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Quy Huy
Published: Monday, October 31, 2022 - 12:02 In September 2022, Boeing agreed to pay $200 million for charges that it misled investors about two crashes of its 737 Max aircraft that killed 346 people. The penalty imposed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is small change compared to the $2.5 billion shelled out by the plane maker last year to settle a criminal fraud suit filed by the U.S. Dept. of Justice. Sadly, Boeing is just one of many multinational corporations (MNCs) to fall foul of the authorities or public opinion over subpar products in recent years. In 2016, Samsung had to recall its flagship smartphone globally at a cost of $5.3 billion over complaints of exploding batteries. Meanwhile in China, Heinz has been embroiled in at least two damaging recalls since the 2000s. The common thread is an obsession with speed to get ahead of the competition. Samsung’s Galaxy Note 7 was touted as a rival to Apple’s iPhone; Boeing pushed out the 737 MAX in three months to beat Airbus to the order book of American Airlines; Heinz was trying to capture a bigger share of China’s crowded baby food market, then worth an estimated 8 billion yuan. In a forthcoming paper, Sam Park, professor of strategy and international business at Nanyang Technological University, shed light on why MNCs often pay insufficient attention to quality while focusing on business expansion. Park and his colleagues found that the kind of attention MNCs pay to their operations is as important as how much, especially in emerging, fast-evolving markets like China. Contrary to previous research that treated MNC’s attention as a monolithic whole, Park et al argued that it could be differentiated between expansion attention, which focuses on growing revenue, and stakeholder attention, which focuses on the welfare and ethical behavior of employees, suppliers, and dealers—the primary stakeholders that have a direct effect on product quality. They hypothesized that the risk of an MNC experiencing a consumer crisis is greater when expansion attention is higher, and lower when stakeholder attention is higher. The researchers interviewed senior managers of five large MNCs in China and analyzed 92 consumer crises involving 68 Fortune Global 500 companies in the country from 2000 to 2013. Heinz, for instance, suffered reputational damage in 2005 after its chili sauce was found to contain a cancer-causing food dye. Dell was slapped with lawsuits from an online anti-Dell consumer alliance in the early 2000s for using a quota model that encouraged salespeople at local retailers to prioritize sales over consumer experience. Park et al measured expansion attention by how quickly the MNCs set up local subsidiaries. Stakeholder attention was assessed by the number of unique practices a firm put in place to train or engage with employees, suppliers, and dealers. Nestlé, for example, had a mandatory training program that “teaches employees the right nutrition skills and knowledge”; Ford China worked with cash-strapped suppliers to ensure that their activities “followed the legal framework.” The researchers’ analysis turned out remarkable—and rather sobering—findings. For the average firm in their sample, expansion attention increased the likelihood of experiencing consumer crises by 98.1 percent, whereas stakeholder attention slashed the risk by 81.5 percent. Managers under pressure to expand business operations typically fail to pay appropriate attention to the welfare and ethics of their primary stakeholders. In emerging markets such as China, changing stakeholders’ entrenched but ethically controversial practices may even slow business growth in the short term. An MNC executive told Park et al: “Fast expansion requires us to be more flexible [on quality requirements] about what we offer to our clients.... We are loosening the global HQ’s standard on raw materials, and we are making a compromise to local suppliers.” The researchers highlight the potentially hazardous consequences of this obsession in a country evolving at light speed, but their findings are just as relevant to MNCs everywhere as consumers in general become more informed and sophisticated. The bottom line: MNCs need to co-evolve with their operating environment. On the one hand, they should keep up with societal and consumers’ expectations; on the other, they ought to demonstrate leadership and vision—particularly in relatively unregulated markets—by proactively educating employees, suppliers, and other stakeholders on ethical behavior and service quality as spelled out by their global HQ. To do so, as Park et al suggest MNCs could empower subsidiary managers to develop “cognitive division of labor” with different managers attending to distinct stakeholders. This will help firms explore risks and opportunities in the behavior of a wide range of stakeholders. It will also prevent decision makers in subsidiaries from being fixated on expansion. Ultimately, global HQs need to press home the significance of stakeholder attention by incorporating stakeholder engagement as a critical component of MNCs’ foreign operations. First published Oct. 10, 2022, on INSEAD Knowledge. Quality Digest does not charge readers for its content. We believe that industry news is important for you to do your job, and Quality Digest supports businesses of all types. However, someone has to pay for this content. And that’s where advertising comes in. Most people consider ads a nuisance, but they do serve a useful function besides allowing media companies to stay afloat. They keep you aware of new products and services relevant to your industry. All ads in Quality Digest apply directly to products and services that most of our readers need. You won’t see automobile or health supplement ads. So please consider turning off your ad blocker for our site. Thanks, Quy Huy is a strategic management professor at INSEAD. Huy’s research on strategic change won multiple international awards and has been published in several management journals. Huys focuses his research on relations between social-psychological factors such as emotional regulation and symbolic management to macro strategic processes. Huy has a Ph.D. in strategy from McGill University, an engineering degree from McGill University, and holds CFA credentials from the globally recognized Chartered Financial Analyst Institute.Speed Kills: Why Some Multinationals Fail to Pay Attention to Quality
When managers fixate on quick financial results, ethics and service take a back seat
Toxic chili sauce and other crises
Continuous two-way educating and adapting
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Quy Huy
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