“…All the key companies in the sector are also involved in acquisitions to extend their market reach (p. 12). There is also evidence of a shift towards the ‘Anglo‐Saxon model’ of business with an increased emphasis on ‘shareholder value’ (p. 9) and standardized financial reporting to meet the requirements of the US capital markets (Becker‐Ritterspach et al., 2002).…”
Section: Comparative Discussion Of the Empirical Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In terms of the standardization of business practices in our three MNCs, our research partners’ work points to an increase in indirect methods of coordination and control in all three MNCs, including the use of financial indicators to measure performance, radical sanctions if subsidiaries fail to perform well and share options for top management at all levels to lock them into the shareholder value perspective (Becker‐Ritterspach et al., 2002). Amy showed the greatest level of acceptance and operationalization of the shareholder value concept through individual company performance targets expressed in earnings per share and constant reference by all managers interviewed to shareholder value as the driving force behind company policies and practices.…”
Section: Comparative Discussion Of the Empirical Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This paper forms part of a wider research project to analyse change management processes in MNCs, which has been jointly developed with researchers from Germany. Elsewhere the focus has been on the (top‐down) application of new strategies by power holders at MNC HQ level (Becker‐Ritterspach et al., 2002). This paper considers the strategies from the subsidiary level perspective and investigates the emerging choices and constraints in the management practices of local managers in German and British subsidiaries of three MNCs in the same industrial sector as they interact with their wider social context within the host country and within the MNC itself.…”
Section: Research Design and Methodologymentioning
This paper seeks to examine empirically the extent to which actors in subsidiaries of multinational companies (MNCs) are able to exercise some choice in the face of global pressures from the MNC headquarters (HQ). We argue that managerial practices in MNCs are not the result of a simple imposition of a global or a MNC organisational rationality but are subject to an interactive process, where differing contextual rationalities come into play. Using data from MNC subsidiaries in Britain and Germany, the paper compares the power resources and strategic choices of subsidiary level actors and shows the ways in which they seek to influence global strategy implementation as it affects local work systems. We investigate the different abilities of German and British managers to shape global restructuring processes in their local organisational contexts and conclude that national contexts impact on both the formulation of parent company strategies via a home country rationality and on the implementation of global strategies via a host country rationality. There are greater national barriers to a MNC policy of convergence based on standardized products and processes in Germany than in the UK.
“…All the key companies in the sector are also involved in acquisitions to extend their market reach (p. 12). There is also evidence of a shift towards the ‘Anglo‐Saxon model’ of business with an increased emphasis on ‘shareholder value’ (p. 9) and standardized financial reporting to meet the requirements of the US capital markets (Becker‐Ritterspach et al., 2002).…”
Section: Comparative Discussion Of the Empirical Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In terms of the standardization of business practices in our three MNCs, our research partners’ work points to an increase in indirect methods of coordination and control in all three MNCs, including the use of financial indicators to measure performance, radical sanctions if subsidiaries fail to perform well and share options for top management at all levels to lock them into the shareholder value perspective (Becker‐Ritterspach et al., 2002). Amy showed the greatest level of acceptance and operationalization of the shareholder value concept through individual company performance targets expressed in earnings per share and constant reference by all managers interviewed to shareholder value as the driving force behind company policies and practices.…”
Section: Comparative Discussion Of the Empirical Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This paper forms part of a wider research project to analyse change management processes in MNCs, which has been jointly developed with researchers from Germany. Elsewhere the focus has been on the (top‐down) application of new strategies by power holders at MNC HQ level (Becker‐Ritterspach et al., 2002). This paper considers the strategies from the subsidiary level perspective and investigates the emerging choices and constraints in the management practices of local managers in German and British subsidiaries of three MNCs in the same industrial sector as they interact with their wider social context within the host country and within the MNC itself.…”
Section: Research Design and Methodologymentioning
This paper seeks to examine empirically the extent to which actors in subsidiaries of multinational companies (MNCs) are able to exercise some choice in the face of global pressures from the MNC headquarters (HQ). We argue that managerial practices in MNCs are not the result of a simple imposition of a global or a MNC organisational rationality but are subject to an interactive process, where differing contextual rationalities come into play. Using data from MNC subsidiaries in Britain and Germany, the paper compares the power resources and strategic choices of subsidiary level actors and shows the ways in which they seek to influence global strategy implementation as it affects local work systems. We investigate the different abilities of German and British managers to shape global restructuring processes in their local organisational contexts and conclude that national contexts impact on both the formulation of parent company strategies via a home country rationality and on the implementation of global strategies via a host country rationality. There are greater national barriers to a MNC policy of convergence based on standardized products and processes in Germany than in the UK.
“…For example, the affiliation of expatriates to the HQ on the one hand and to the foreign subsidiary on the other is a situation that presents tactical and strategic alternatives otherwise unavailable in the national framework. Subsidiary managers can weaken, modify or ward off disagreeable and unreasonable requests from HQ by referring to the institutional structures in their country or to the political power of local actors in certain circumstances (for examples, see Becker-Ritterspach et al, 2002;Tempel, 2001). They can, for example, exploit existing differences in national work regulations.…”
Section: Micro-politics and Conflicts In Mncs: Theoretical Foundationmentioning
“…(Marschan, Welch, & Welch, 1999: 429) Contrary to Jukka, in the Lift&Elevators divisions of the German as well as the US-American MNC, the main focus of the control discourse was on output control (Becker-Ritterspach, Lange, & Lohr, 2002).…”
Section: Third Order Controls: Vocabularies Of the Organizationmentioning
This paper compares sensemaking processes in MNCs situated in the same industrial sector. Our comparative analysis of three MNCs and its subsidiaries in Germany and the UK aims to shed light on the contextual dimension (institutions, culture and politics) of the sensemaking process. First we discuss ideologies related to the discourse about global restructuring of manufacturing. Second, we compare similarities and differences in vocabularies of the (multinational) organization. Third, we compare cross-national vocabularies of work in German and British subsidiaries. Finally we suggest a political approach of sensemaking referring to stories used to legitimize or delegitimize dominant 1 First drafts of this paper has been presented at the 18 th EGOS Colloquium in the subgroup 'Language and Politics in
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.