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Training and Development of
        International Staff
    -with reference to Japan, China, South Koreaand
                         Singapore
Presented By:
VIRDA AZMI
Subject: Global Human Resource Management
M.A. (HRM) Final Semester
Dept of Social Work
Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi
Need for T&D
• MNCs increasingly use expatriates on short-term and long-term
  international job assignments for a variety of purposes, such as:
• to acquire and transfer knowledge,
• to manage a foreign subsidiary,
• to fill a staffing need,
• to maintain communication,
• coordination and control between subsidiaries and corporate
  headquarters,
• and to develop global leadership competence
• An expatriate’s success in the host country is largely determined by his or
   her cross-cultural adjustment to the host country

• Expatriates who are not prepared to confront the challenges (e.g., to cope
   with culture shock) find it difficult to adjust and hence, perform poorly.

• Thus, improving cross-cultural adjustment has been the focus of many
   international HR interventions.

• Since cross-cultural adjustment can be facilitated if the expatriate has an
   awareness of the norms and behaviors that are appropriate in the host
   country, many MNCs offer cross-cultural training (CCT) to teach their
   expatriates the host country’s appropriate norms and behaviors.
Cross-Cultural Training
• Cross-cultural training is defined as any planned intervention
   designed to increase the knowledge and skills of expatriates to live
   and work effectively and achieve general life satisfaction in an
   unfamiliar host culture

• CCT has been advocated as a means of facilitating effective cross-
   cultural interactions and cross-cultural adjustment
• In the early 1980s, only 32% of MNCs offered CCT. Almost 20 years
    later, the 1998 Global Relocation Trends Survey Report indicates
    that 70% of the 177 MNCs surveyed provide CCT of at least one
    day’s duration
• Cross-cultural training effectiveness is reflected by the cognitive,
    affective, and behavioral changes that occur during the CCT event.
•   In order to improve the effectiveness of CCT programs, or to
    maximize the change that occurs during training, it is important to
    follow a systematic approach to designing effective CCT programs.
• The process for designing effective CCT programs consists of five
  distinct phases:
1. Identify the type of global assignment for which CCT is needed.
2. Determine the specific cross-cultural training needs.
3. Establish the goals and measures for determining training
   effectiveness.
4. Develop and deliver the CCT program.
5. Evaluate whether the CCT program was effective.
PHASE 1 – IDENTIFY THE TYPE OF GLOBAL ASSIGNMENT

• Caligiuri describes a classification of global assignments into four
  categories:
1. Technical
2. Functional/tactical
3. Developmental/high potential
4. Strategic/executive
PHASE 2 – CONDUCT A CROSS-CULTURAL TRAINING NEEDS
                          ANALYSIS

• A cross-cultural training needs analysis is conducted across three
  levels:

1.    The organizational level, to determine the organizational context
      for CCT
2.    The individual (or expatriate) level, to determine any special needs
      that have to be addressed in CCT for a given person; and
3.    The assignment level, to determine the cross-cultural knowledge
      and skills required to effectively complete the given assignment.
PHASE 3 – ESTABLISH CCT GOALS AND MEASURES


• Cross-cultural training goals should be stated in detailed and
  measurable terms.
• Detailed and measurable training goals help develop appropriate
  outcomes for training evaluation.
• Short-term CCT goals can bring about cognitive, affective, and
  behavioral changes
• The long-term goal of many CCT programs is to improve the
  rate of cross-cultural adjustment.
• Improving cross-cultural adjustment is important for all
  expatriates and would generalize across assignments.
• Likewise, improved success on the global assignment may be
  another generalized long-term goal with the specific
  dimensions, of course, being job specific.
PHASE 4 – DEVELOP AND DELIVER THE CCT PROGRAM


• This phase involves determining the specific instructional content
  needed in order to achieve the stated goal, the methods to deliver
  the instructional content, and the sequencing of the training
  sessions.
PHASE 5 – EVALUATE CROSS-CULTURAL TRAINING

• The evaluation process involves establishing measures of
  effectiveness (criteria), and developing research designs to
  determine what changes (e.g. cognitive, affective, and behavioral)
  have occurred during the training.
• Criteria must be established for both evaluation of short-term, and
  long-term goals.
• The appropriate evaluation criteria should also be assessed prior to
  the delivery of CCT to provide some type of comparison bases for
  post-training assessment. In addition evaluation strategies need to
  be developed during phase 3, that is, the decision on how to
  evaluate CCT’s short-term and long-term goals needs to be made at
  the same time as these goals are established.
Country   Management        Business         Teams         Communica          Women at
              Style         Structures                       tion Styles       workplace

Japan      •information     • The          • group-         • what one        •there
           flow from the    concept of     oriented         says does         remains a
           bottomto the     life-time      teams            not will not      strong
           top              employmen      •direct          be what he        unspoken
           •senior          t is a myth.   confrontatio     actually          discriminati
           management       •Hierarchic    n is avoided.    means             on towards
           having a         ally           •group           •body             women in
           largely          organized      members          language is       the
           supervisory      companies      must be seen     very              workplace.
           approach         •Group         to be modest     minimal           •expected to
           •The key task    orientation    and humble.      •Emotionles       perform
           for a Japanese   and team       •The group is    s and higly       lower grade
           manager is to    working.       a life-          formal            tasks and to
           provide the      •hierarchy     defining set     behaviour.        leave
           environment      is based on    of               •It is rare for   employment
           in which the     consensus      relationships.   any reaction      upon
           group can        and co-                         or emotion        marriage or
           flourish.        operation                       to be visible.    the birth of
                                                                              children.
Country   Management         Business       Teams       Communica         Women at
              Style          Structures                   tion Styles      workplace


China      •management      •highly        • consensus   •Saying 'no'    •Officially,
           style tends      hierarchical   -oriented     causes both     women have
           towards the      •operational   •individual   embarrassm      the same
           directive        structures,    needs and     ent and loss    rights as men
           •Manager –       chains of      desires       of face         in the
           Subordinate is   command,       being         •very limited   workplace
           a mutually       management     sublimated    amount of       •Women are
           beneficial       style etc.     to the        visual body     found in
           two-way          tend to be     greater       language        reasonably
           relationship.    hierarchical   good of the                   senior roles in
                                           whole.                        large Chinese
                                                                         organizations
Country   Management         Business         Teams       Communica       Women at
              Style          Structures                     tion Styles    workplace


South      •leadership is   •Centralisatio   •Group        •vagueness     •women
Korea      hierarchical     n and vertical   orientation   of meaning:    work as
           and              hierarchy                      •'no' = poor   secretaries
           paternalistic    •informal        •loyal team   etiquette      or in poorly
                            structures       players in    •'yes‘ ='I     paid
           •consensus       exist within     ideal         have heard     assembly
           decision-        the              situations    you‘ , not     line
           making in        organization                   always         positions
           certain          giving rise to                 agreeing.      •Not treated
           situations       internal                       •Slouching/    at par with
           •work and        power                          overly         men
           private are      mechanisms                     expressive
           not separated                                   body
                                                           gestures can
                                                           be
                                                           disconcertin
                                                           g.
Country    Managemen         Business        Teams      Communicati       Women at
              t Style        Structures                    on Styles       workplace


Singapore   •Managers      •Traditional,   •Group       •English is      •women have
            tend to be     family-run      oriented     widely used      have achieved
            older          businesses      •Decisions   •'no' is a       much in the
            •Managers      are common      are team     difficult word   business arena
            delegate       •Hierarchical   ones and     •Disagreemen     •expected to
            decisions to   structure       therefore    t can affect     keep a very
            their teams    •Centralized    success or   the harmony      professional,
            and expect     decision        failure is   thus 'no'        almost distant
            it to be       making          also team    becomes,         relationship
            respected                      oriented     'Yes, but it     with male
            •Performanc                                 might be         colleagues
            e culture                                   difficult'       •Eye contact
                                                        •Humor is        should be
                                                        best avoided     minimal and
                                                        •Formal Style    proper
                                                                         distances
                                                                         observed
Training and development of international staff

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Training and development of international staff

  • 1. Training and Development of International Staff -with reference to Japan, China, South Koreaand Singapore Presented By: VIRDA AZMI Subject: Global Human Resource Management M.A. (HRM) Final Semester Dept of Social Work Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi
  • 2. Need for T&D • MNCs increasingly use expatriates on short-term and long-term international job assignments for a variety of purposes, such as: • to acquire and transfer knowledge, • to manage a foreign subsidiary, • to fill a staffing need, • to maintain communication, • coordination and control between subsidiaries and corporate headquarters, • and to develop global leadership competence
  • 3. • An expatriate’s success in the host country is largely determined by his or her cross-cultural adjustment to the host country • Expatriates who are not prepared to confront the challenges (e.g., to cope with culture shock) find it difficult to adjust and hence, perform poorly. • Thus, improving cross-cultural adjustment has been the focus of many international HR interventions. • Since cross-cultural adjustment can be facilitated if the expatriate has an awareness of the norms and behaviors that are appropriate in the host country, many MNCs offer cross-cultural training (CCT) to teach their expatriates the host country’s appropriate norms and behaviors.
  • 4. Cross-Cultural Training • Cross-cultural training is defined as any planned intervention designed to increase the knowledge and skills of expatriates to live and work effectively and achieve general life satisfaction in an unfamiliar host culture • CCT has been advocated as a means of facilitating effective cross- cultural interactions and cross-cultural adjustment
  • 5. • In the early 1980s, only 32% of MNCs offered CCT. Almost 20 years later, the 1998 Global Relocation Trends Survey Report indicates that 70% of the 177 MNCs surveyed provide CCT of at least one day’s duration • Cross-cultural training effectiveness is reflected by the cognitive, affective, and behavioral changes that occur during the CCT event. • In order to improve the effectiveness of CCT programs, or to maximize the change that occurs during training, it is important to follow a systematic approach to designing effective CCT programs.
  • 6. • The process for designing effective CCT programs consists of five distinct phases: 1. Identify the type of global assignment for which CCT is needed. 2. Determine the specific cross-cultural training needs. 3. Establish the goals and measures for determining training effectiveness. 4. Develop and deliver the CCT program. 5. Evaluate whether the CCT program was effective.
  • 7. PHASE 1 – IDENTIFY THE TYPE OF GLOBAL ASSIGNMENT • Caligiuri describes a classification of global assignments into four categories: 1. Technical 2. Functional/tactical 3. Developmental/high potential 4. Strategic/executive
  • 8. PHASE 2 – CONDUCT A CROSS-CULTURAL TRAINING NEEDS ANALYSIS • A cross-cultural training needs analysis is conducted across three levels: 1. The organizational level, to determine the organizational context for CCT 2. The individual (or expatriate) level, to determine any special needs that have to be addressed in CCT for a given person; and 3. The assignment level, to determine the cross-cultural knowledge and skills required to effectively complete the given assignment.
  • 9. PHASE 3 – ESTABLISH CCT GOALS AND MEASURES • Cross-cultural training goals should be stated in detailed and measurable terms. • Detailed and measurable training goals help develop appropriate outcomes for training evaluation. • Short-term CCT goals can bring about cognitive, affective, and behavioral changes
  • 10. • The long-term goal of many CCT programs is to improve the rate of cross-cultural adjustment. • Improving cross-cultural adjustment is important for all expatriates and would generalize across assignments. • Likewise, improved success on the global assignment may be another generalized long-term goal with the specific dimensions, of course, being job specific.
  • 11. PHASE 4 – DEVELOP AND DELIVER THE CCT PROGRAM • This phase involves determining the specific instructional content needed in order to achieve the stated goal, the methods to deliver the instructional content, and the sequencing of the training sessions.
  • 12. PHASE 5 – EVALUATE CROSS-CULTURAL TRAINING • The evaluation process involves establishing measures of effectiveness (criteria), and developing research designs to determine what changes (e.g. cognitive, affective, and behavioral) have occurred during the training. • Criteria must be established for both evaluation of short-term, and long-term goals. • The appropriate evaluation criteria should also be assessed prior to the delivery of CCT to provide some type of comparison bases for post-training assessment. In addition evaluation strategies need to be developed during phase 3, that is, the decision on how to evaluate CCT’s short-term and long-term goals needs to be made at the same time as these goals are established.
  • 13. Country Management Business Teams Communica Women at Style Structures tion Styles workplace Japan •information • The • group- • what one •there flow from the concept of oriented says does remains a bottomto the life-time teams not will not strong top employmen •direct be what he unspoken •senior t is a myth. confrontatio actually discriminati management •Hierarchic n is avoided. means on towards having a ally •group •body women in largely organized members language is the supervisory companies must be seen very workplace. approach •Group to be modest minimal •expected to •The key task orientation and humble. •Emotionles perform for a Japanese and team •The group is s and higly lower grade manager is to working. a life- formal tasks and to provide the •hierarchy defining set behaviour. leave environment is based on of •It is rare for employment in which the consensus relationships. any reaction upon group can and co- or emotion marriage or flourish. operation to be visible. the birth of children.
  • 14. Country Management Business Teams Communica Women at Style Structures tion Styles workplace China •management •highly • consensus •Saying 'no' •Officially, style tends hierarchical -oriented causes both women have towards the •operational •individual embarrassm the same directive structures, needs and ent and loss rights as men •Manager – chains of desires of face in the Subordinate is command, being •very limited workplace a mutually management sublimated amount of •Women are beneficial style etc. to the visual body found in two-way tend to be greater language reasonably relationship. hierarchical good of the senior roles in whole. large Chinese organizations
  • 15. Country Management Business Teams Communica Women at Style Structures tion Styles workplace South •leadership is •Centralisatio •Group •vagueness •women Korea hierarchical n and vertical orientation of meaning: work as and hierarchy •'no' = poor secretaries paternalistic •informal •loyal team etiquette or in poorly structures players in •'yes‘ ='I paid •consensus exist within ideal have heard assembly decision- the situations you‘ , not line making in organization always positions certain giving rise to agreeing. •Not treated situations internal •Slouching/ at par with •work and power overly men private are mechanisms expressive not separated body gestures can be disconcertin g.
  • 16. Country Managemen Business Teams Communicati Women at t Style Structures on Styles workplace Singapore •Managers •Traditional, •Group •English is •women have tend to be family-run oriented widely used have achieved older businesses •Decisions •'no' is a much in the •Managers are common are team difficult word business arena delegate •Hierarchical ones and •Disagreemen •expected to decisions to structure therefore t can affect keep a very their teams •Centralized success or the harmony professional, and expect decision failure is thus 'no' almost distant it to be making also team becomes, relationship respected oriented 'Yes, but it with male •Performanc might be colleagues e culture difficult' •Eye contact •Humor is should be best avoided minimal and •Formal Style proper distances observed