2016/2017 KAN-CCMIU1002U CEMS Global Strategic Management
English Title | |
CEMS Global Strategic Management |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Mandatory |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Start time of the course | Autumn |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Min. participants | 60 |
Max. participants | 60 |
Study board |
Study Board for BSc og MSc in Business, Language and Culture,
MSc
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Course coordinator | |
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Main academic disciplines | |
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Last updated on 19-05-2017 |
Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
To achieve the grade 12, students should meet the
following learning objectives with no or only minor mistakes or
errors:
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Course prerequisites | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
THIS COURSE IS ONLY OPEN TO CEMS MIM STUDENTS
Before the course starts you are expected to gain sufficient understanding of the essentials of strategic management, or if you feel you already master these to refresh that understanding. For this purpose you are very strongly advised to use a newly developed online CEMS app (details to be confirmed) or study a strategy textbook such as Robert Grant’s Contemporary Competitive Advantage. During the course there will not be time to revisit the essentials of strategic management. Please contact the lecturer (mmo.smg@cbs.dk) at your earliest convenience if you have any questions about this. |
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Prerequisites for registering for the exam | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of mandatory
activities: 2
Requirements about active
class participation (assessed approved/not approved)
Participation in the two group presentations in class is mandatory and must be completed in order to be admitted to the course exam. |
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Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content and structure | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Welcome to the course “Global Strategic Management” that forms a core part of the CEMS Program. The aim of the course is to help you improve in your ability to be an effective global manager, especially in the area of strategy. To achieve this aim, we will use a variety of learning tools, supported by relevant academic thinking where needed.
Because of the complex nature of the subject studied, the emphasis of this course is not on developing and applying simple recipes. Furthermore, we will strongly emphasize your ability to tackle real-life problems, and do so partly in a group setting. Thus there are three key interrelated goals in this course and this is reflected in the specific learning objectives:
1. Obtaining a Global Strategic Management Mindset. To be successful as a global strategic manager, you must be able to think, act, and manage in ways that extend beyond a single country approach. This requires an open, (self-) critical, and adaptive approach, which should allow you to operate effectively in a multitude of contexts.
2. Acquiring Global Strategic Management Knowledge. To be successful as a global strategic manager, you must have an understanding of the drivers of global strategies, how these strategies affect a variety of outcomes, and through what strategy processes they come about. This requires an ability to know both what the most appropriate solution is theoretically and how practical factors affect that solution.
3. Applying Global Strategic Management Skills. To be successful as a global strategic manager, you must have a variety of personal skills, including the ability to turn knowledge into concrete action, the ability to work in teams to solve complex problems, and the ability to critically reflect on your own abilities and shortcomings
This course builds upon foundational knowledge of (non-global) strategic management, which you are expected to have acquired previously and focuses on strategic management in a global context. In other words, the object of our interest is how firms formulate and implement strategies when they are operating across national borders or are planning to do so. Within this context, the course aims to provide you with a) an improved ability to analyze global strategies b), an improved ability to formulate global strategies, and c) an improved ability to execute global strategies. Our focus throughout the course is very much driven by real-life practical problems faced by large and sometimes smaller multinational firms across a wide range of industries and countries. Below you will find further detail on (1) the course description, (2) the learning objectives, (3) the classes and group work, (4) the examination, and (5) the course sessions and readings. As in real-life settings, we assume you have come to this course ready to work in teams and willing to participate in class discussions. Furthermore we strongly expect you to engage in a learning process and to be able to articulate that learning.
The course essentially takes an evolutionary perspective, tracking how global strategic management in practice has changed over time up to where it is today and will go tomorrow. Such an approach is useful because it allows us to understand more basic settings prior to considering how global strategic management is becoming ever more complex. This complexity takes multiple forms, for instance in terms of types of decision-making, geographic spread, organizational models, the involvement of partners, and multiple and more diffuse performance objectives.
The focus in this course is on practically relevant issues, and to some extent directly on the role you as an individual will have in tackling such issues. This practical perspective is shadowed by relevant literature and conceptual debates where needed, i.e. the focus is not on the literature as such. However, through additional background readings you can dig into the literature and these conceptual debates as much as you need and want to
Sessions
We strongly encourage presence in the classroom and
participation in both classroom discussion and group work. Such
participation should facilitate the writing of your learning diary,
which is an integral part of the individual assignment you must
pass in order to pass the course. Ample room will be provided for
you to participate in classroom discussion, regardless of whether
you prefer to tackle issue from a more practical or more conceptual
angle. We use multiple learning tools in this class, including case
studies, lectures, group presentations, role play, and practitioner
contributions. Each of these tools provides different benefits.
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Teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Classes, group work and class presentations | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Student workload | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Expected literature | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
In this session we will first introduce the course, including the group work and assignment. Then we briefly revisit our understanding of strategic management (without the global) and set out the stall for global strategic management: What is it (not), why do we need it and how do we go about it? We then discuss multinational corporations, which are the vehicle for global strategic management and briefly look at formal and informal institutions. We will dig into some shorter examples throughout this session. There are no group presentations
Core readings and materials:
Further readings:
2. Structures and processes in global strategic management (MM)
One aspect of session is the idea that organizational structures and strategies are intertwined and that a choice of structure therefore enables / constrains strategic choices that organizations make. We then zoom in on a key aspect of organizational structure in global strategic management, the headquarter-subsidiary relationship. Next we look at global strategic management through a process angle, i.e. how does global strategic management get done? The session includes a simulation exercise. Groups 1 to 6 will provide a short initial presentation during this session.
Core readings and materials:
Further readings:
3. Entry decisions and strategic market assessment
This session starts looking at how to assess competitive advantage for subsidiaries. Based on the competitiveness assessment, the session explores: i) the dimensions to assess the choice of a new international market to enter into, ii) how to assess how strategic is that potential market, and iii) the choice of the entry mode appropriate to the market and firm characteristics. Groups 7 to 12 will provide a short initial presentation during this session.
Core readings and materials:
Further readings:
4. International corporate growth (FDL)
This session introduces external growth strategies with focus on alliances and acquisitions. After the introduction of what these growth strategies are, the session explores: i) how (market conditions and firm characteristics) to decide between these two strategic options, ii) international dimensions of alliances and acquisitions, and iii) how to assess the performance of these operations, also from an international perspective. Groups 1 and 2 will present. Groups 7 and 8 will act as clients for these presentations.
Core readings and materials:
Further readings:
5. Country analysis and environment
The session looks at how regions are heterogeneous in providing challenges and opportunities to multinational corporations. More precisely, the session will reflect on the assessment of the competitiveness of specific geographies. The concept of distance among regions is discussed to understand how it affects international business opportunities. Groups 3 and 4 will present. Groups 9 and 10 will act as clients for these presentations.
Core readings and materials:
Further readings:
6.Knowledge flows in multinational corporations
The session looks at the role of knowledge in multinational corporation. In particular, the session discusses: i) knowledge as form of power in the HQ-subsidiary relationship, ii) knowledge production in subsidiary and transfers within multinational corporation, and iii) the role of corporate venture capital as knowledge sourcing strategy in multinational corporation. Groups 5 and 6 will present. Groups 11 and 12 will act as clients for these presentations.
Core readings and materials:
Further readings:
7.Taking global strategic management apart
The aim of this session is to understand how global strategic management can be viewed as a collection of modules sourced from within or outside an organisation, and within or outside a country. Groups 7 and 8 will present. Groups 1 and 2 will act as clients for these presentations.
Core readings and materials:
Further readings:
8. Wicked problems: Maintaining legitimacy in global strategic management
This session investigates the ‘dark’ side of multinational corporations, especially their struggle in maintaining corporate social responsibility across the many domains they operate in. Groups 9 and 10 will present. Groups 3 and 4 will act as clients for these presentations.
Core readings and materials:
Further readings:
9. The last frontier: Global strategic management in Africa
During this session we look at what can arguably be seen as the one remaining unexplored continent in global strategic management, Africa. We try to understand Africa from an opportunities perspective, while not ignoring its challenges. Groups 11 and 12 will present. Groups 5 and 6 will act as clients for these presentations.
Core readings and materials:
Further readings:
10. Creating global strategic management for tomorrow
In the final session we specifically look at what individuals, you yourself included, do in global strategy, especially how they innovate in management practices. This involves some in-class group work. We then recapture the course. There are no group presentations.
Core readings and materials:
Further readings:
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