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Strategic Management And Strategic Competitiveness Research Paper

Wal-Mart is the world's largest retailer, and it has been significantly affected by the forces of globalization. This paper will consider those forces in the context of both the company's vision and in terms of organizational theory. Globalization

Wal-Mart has been opportunistic in its approach to globalization. The company famously has become the subject of studies on globalization not just for its retail reach but for its supply chain management. Wal-Mart's vision and mission relate to delivering low prices to the consumer. The company feels that the promise of low prices will attract consumers to its stores. Thus, Wal-Mart follows through with its "everyday low prices" mantra by sourcing goods from the lowest-cost producers it can find. While for its first few decades this meant finding goods from American suppliers, Wal-Mart has seen in the past couple of decades a shift towards overseas production. All of this is done through second-party suppliers, but Wal-Mart exerts a high level of influence throughout its supply chain, to the point where it can guide the actions of its suppliers, leading them overseas. The globalization of Wal-Mart's supply chain has therefore become integral to its strategy, as its moves overseas combined with other elements of the supply chain management have allowed Wal-Mart to deliver, more or less, on its promise of lower prices.

Wal-Mart has also grown into a player in a number of markets around the world. Rugman & Girod (2003) argue that Wal-Mart is essentially a regional retailer within NAFTA, but this is to ignore the company's substantial presence in the Chinese market. In addition, Wal-Mart utilizes other brands in Europe, although it has been less successful on that continent. That said, the company does derive a significant amount of its sales in Mexico and Canada, which along with China provide close to a quarter...

This view makes some sense for Wal-Mart. Most of its move to globalize has been spurred strictly by economic considerations. Bear in mind the company's mission and vision relate to a high-volume, low-cost business model. Wal-Mart must do two things to succeed -- it must drive down costs and it must be able to extract some temporary monopoly rents typical of a firm in a state of monopolistic competition.
Driving down costs is something that Wal-Mart can do by leveraging its economies of scale. However, this does not push it into global markets. There are other ways to drive down costs as well, including through the use of information. The more information the buyer has, the easier it will be for the buyer to drive down costs. This is the strategy Wal-Mart has utilized. With its intense knowledge of the supply chains of its suppliers, it pressures them to find solutions that bring down costs further. Often, this leads overseas, and Wal-Mart knows this. The company has fostered a special relationship with China in order to help facilitate better access to low-cost Chinese goods. Wal-Mart does this with other countries as well when needed. The company's push for globalization therefore relates to it finding more information and then using that information to drive down the prices it pays to suppliers.

The resource view of the firm focuses on the idea that the firm achieves profits in the resources is acquires and how it uses them. Knowledge is definitely one resource that Wal-Mart employs, but it also employs its brand. The company is desirable for the volume that it can offer suppliers, but beyond that Wal-Mart can use its…

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Works Cited:

Rugman, A. & Girod, S. (2003). Retail multinationals and globalization: The evidence is regional. European Management Science. Vol. 21 (1) 24-37.

Tirole, J. (1993). The theory of industrial organization. MIT Press. Retrieved April 21, 2013 from https://faculty.fuqua.duke.edu/~charlesw/s591/willstuff/oldstuff/PhD_2007-2008/Papers/c06/Tirole%20%28Part%202%29%20Class%206.pdf

2012 Wal-Mart Annual Report. Retrieved April 21, 2013 from http://www.walmartstores.com/sites/annual-report/2012/WalMart_AR.pdf
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