Purchasing office in China : Selecting a purchasing structure and managing the purchasing office

What is it like managing a purchasing office in China today? What are the purchasing structures to be considered? These are two fundamentals which this thesis aims to find out. What can be done to ease the process and avoid problems before they are actual problems are matters that will be discussed....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Magnusson, Christoffer
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Stockholms universitet, Företagsekonomiska institutionen 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-6384
id ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-su-6384
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-su-63842013-01-08T13:13:41ZPurchasing office in China : Selecting a purchasing structure and managing the purchasing officeengMagnusson, ChristofferStockholms universitet, Företagsekonomiska institutionen2006Business studiesFöretagsekonomiWhat is it like managing a purchasing office in China today? What are the purchasing structures to be considered? These are two fundamentals which this thesis aims to find out. What can be done to ease the process and avoid problems before they are actual problems are matters that will be discussed. The thesis is delimitated to the Chinese market and the effects and implications by working there. Further the research in the thesis is delimitated towards companies that are involved in trade and that have purchasing offices in China. A case study will guide the reader into the ways of doing purchasing in China. By going over several incidents that may occur when working in China the reader will through a case study form an opinion on what the situation may be like for many foreign purchasing offices existing in China today. Views from both Chinese and expatriated foreign staff will be given in the case. The case study will be focused on the implications occurring during an actual purchasing process. The data in this thesis comes from interviews at one of the major clothing chains in northern Europe and from selected articles relating to the industry. When analyzing the data provided by the selected company a hermeneutic perspective has been used. A deductive method has been used to derive empirical data that has been published in some form. The major conclusions is that a company need to come prepared, setting up an office takes time and routines that work at home doesn’t necessarily work in other unfamiliar locations. The structures necessary for the purchasing office may depend on factors such as size of the company and cultural values. Ways of improving the purchasing process may be to rely more on IT systems. Purchasing offices should have a certain degree of autonomy when doing purchasing in China. Having employees seeing the whole picture of the company may be important due to the head office often being far away. Reengineering jobs to become more multi dimensional, thus providing a greater understanding of the purchasing process for employees is one solution. Cultural issues are to reckon with and there are certain issues that must be resolved either by integrating different ideas or adaptation by locals and expatriated employees. As can be seen in the case of “Workplace Shanghai” there may be difficulties but they can be overcome as will be further assessed in this thesis. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-6384application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Business studies
Företagsekonomi
spellingShingle Business studies
Företagsekonomi
Magnusson, Christoffer
Purchasing office in China : Selecting a purchasing structure and managing the purchasing office
description What is it like managing a purchasing office in China today? What are the purchasing structures to be considered? These are two fundamentals which this thesis aims to find out. What can be done to ease the process and avoid problems before they are actual problems are matters that will be discussed. The thesis is delimitated to the Chinese market and the effects and implications by working there. Further the research in the thesis is delimitated towards companies that are involved in trade and that have purchasing offices in China. A case study will guide the reader into the ways of doing purchasing in China. By going over several incidents that may occur when working in China the reader will through a case study form an opinion on what the situation may be like for many foreign purchasing offices existing in China today. Views from both Chinese and expatriated foreign staff will be given in the case. The case study will be focused on the implications occurring during an actual purchasing process. The data in this thesis comes from interviews at one of the major clothing chains in northern Europe and from selected articles relating to the industry. When analyzing the data provided by the selected company a hermeneutic perspective has been used. A deductive method has been used to derive empirical data that has been published in some form. The major conclusions is that a company need to come prepared, setting up an office takes time and routines that work at home doesn’t necessarily work in other unfamiliar locations. The structures necessary for the purchasing office may depend on factors such as size of the company and cultural values. Ways of improving the purchasing process may be to rely more on IT systems. Purchasing offices should have a certain degree of autonomy when doing purchasing in China. Having employees seeing the whole picture of the company may be important due to the head office often being far away. Reengineering jobs to become more multi dimensional, thus providing a greater understanding of the purchasing process for employees is one solution. Cultural issues are to reckon with and there are certain issues that must be resolved either by integrating different ideas or adaptation by locals and expatriated employees. As can be seen in the case of “Workplace Shanghai” there may be difficulties but they can be overcome as will be further assessed in this thesis.
author Magnusson, Christoffer
author_facet Magnusson, Christoffer
author_sort Magnusson, Christoffer
title Purchasing office in China : Selecting a purchasing structure and managing the purchasing office
title_short Purchasing office in China : Selecting a purchasing structure and managing the purchasing office
title_full Purchasing office in China : Selecting a purchasing structure and managing the purchasing office
title_fullStr Purchasing office in China : Selecting a purchasing structure and managing the purchasing office
title_full_unstemmed Purchasing office in China : Selecting a purchasing structure and managing the purchasing office
title_sort purchasing office in china : selecting a purchasing structure and managing the purchasing office
publisher Stockholms universitet, Företagsekonomiska institutionen
publishDate 2006
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-6384
work_keys_str_mv AT magnussonchristoffer purchasingofficeinchinaselectingapurchasingstructureandmanagingthepurchasingoffice
_version_ 1716512880753377280