disruptive Innovation by Emerging Multinationals.Copenhagen Business School Working Paper.
Hoover, W.E. (Jr.) (2006). Making China your second home market: An interview with the CEO of Danfoss, McKinsey Quarterly, January: 84-93.
 
Session 4: The Importance of Guanxi as Informal Institution
 
Discussion Questions
 
  • Define the term ‘guanxi’.
  • What are the main theoretical explanations for guanxi?
  • How important is guanxi in business relationships between Chinese and Western companies? To what extent should MNEs consider building guanxi as part of their business strategy?
  • Suggest strategies for MNEs to create and maintain guanxi relationships.
  • Is guanxi still important today or has the importance of guanxi declining as China has reached an advanced stage of opening up and reform?
 
Essential Reading
 
Li, P.P. (2007). Guanxi as the Chinese Norm for Personalized Social Capital: Toward an Integrated Duality Framework of Informal Exchange. Handbook of Research on Asian Business, Henry W. Yeung (Ed.), London: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2007, Chapter 4, 62-83.
Wilson and Brennan (2010). Doing business in China: Is the Importance of Guanxi
Diminishing? European Business Review, 22 (6): 652-665.
Vanhonacker, W. (2004). Guanxi Networks in China, China Business Review, May/June: pp. 48-53
Dunfee, T.W. and Warren, D.E. (2001). Is Guanxi Ethical? A Normative Analysis of Doing Business in China, Journal of Business Ethics, 32: 191-204.
 
Session 5: Entry Mode
 
Discussion Questions
 
  • Why have wholly foreign owned enterprises become the most popular mode of entry for MNEs into the Chinese market today?
  • Examine the pros and cons of the respective entry modes in the Chinese market.
  • What factors impact on a company’s choice of entry strategy?
  • Examine the reasons behind the failure and success of joint ventures in the automobile industry in China (e.g., the joint venture by Danone and Wahaha).
 
Essential Reading
 
Li, P.P. (2010). Toward a learning-based view of internationalization: The accelerated trajectories of cross-border learning. Journal of International Management (Special issue: 50 Years of IB Research), 16: 43-59.
Li, Y., Li, P.P., Liu, Y. & Yang, D. (2010). Learning Trajectory in Offshore OEM Cooperation: The Transaction Value for Local Suppliers in the Emerging Economies. Journal of Operations Management, 28: 269-282.
Bransfield, S. and Schlueter, D. (2004). When Joint Ventures Go Bad, China Business Review, Sept./Oct.: 24-27.
Borgonjon, J. and Hofmann, D.J. (2008). The Re-Emergence of the Joint Venture, China Business Review, May-June: 32-35.
 
Session 6: Marketing Management
 
Discussion Questions
  • Examine the pricing strategies that foreign companies use to deal with and survive the Chinese competition.
  • Suggest promotion strategies for MNEs wanting to succeed in the Chinese market. What factors should MNEs take into account when advertising in the Chinese market?
  • Examine the difficulties foreign companies have faced in distributing their products within China.
  • Choose a multinational company present in the Chinese market. Analyse its marketing strategy focusing on how it prices, promotes and places its products.
 
Essential Reading
 
Choi, C.J. and Nailer, C. (2005). The China Market and European Companies: Pricing and Surviving the Local Competition, European Business Review, 17 (2): 177-190.
Chen, R. (2004). Corporate Reputation: Pricing and Competing in Chinese Markets- Strategies for Multinationals, Journal of Business Strategy, 25 (6): 45-50.
Anonymous (2005). Moving Forward on Distribution, China Business Review, Nov./Dec.: 24-29
Crocker, G. and Tay, Y.C. (2004). What It Takes to Create a Successful Brand, China Business Review, July/Aug.: 10-16.
McEwen, W. Fang, X. Zhang, C. and Burkholder, R. (2006). Inside the Mind of the Chinese Consumer,Harvard Business Review, 84 (3): 68-76.
 
Session 7: Human Resource Management
 
Discussion Questions
 
  • Why has there been a recent trend for MNEs to move from an ethnocentric/expatriate to a polycentric/localised staffing strategy in China?
  • What problems might MNEs face in implementing a localised staffing strategy?
  • What strategies can be implemented by MNEs in order to improve staff commitment and retain talented local staff within their Chinese operations?
  • How important are the provision of training and development opportunities to the retention of local staff in China?
 
Essential Reading
 
Fryxell, G.E. Butler, J. and Choi, A. (2004). Successful Localization Programs in China: An Important Element in Strategy Implementation, Journal of World Business, 39: 268–282.
Leininger, J. (2007). Recent Compensation and Benefit Trends in China, July/August: 28-30.
Chiu, R.K. Luk, V.W.M. and Tang, T.LP. (2002). Retaining and Motivating Employees: Compensation Preferences in Hong Kong and China, Personnel Review, 31 (4): 402-431.
Walsh, J and Zhu, Y. (2007). Local Complexities and Global Uncertainties: A Study of Foreign Ownership and Human Resource Management in China, The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 18 (2): 49-67.
 
Session 8: Intellectual Property and Negotiating with the Chinese
 
Discussion Questions
 
  • Why are infringements of intellectual property rights so rampant in China?
  • Suggest strategies that MNEs can pursue to protect their intellectual property in China.
  • Comment on the common tactics used by Chinese in negotiations with foreigners.
  • Examine the main differences between Chinese and Western negotiation tactics.
  • Suggest strategies to deal with Chinese negotiation tactics.
 
Essential Reading
 
Jarrett, K. and Wendholt, A. (2010). Transferring Technology to Transform China—Is It Worth It? China Business Review, March/April: 20-24.
Chapa, O. and LeMaster, J. (2007). Chinese Intellectual Property Rights? Know Before You Go, Thunderbird International Business Review, 49 (5): 567–590.
Fang, T. (2006). Negotiation: The Chinese Style, Journal of Business and Industrial Marketing, 21 (1): 50-60.
Graham, J.L. and Lam, N.M. (2003). The Chinese Negotiation, Harvard Business Review, October: 82-91.
 
Course Literature:
 
Required Textbook:None
 
Recommended Textbooks:
 
  1. Li, P.P. (2013, Ed.). Disruptive Innovation in Chinese and Indian Businesses: The Strategic Implications for Local Entrepreneurs and Global Incumbents. London: Routledge
 
  1. Tian, X.W. (2007). Managing International Business in China, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press [There are around 10 copies of this text in the library]
 
Chen, M.J. (2001). Inside Chinese Business, Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 

Last updated on 29-05-2014