A small team of Canadian managers from a large financial institution is faced with the challenges of managing a recently acquired Mexican operation. Managers must cope with a language barrier and cultural differences as they try to restructure the over-staffed Mexican financial institution. A second teaching note (5A97L01) discusses how to use this case from a cross-cultural orientation perspective.
Looking for a creative option to promote 3M products to medical professionals, a 3M Chile sales manager developed the idea of a first-aid kit or botiquin that could be used as a promotional gift. Managers at the company's world headquarters had not previously focused on branded first-aid kits. It was the same all over the world, a plain white box with the red cross in front. You just can't brand a first-aid kit! they replied. At the same time, the Chilean managers lacked the resources necessary for adequate market research. Should they go ahead with the botiquin concept anyway? If they did, questions such as channels, packaging, promotion, and pricing, would still have to be addressed. (A sequel to this case is available, titled 3M Chile - Health Care Products (B), case 9A99A005.)
Executives of a telecommunications corporation are wondering what they can learn from an experience to develop managers to run expanding Latin American operations. The corporation signed a letter of intent to purchase control of a leading telecommunications provider in Mexico with 2,300 employees. Senior executives knew that one of their most pressing issues would be finding the right people to manage their Latin American operations. The 14 managers sent to Mexico to manage the corporation were double the number then being prepared for that type of assignment. The executives must consider the issues encountered by this team of expatriates and their families as they try to adapt to life in Mexico.
The managing director's approach to team based selling, was not being received as well as he expected. It seemed that top executives, members of his Management Operating Committee, were suggesting stopping his changes before they got out of hand. He found himself starting to have doubts about what he was doing.
The Mexico-U.S. border environmental situation is outlined in this note which provides background information on the region. The nature and extent of the pollution problem and a brief overview of the current system of environmental regulation and enforcement in Mexico and under the North American Free Trade Agreement is also reviewed. The note also provides two caselets of companies operating in the border region. The principle objective of this note is to familiarize students with some of the major debates surrounding the relationship between globalization (expansion of international trade and investment) and the natural environment. It offers the chance for students to learn about the Mexican-U.S. border situation and to consider both the causes of and possible solutions to the serious and complex pollution problem in the region.
Management is faced with a broad range of opposition and criticism after closing the telemarketing operation. Labor organizations force legal proceedings, the primary telecommunications workers union in Mexico demands action under the Labor Side Agreement of the North American Free Trade Agreement and, ultimately, a court ruling demands that the company rehire and compensate employees displaced by the closure of the operation. This case was written to accompany Sprint - La Conexion Familiar (A), case 9A97C001.
Management must decide what action to take with a small telemarketing operation that is about to vote on union representation. If employees vote in favor of a union, the operation would become the first business unit to be represented by a union. Closure of the plant is an option to be considered. The mostly Hispanic workforce becomes an additional consideration in the (B) case, 9A97C002.
A small team of Canadian managers from a large financial institution is faced with the challenges of managing a recently acquired Mexican operation. Managers must cope with a language barrier and cultural differences as they try to restructure the over-staffed Mexican financial institution. A second teaching note (5A97L01) discusses how to use this case from a cross-cultural orientation perspective.
After a substantial devaluation in the value of the Mexican currency, a major automaker attempts to reduce the price it is paying to a Mexican based supplier. The supplier (Ventramex) is put in a difficult position because a large portion of its costs is based in US dollars. The company must decide how to respond to the automaker while considering options that would increase the proportion of its costs that are based in Mexican pesos.