Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- 1 Remaking management: neither global nor national
- Part I Conceptualising International and Comparative Management
- Part II Systems in Transition
- Part III Society as Open and Closed
- Part IV The Search for Global Standards
- Preface: Dominance, best practice and globalisation
- 12 The unravelling of manufacturing best-practice strategies
- 13 Policy transfer and institutional constraints: the diffusion of active labour market policies across Europe
- 14 Comparative management practices in international advertising agencies in the United Kingdom, Thailand and the United States
- 15 Corporate social responsibility in Europe: what role for organised labour?
- 16 Can ‘German’ become ‘international’? Reactions to globalisation in two German MNCs
- Index
16 - Can ‘German’ become ‘international’? Reactions to globalisation in two German MNCs
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- 1 Remaking management: neither global nor national
- Part I Conceptualising International and Comparative Management
- Part II Systems in Transition
- Part III Society as Open and Closed
- Part IV The Search for Global Standards
- Preface: Dominance, best practice and globalisation
- 12 The unravelling of manufacturing best-practice strategies
- 13 Policy transfer and institutional constraints: the diffusion of active labour market policies across Europe
- 14 Comparative management practices in international advertising agencies in the United Kingdom, Thailand and the United States
- 15 Corporate social responsibility in Europe: what role for organised labour?
- 16 Can ‘German’ become ‘international’? Reactions to globalisation in two German MNCs
- Index
Summary
Introduction
While a number of companies have adopted the philosophy that, once they reach a certain degree of globalisation, they can, and should, divorce themselves from their national origins and become ‘international’ instead, sociological and anthropological research on social identity questions whether any company should – or, indeed, can – become completely ‘global’ in this fashion. Through applying a system, society and dominance approach to case studies of the British operations of two German multinationals, one a bank (‘ZwoBank’) and one a car company (‘AutoWorks’), I examine how they took different approaches to the process of being seen as ‘international’, study the impact of this process upon the management culture of the organisation and conclude with a look at more general implications for cross-cultural management and international human resource management.
‘Made in Germany’ or ‘Made by Siemens’: the problem outlined
The dominance effect, hyperglobalisers and convergence
Although it may seem counter-intuitive in light of the evidence to the contrary, the ‘hyperglobaliser’ and ‘convergence’ philosophies continue to exist, and to contribute to the idea that companies can become truly international. In this section I challenge this idea using SSD theory.
David Held, Anthony McGrew, David Goldblatt and Jonathan Perraton (1999) identify hyperglobalisers as follows: that they assume that the processes of globalisation are bringing about a new era in which nation states are decreasing in importance and old divisions are being eroded in favour of a new, more egalitarian economic system (3–5; see also Ohmae, 1990).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Remaking ManagementBetween Global and Local, pp. 428 - 458Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008