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ComputerLand in Japan Ahoud Al-Ajmi Nathalia Copeland Ali Tapper
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Computer land in japan presentation

Jul 15, 2015

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Page 1: Computer land in japan presentation

ComputerLand in Japan

Ahoud Al-Ajmi

Nathalia Copeland

Ali Tapper

Page 2: Computer land in japan presentation

Subsidiary Franchise

• A company who is partly or fully controlled ( 50% or more) by another parent company. Own shares in the company.

• Foreign subsidiaries must follow the laws of the country where the subsidiary operates

• License to open up business(es) by acquiring franchisor’s business model to sell products/services under the name of that business

• Allows home firm to enter country at fairly low cost , gains firm access to local knowledge and commitment from locals

• Grants local groups or entrepreneurs the right to market a company’s products within a certain location

• In this case, franchises are licensed by the subsidiary

Page 3: Computer land in japan presentation

The Issue:

ComputerLand needs to partner with a Japanese company to enter the Japanese market. Looking for:

• Experience in procurement

• Experience in distribution of computer products

ComputerLand’s top candidate: Kanematsu-Gosho

• Japan’s largest electronics trading company (http://m.csmonitor.com/)

• Experience in desired areas

• Had exclusive business dealings with IBM

Case Breakdown

Page 4: Computer land in japan presentation

Timeline of Events: Negotiation

• Chairman of ComputerLand was concerned that if his VP went to Japan, he would be disadvantaged in Japanese culture, so insisted negotiations held in US or by telephone from Japan.

• 9 months of negotiation through emailing/faxing.

• Japanese decision making process tends to have more consultation and agreement with company than with an American company

• Japanese government had to be persuaded that American partner could

have 50% ownership instead of minority position.

Page 5: Computer land in japan presentation

Kanematsu-Gosho will contribute cash to start the joint venture of subsidiary ComputerLand Japan Ltd.

ComputerLand will contribute knowledge, trademark, and technology.

Timeline of Events: Selection

Page 6: Computer land in japan presentation

Timeline of Events: Policy & Operational

Issues

CompterLand Japan Ltd. wants to open franchises in Japan. Could not find individuals who qualified/had necessary cash, so company had to own.

Other Issues:

Store size had to be reduced.

Had trouble getting top-quality employees to want to work for foreign company in Japan.

Coordination issues between proprietor-owned ComputerLand and publically owned Kanematsu-Gosho.

WHERE THEY ARE NOW?WHAT HAPPENED?

outlook

Page 7: Computer land in japan presentation

American vs. Japanese Distribution System

Joint venture

Page 8: Computer land in japan presentation

U.S. vs. Japan: Hofstede Comparison

Page 9: Computer land in japan presentation

Channel relationship based on Hofstede

Uncertainty Avoidance:

High uncertainty avoidance (Japan) • Rules and policies.

Low uncertainty avoidance (U.S)

• More flexible negotiations.

Collectivism vs. Individualism:

Japan is a collectivist society:• Relationship centered

• High context communication.

U.S is individualist society:• Negotiate on adversarial standpoint.

• Low context communication

Page 10: Computer land in japan presentation

Differences in management styles of Joint

venture

Choosing a partner

Long-term orientation (Japan):

• Objective: Gain American technology.

• Evaluate managers of the American company.

Short-term orientation (U.S):

• Objective: Penetrate market.

• Evaluating Japanese managers is not important.

Page 11: Computer land in japan presentation

Joint Venture

Americans:

Formal agreement leads to a successful joint venture.

Japanese:

Trust and confidence lead to a successful joint venture.

Thus: Good relationship should precede any formal or legal document.

Page 12: Computer land in japan presentation

The ‘9-Cs’ Criteria

1) Consumers & their Characteristics

2) Culture

3) Character

4) Capital

5) Cost

6) Competition

7) Coverage

8) Continuity

9) Control

Page 13: Computer land in japan presentation

Most Common Cause of Joint

Venture Failures:

Cultural differences

Poor or unclear leadership

Poor Integration Process

Page 14: Computer land in japan presentation

Global Players Struggling in Japan

Page 15: Computer land in japan presentation

Marketing Implications

Strategic Alliances succeed by learning the mindset of specific individuals

Cultural Compatibility

Market Compatibility

Page 16: Computer land in japan presentation

Questions

• Was it wise for ComputerLand to insist on holding the negotiations in the United States? What were the advantages and disadvantages for each of the parties? Why did Kanematsu-Gosho agree to the location?

• Analysis the differences between the Japanese and American distribution systems as they appear in this case. Which elements of the ‘ComputerLand model’ are transferable to Japan?

• When exporting to another country or setting up a joint venture there, how can you decide which of the local customs and business practices should be accepted, and which of your home country practices should you introduce?