Unit 1
Unit 1
U nit 1
.
Global Perspective:
Global Commerce Causes Peace
• Global commerce thrives during peacetime
– Boeing company
– Commercial aircraft and space vehicle industries
– Mobile phone industry
– Individuals and small companies
• International markets are ultimately
unpredictable
– Flexibility means survival
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International Marketing
• International Trade
– which arises due to divergent scarcities between nations,
points out the possibilities and advantages of trade
• International Marketing
– the process through which international trade takes place
• International Business
– wider in scope than international marketing. It includes
besides marketing, investments abroad including
establishment of subsidiaries and joint ventures abroad.
1-3
Scope and Significance of
International Marketing
• Opening a branch / subsidiary abroad for
processing, packaging, assembly or even
complete manufacturing through direct
investment.
• Negotiating licensing / franchising arrangements
• Establishing joint ventures in foreign countries
for manufacturing and/or marketing
• Offering consultancy services and undertaking
turnkey projects abroad
1-4
Scope and Significance of
International Marketing
• Counter trade
– Counter trade is exchanging goods or services which
are paid for, in whole or part, with other goods or
services, rather than with money
► Offset (airplanes and computer equipment worth 1
million)
► Buyback (steel)
► Bilateral (controlled or centrally planned economies )
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Foreign Acquisitions
of U.S. Companies
Exhibit 1.1
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Selected U.S. Companies
and Their International Sales
Exhibit 1.2
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Strategic Importance of
International Marketing
• Survival and Growth
• Sales and Profit
• Obtaining Scale Economies
– Standarization
– Coca-cola: brand name, concentrate formula,
positioning and advertising theme – that has been
virtually the same throughout the world. Only the
artificial sweetner and packaging differ across countries
• Desirable global Brand associations
– Japanese firms: Yamaha, Sony, Canon, Honda
(technology and product quality are important)
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Strategic Importance of
International Marketing
• Access to Low-Cost Labor or Materials
– Eg: manufacture a computer (Suppliers)
– SCA (Sustainable Competitive Advantage)
• Access to National investment incentives
– Achieve economic objectives for target industries or
depressed areas
– British government offered Japanese car manufacturers
a cash bonus to locate a plant in UK
• Cross-Subsidization
– Use the resources accumulated in one part of the world
to fight a competitive battle in another
► Retaliation (market share)
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Strategic Importance of
International Marketing
• Dodge Trade Barriers
– Eg: caterpillar
• Access to strategically important Markets
– Market size
– Raw material supply
– Labor cost
– Technology
– New trends and development
• Inflation and price moderation
• Standard of living
• Understanding of marketing process
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The International Marketing Task
Exhibit 1.3
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Environmental Adaptation
• Ability to effectively interpret the influence and
impact of the culture in which you hope to do
business
– Cultural adjustments (react in a manner acceptable to
society)
• Establish a frame of reference
– White is a symbol of mourning in Asia whereas in
western culture it is used for bridal gowns
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Environmental Adaptation
– Hand gesture: wanting to say ok, many people in US
raise a hand and make a circle with thumb and
forefinger, zero or worthless to French, money to
Japanese, and a general sexual insult in Greece
• Avoid measuring and assessing markets against
the fixed values and assumptions of your own
culture
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The Self-Reference Criterion
and Ethnocentrism
• The key to successful international marketing is
adaptation to the environmental differences
from one market to another (uncontrollable
factors and marketing mix)
• Primary obstacles to success in international
marketing
– SRC
– Associated ethnocentrism
1-14
SRC and Ethnocentrism
• SRC is an unconscious reference to
– One’s own cultural values, experiences, and
knowledge as a basis for decisions
► Personal space between people of different cultures
► Americans refuse foods and drinks when offered which is
offensive in Asia
1-15
SRC and Ethnocentrism
• Ethnocentrism
– Notion that one’s own culture or company knows best
• Ethnocentrism and the SRC can influence an
evaluation of the appropriateness of a
domestically designed marketing mix for a
foreign market
– Cookies: US & Japan
– Unilever in Brazil: no washing machines; simpler soap
formula, packaged in small low priced packages.
– McDonald’s in India
1-16
SRC and Ethnocentrism
• The most effective way to control the influence
of ethnocentrism and the SRC is to recognize
their effects on our behavior
– In German: Vicks sounds like intercourse, so the
name was changed to wicks before entering the
market
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Framework
for Cross-cultural Analysis
1. Define business problem or goal
• Home-country vs. foreign-country cultural traits,
habits, or norms
• Consultation with natives of the target country
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Framework
for Cross-cultural Analysis
3. Isolate the SRC influence
• Examine it carefully to see how it complicates the
problem
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Developing a Global Awareness
• Tolerance of cultural differences:
– Understanding cultural differences and accepting and
working with others whose behavior may be different
from yours
► Punctual
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Approaches to Global Awareness
• Select individual managers specifically for their
demonstrated global awareness
• Develop personal relationships in other
countries
• Have a culturally diverse senior executive staff
or board of directors
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Stages of International
Marketing Involvement
• No direct foreign marketing
• Infrequent foreign marketing
• Regular foreign marketing
• International marketing
• Global marketing
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No Direct Foreign Marketing
• Products reach foreign markets indirectly
– Trading companies
– Foreign customers who contact firm
– Wholesalers
– Distributors
– Web sites
• Foreign orders pique a company’s interest to
seek additional international sales
1-23
Infrequent Foreign Marketing
• Caused by temporary surpluses
– Variations in production levels
– Increases in demand
• Firm has little or no intention of maintaining
continuous market representation
– Foreign sales decline when demand or surplus
decreases
– May withdraw from international markets
• Little or no change in company organization or
product lines
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Regular Foreign Marketing
• Firm has production capacity devoted to foreign
markets
• Firm employs domestic or foreign intermediaries
– Uses its own sales force
– Sales subsidiaries in important markets
• Products allocated or adapted to foreign markets
as demand grows
• Firm depends on profits from foreign markets
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International Marketing
• Entails not only marketing but also the
production of goods outside the home market
• Venture
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Global Marketing
• Company treats world, including home market
as one market
• Market segmentation decisions no longer
focused on national borders
– Defined by income levels, usage patterns, or other
factors
• More than half of revenues come from abroad
• Organization takes on global perspective (orgn
str, production, marketing)
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Strategic Orientation
Differences in complexity and sophistication of a
company’s marketing activity depend on which
orientation guides its operations
•Domestic market extension orientation
•Multidomestic market orientation
•Global market orientation
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Domestic Market Extension
Orientation
• International operations viewed as secondary
• Prime motive is to market excess domestic
production
• Firm’s orientation remains basically domestic
• Minimal, if any, efforts are made to adapt
product or marketing mix to foreign markets
• Firms with this approach are classified as
ethnocentric
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Multidomestic Market Orientation
• Companies have a strong sense that foreign
country markets are vastly different
• Market success requires an almost independent
program for each country
– Separate marketing strategies
– Subsidiaries operate independently of one another in
establishing marketing objectives and plans
– Products are adapted for each market
– Marketing mix are localized
• Control is decentralized
• Polycentric
1-30
Global Market Orientation
• Company guided by global marketing orientation
– Marketing activity is global
– Market coverage is the world
• Thrives for efficiencies of scale: firm develops a
standardized marketing mix applicable across national
boundaries wherever it is cost and culturally effective
– Markets are still segmented
– Each country or region is considered side by side with
a variety of other segmentation variables, such as
consumer characteristics (age, income, language
group), usage patterns, and legal constraints
– Fits the regiocentric or geocentric classifications
– Coca-cola company, Ford Motor company, Intel
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The Orientation
of International Marketing
• The successful international marketer possesses
the best qualities of the anthropologist, sociologist,
psychologist, diplomat, lawyer, prophet and
business person
• An environmental/cultural approach to
international strategic marketing
• Discussion of international marketing ranges from
the marketing and business practices of small
exporters to the practices of global companies
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The Orientation
of International Marketing
Exhibit 1.4
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Differences between International
and Domestic Marketing
• Scope (territory)
• Benefits
– To nations
– To firms
• Market Fluctuations (sharing profits and losses)
• Mode of entry (options and formalities)
• Customs (trade barriers and tariffs)
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Differences between International
and Domestic Marketing
• Sharing of technology
• Political relations
• Factor of Productions
• Investment
• Marketing Mix
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Trends in Foreign Trade
• Foreign trade is defined as an exchange of
goods and services between persons and firms
of different countries.
• Methods of globalization
– Export trade, Import trade, Entrepot trade
– Licensing (royalty) and Franchising
– Fully Owned Manufacturing Facilities
– Joint Ventures
– Mergers and Acquisitions
– Strategic Alliances (collaborative agreements, global strategic
partnerships)
► The big airlines like Lufthansa, Singapore Airlines, Thai Internaties, Korean
Airlines, etc have formed strategic alliances with other airlines.
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Trends in Foreign Trade
• The rapid growth of the World Trade Organization
and regional free trade areas
• The trend toward the acceptance of the free
market system among developing countries in
Latin America, Asia, and Eastern Europe
• The burgeoning impact of the Internet, mobile
phones, and other global media on the dissolution
of national borders
• The mandate to properly manage the resources
and global environment for the generations to
come
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Trends in Foreign Trade
• Globalized Production: many brands of a single product
• Global Outsourcing: to take advantage national
differences in costs and quality of resources- labor and
raw materials (car manufacturer)
• Shifting from manufacturing to services: as service
sector has flourished in developed countries, labor force
is declining in manufacturing and increasing in service
sector in U.S., U.K and Japan
• Global Corporations: keep in touch with technology and
market trends all around the world: IBM-workers from
diversfied culture, Whirlpool (U.S.) in Mexico and Europe
1-38
Trends in Foreign Trade
• Increasing number of companies are foreign
controlled
• Increasing number of foreign companies building
and buying manufacturing plants: Dabur Nepal,
Nepal Unilever
1-39
World Economic Growth
• For the next decade, China and other emerging
markets will account for 75% of the world’s total
growth
• The stage of economic growth in a country
affects the attitudes toward foreign business
activity, the demand for goods, distribution
systems within a country, and the entire
marketing process
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United Nations Economic
Development System
• More-Developed Countries (MDC)
– (e.g., Canada, England, France, Germany, Japan, U.S.)
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Newly Industrialized Countries
1-42
Common Traits of
Big Emerging Markets
• Are physically large
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Common Traits of
Big Emerging Markets
• Will engender further expansion in neighboring
markets as they grow
• Are regional economic drivers
1-44
Economic Advancements in
Emerging Markets
• Energy available in large amounts at low cost
per unit
• High level of GDP and Income
• High levels of per capita consumption
• Relatively low rate of population growth
• Complex modern facilities for transportation and
communication
• Substantial amount of capital for investment
1-45
Effects of Trends in Foreign Trade
• Import Penetration: increasing difficulty for
domestic markets to sustain: soap industries
• FDI
• Multinational Companies: look for countries that
offer favorable government policy, sizeable
market and cheap labor
• Competitive Environment
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Nepal’s Foreign Trade
• Import is greater than export
• Nepal’s foreign trade relations exists with more
than 80 countries
• Nepalese exports reach to about 68 countries
and imports come from nearly 74 countries
• Nepal has signed bilateral treaty with 17
countries
• To facilitate transit and port facilities, Nepal has
entered into transit agreements with India and
Bangladesh
1-47
THANK YOU
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