U09061 MANAGING BUSINESS RELATIONSHIPS Karas/MBR 0910 JUDI KARAŚ Unit Co-ordinator TEACHING TEAM John Baldry Hazel Beadle Chris Chapleo Ray French David Hall Jennifer Johnston Karen McCormick Vijay Pereira Vesselin Blagoev
WEEK 1 : RELATIONSHIPS AND STAKEHOLDERS Karas/MBR 0910 Unit Overview – Learning, Teaching and Assessment Why study MBR? Which Business Relationships? A Stakeholder Perspective The ‘MBR Diamond’
Unit Overview Karas/MBR Credits = 200 hours’ Student Effort Classes (22 hours) + Exam (2 hours) = 176 HOURS’ INDEPENDENT STUDY comprising SSeminars RReading RResearch, preparation, rehearsal and delivery of assessed group presentation and writing and submission of group assignment RRevision Assessment – See Unit Handbook Group Case Analysis – Presentation and Written Report = 40% of total marks Two Hour Exam = 60% of total marks
Why Study Business Relationships? Karas/MBR 0910 “ Mutually beneficial relationships including employees, investors and other stakeholders, result in confidence and trust that can carry an organization through the inevitable hard times.” Source: The Universal Manager-report
Which ‘Business Relationships’? Karas/MBR 0910 Intra-organisational (internal) relationships Person to person Leadership, management and power Inter-organisational (external) relationships Person to business Morgan Spurlock & McDonalds Business to person Gerald Ratner’s decanter and earrings Business to business Nike’s 100% outsourcing strategy Strategic alliances
Relationships : A Stakeholders’ Perspective Karas/MBR 0910 Definition “Any individual or group which has an interest in and/or is affected by the goals, operations or activities of the organisation or the behaviour of its members.” Mullins (2005) p.1063
Classifying Stakeholders Karas/MBR 0910 Internal Stakeholders Owners Decision-makers Unions and employees The Organization Marketplace Stakeholders Customers Competitors Suppliers External Stakeholders Government Political or Activist groups Financial community Trade associations Greenley 1989 p.153
Defining Stakeholders Karas/MBR 0910 Finlay 2000, pp Primary/Active: “always want more” providers of capital customers employees suppliers Secondary/Passive: “want acceptable performance” government pressure groups including local communities
Stakeholder Power Stakeholder Power (Johnson and Scholes 2003 – see Handbook) Karas/MBR 0910 Sources of power (internal stakeholders) formal hierarchical power informal power control of strategic resources including skills Sources of power (external stakeholders) control of strategic resources involvement with organisation links : internal and external (e.g. media)
Stakeholder Mapping (Mendelow 1991 cited in Johnson and Scholes 1993) Karas/MBR 0910 HighLow A Few problems B Unpredictable but manageable High C Powerful but predictable D Greatest danger or opportunities LowHigh Low A Minimal effort B Keep Informed High C Keep satisfied D Key players POWER/DYNAMISM MATRIX POWER/INTEREST MATRIX Power Predictability Level of Interest see Handbook pp for required reading
Stakeholder Mapping (Mitchell et al 1997) Karas/MBR 0910 Three Alternative Dimensions Power Legitimacy : legal, or standing in society Urgency : requires immediate attention
Stakeholders in Practice Karas/MBR 0910 “Vodafone’s success flows from our commitment to sound business conduct and the way we interact with our stakeholders-shareholders, employees, customers, business partners and suppliers, government and regulators, communities and society and the environment.” Source: Vodafone.com Our Business Principles
but … open to interpretation! Karas/MBR 0910 Michael O’Leary on Ryanair’s Stakeholders European Commission …”morons” BAA …”overcharging rapists” UK air traffic control …”poxy” Travel agents …”f***ers who should be taken out and shot”
The ‘MBR DIAMOND’ (© Karas 2009) ‘the total interconnectedness of all things” Karas/MBR 0910 Trust Levels Development Ethics Individual Organisational Transaction Costing Cost benefit “Make or buy” External Stakeholders Marketplace Stakeholders Promiscuity Polygamy Loyalty Internal Stakeholders Management Leadership Power