Responsibility and Internationalization: Developing Corporate Responsibility Strategy to Prevent Crises Dr. Patrick Reinmoeller Professor of Strategic Management Cranfield School of Management Cranfield University Patrick.Reinmoeller@cranfield.ac.uk CRP measures in countries are the explicit part of mostly tacit values and customs. 1 Profitability and Superior Performance Strategy CRP International Strategy: Localization? Global integration? Country 1 Country n Country … Mexico Core Strategy Country … Country … USA Nafta Country 2 Country Country Country Japan Country Country Japan Country Thailand Japan Japan China Country Japan Canada Core Strategy Country Country… Country Country Country I F B E Country ... Country ... Asia Country NL Europe Country n Core Strategy Country ... Country 1 Country 2 Country ... 2 Understanding what matters • Is your CRP influenced by the industry your are in, bad/good timing or by networks? • What explains CRP differences between firms? • Using variance decomposition • Data from 130 large Japanese firms over 5 years (O’Shaughnessy, Gedajlovic, Reinmoeller 2007) Variance Components of ROA, Market to Book and CRP ROA Market to Book CRP Year 3.8% 5.5% 1.2% Industry 5.7% 4.7% 25.6% Keiretsu 1.7% 0% 0% Firm 47% 48.1% 58.0% Full model 58.2% 58.3 84.8% Effect (O’Shaughnessy, Gedajlovic and Reinmoeller, 2007) 3 Measuring “responsible” Behavior • Conceptualization/labeling in US • Western (US) standards and measures • CRP localization or global integration? Motivation How firms perform in terms of Corporate Responsibility is a issue of great importance. How it can be managed in globally operating firms is unclear. Many studies define corporate responsibility performance (CRP) as dependent performance variable (outcome) – as if independent of context. Management needs guidelines to pursue higher CRP. This paper develops a framework CRP for international competition. Research questions Does context matter for CRP? How does context matter for CRP? Case studies Country measures of CRP Results Context defines CRP. Universal issues and peripheral issues co-exist. Managers are responsible for their choices that lead to CRP. 4 Inherent contradictions call for putting CRP in context Extreme Ideals - responsible firms survive - firms that survive are responsible Economic consequences - CSP as public good - efficiency requires goal setting and standard taking - benefits through differentiation vis-à-vis compliance Definitions - specific norms and values (quality) - reputation (perceived quality) - construction (emergent quality) - input (CRP drives performance) - process (CRP as improvement exercise) - output (CRP as measure) - institutions (CRP as prevailing norms) Quest for clarity - Decision makers need a standard to improve Method: comparative case of CRP measures Content analysis Standardized measures defining CRP Comparing strategic decision making vis-à-vis these measures CRP measures seek to influence corporations and to focus corporate behavior by making legitimate expectations of different stakeholder Focus on explicit CSR measures (current state of CSP) 5 1) One country (US) two measures of CRP*: lead to different sets of choices Community Employees Diversity Defense/Military (neg.) Consumer orientation Employment for women Environmental protection Contributions to society South Africa (neg.) Homosexuality Nuclear Power (neg.) Prevention of cruelty against animals * KLD and CEP 2) Two countries (US and Japan) and three measures**: lead to different choices in international competition US South Africa (neg.) Defense/Military (neg.) Homosexuality Prevention of cruelty against animals Nuclear Power (neg.) Community* Consumer orientation Environmental protection Employees* Diversity* Employment for women Contributions to society Information Disclosure Corporate Ethics Japan * Shared categories across three measures **KLD, CED and ICC (Reinmoeller 2008) 6 Two contexts can lead to different choices and CRP Fully cleared Partially cleared US+ US+Japan Key issues Japan+ Partially cleared Fully Cleared US Japan Measures In international competition firms make resource allocation choices between 1) meeting the local CSP expectations fully in all markets 2) meeting the local CSP expectations selectively 3) meeting selected CSP expectations in all markets 4) meeting CSP ambitions (if higher than CSP expectations) (Reinmoeller 2008) Results Context matters for CSP within and across countries. Context matters by guiding resource allocation to co-existing core issues and peripheral issues. International consensus in development. Core issues may be more stable and staple. Peripheral issues may be instable but differentiating. Managers are responsible for their choices of strategic options that lead to CSP. Managers need to overcome contradictions (economizing vs exhausting) 7 Possible solutions to overcome contradictions • Adapt, Adopt or Integrate • Accepting the path dependence of standardized measures • Development of company specific CRP initiatives and measures (innovation to simplify and differentiate) • Overcoming contradictions through structural and process solutions (ambidexterity and dialectics) • Leadership and cognitive styles • Shared prudence (unified style and adaptive autonomy) Importance of Items over multiple CRP measures Copyright © 2008 Reinmoeller 8 Measuring Overlap and Outliers Girwan Newman Clustering Copyright © 2008 Reinmoeller Deciding on Global CSP Strategy is complex … but can be simplified • 8 countries • Meaningful differences • 10 measures • Identifying outliers • 55 items • 190 attention points • Outlier analysis • Content analysis • Strategic Options Copyright © 2008 Reinmoeller 9 Patrick Reinmoeller Patrick.reinmoeller@cranfield.ac.uk 10