Monsanto - Presentation

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Monsanto’s pyramid of purposes

Pledge: “Growth for a better world”


=>“ensure that agriculture can meet
humanity’s needs in the future” 1)

Aims: We develop “modern agricultural practices and


crops” 1) in order to increase productivity
=> Increasing yields, fewer input of energy & pesticide

Objectives: 1) We create genetically modified plant material


2) We develop agricultural chemicals such as manure or pesticides
Our products are marketed through farmers, mostly in North America

“Germany is one of the top 5 importers of U.S. soybeans, and therefore a market that cannot
be ignored” 2) => We need to introduce our products to the European market.

1) www.monsato.com/who_we_are/our_pledge.asf
2)Greenpeace campaigns against altered soybeans, Journal of Commerce, November 7th, 1996
A very American company
2007 Fiscal Year Sales By Geographic Region by %
Monsanto’s Stakeholders

Environment
and Society Stockholders Religion

Suppliers
Monsanto Corporation
Customers
Saint Louis, MO
Politics

Employees: Cooperation with


BASF: R&D, marketing
18,800 worldwide
Environment Monsanto Europe

Far environment
European
Gouvernments Greenpeace
Near environment
Ethical
Media Suppliers US & EU values
farmers
Stockholders Seed
manufacturers
Internal environment eg. Pioneer Hybrid
International (no 2)
Employees
Syngenta (no 3)
Corporate culture
Managers
Customer Relations

 Important Distinction: Customers vs


Consumers
– little immediate end-consumer relation (exceptions: RoundUp!
herbicide)
– no immediate end-consumer relation concerning GMO foods

 Direct and Indirect Relations towards


European Customers
– Targeting the market directly and indirectly
Targeting the EU directly & indirectly

Food
Farmers
traders

Monsanto Corp.
Farmers
GM Seeds

Consumers

Food
“Ideal Progress” traders
Power of EU-Farmers as a Stakeholder group

 Customers belong to company’s „near environment“


 relatively homogenous group of customers
 Financial Power: generally not reliably high
– alternating high-yield and low-yield harvests
– individual farmers do not work with either exorbitant turnovers nor profits
 low individual bargaining power
– scattered into many small and disparate parcels among Europe (in contrast
to the big agroindustry of the US-Midwest)
– no functioning Europe-wide cooperative (due also to national economic
rivalries)
– Example: German milk price bargains of 2008
Porter’s Five Forces:
Bargaining power of customers
Threat of new
entrants

Bargaining power of
customers
• purchase in huge volumes: rather not (there are
Bargaining power
Industry structure many farmers)
of suppliers
• easy to buy alternatives from others: no
(RoundUp)
• financial power: rather low (might need debit for
buying from Monsanto)
• could make the product themselves: no

Threat of substitute
products/services
Customer’s Attitude

 cultural heterogeneity (e.g. UK vs. continental


Europe)
 rising concern in European societies led to a
changing customer attitude

 thus, customers were not causative for the


problems Monsanto encountered in the
European market
Society
 More pessimistic concerning green biotech

 High priority: consumer‘s benefit

 Food safety: fear of allergy


effect on genome
potential monopoles

 Monsanto: Informing = convincing


GM or no GM?
Influence of Opponents
 The press

 The World According to Monsanto

 Accusations: Manipulation
Lawsuit (PCB)
Bribery in Indonesia

 Europe‘s demand
Greenpeace, FOE

 Environmentalists

 Open dialog: failure

 Eco-warriors
Monsanto and Greenpeace
Society optimism
Regulatory process EU
 Application to the European Commission
 European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
studies on health and ecological issues
 recommendation to the European parliament
 more than two thirds of the member states can
reject the admission
 If quorum not reached European Commission
decides
 member states can oppose in exceptional cases
The situation
 three powerful influents here: the public opinion,
industry and farmers.
 Communication channels:
media and lobbyism
(NGOs such as Greenpeace, industry and farmer
representatives and trade associations)
 no other breeding method is regulated labeling of
GMO products includes today even totally Gene-free
products
The development

 First weak regulation, positive politicians,


soy bean allowed in 1996
 pressure by the NGOs, shift in public
opinion.
 lack of communication of independent
scientists but also few lobbying of
Monsanto and the biotechnology industry
Porter’s Five Forces:
Industry structure
Threat of new
entrants

Industry structure
• competitors: few, market leader 30 % →
oligopole
Bargaining power • market growth: stable Bargaining power
of suppliers • industry size: 49.3 % of Germany used for of customers
agricultural issues
• similarity of products: low
• level of fixed costs/exit barriers: low, R&D
exists, just line extension
• range of products/services: small

Threat of substitute
products/services

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