Transcript inb#17
Chapter Seventeen
Marketing
Internationally
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Learning Objectives
Explain why there are differences between
domestic and international marketing
Discuss why international marketing managers may
wish to standardize the marketing mix
Explain why standardizing the marketing mix
globally is often impossible
Discuss the importance of distinguishing among the
total product, the physical product, and the brand
name
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Learning Objectives
Explain why consumer products generally require
greater modification for international sales than do
industrial products or services
Discuss the product strategies that can be formed
from three product alternatives and three kinds of
promotional messages
Explain “glocal” advertising strategies
Discuss the effect of the Internet on international
marketing
Discuss the distribution strategies of international
marketers
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International Marketing
To develop marketing strategies the international
marketing manager assesses the firm’s foreign
markets and analyzes the many alternative
marketing mixes
Plans and controls a variety of marketing
strategies rather than a single unified and
standardized one
Coordinates and integrates multiple strategies
into a single marketing program
LO1
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Standardize, Adapt,
or Formulate Anew?
Global standardization of the marketing mix
Significant cost savings
Longer production runs
Standardized advertising, promotional materials,
and sales training
Standardized corporate image
Standardized pricing strategies
Easier control and coordination
Reduction of preparation time
Often not possible
LO2
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Product Strategies
Product is central to marketing mix
The total product includes the
physical product
brand name
accessories
after-sales service
warranty
instructions for use
company image
packaging
LO2
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Types of Products
Industrial Products
Many can be sold unchanged worldwide
If changes are required, they may be cosmetic
(language of instructions)
In developing countries problems with
overload of equipment
maintenance
Local legal requirements limit standardization
LO3
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Types of Products
Consumer Products
Require greater modification to meet local
market requirements
Some can be sold unchanged to certain market
segments
Large automobiles, sporting equipment, and
perfumes
Greater dissimilarity as you go down the
economic strata
LO5
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Types of Products
Services
Marketing similar to that of industrial products
Services easier to market globally compared to
consumer products
Laws and customs may force changes
LO5
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Foreign Environmental Forces
Sociocultural
Dissimilar cultural patterns generally require
changes in food and other consumer goods
May require
Redesign of product
Different meanings of colors
Different meanings of brand name
Translation of instructions or labels
LO5
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Foreign Environmental Forces
Legal
Laws concerning
pollution
consumer protection
operator safety
Laws prohibiting classes of imports
Food and pharmaceuticals are affected by
laws concerning purity and labeling
Laws may prevent use of brand name worldwide
In some countries a brand may be registered
to someone else
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Foreign Environmental Forces
Economic
Disparity in income throughout world
Obstacle to product standardization
Many industrialized country products are too
expensive for developing country consumers
Need to simplify the product or produce a
different, less costly one
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Foreign Environmental Forces
Physical
Climate and terrain prevent international product
standardization
Heat
High humidity
Special packaging
High altitudes
Baking products and motors
Rough roads
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Promotional Strategies
Promotion refers to any form of communication
between a firm and its publics
Brings about a favorable buying action
Achieves long-lasting confidence in the firm and
the product or service it provides
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Promotional Strategies
Distinct promotional strategies based on
combination of three alternatives
1. Marketing the same physical product
everywhere
Same message
2. Adapting the physical product for foreign
markets
Adapted message or
3. Designing a different physical product
Different message
LO6
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Six Common
Promotional Strategies
1.
2.
3.
Same product-same message
Avon, Maidenform
Same product-different message
Honda’s campaign in America is different
than in Brazil
Product adaptation-same message
In Japan, Lever Brothers puts Lux soap in
fancy boxes to encourage gift sales
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Six Common
Promotional Strategies
4.
5.
6.
Product adaptation-message adaptation
In Latin America, Tang is sweetened and
promoted as mealtime drink
Different product-same message
Customers can’t afford product in a market
Companies produce distinct product
Message similar
Different product for the same use-different message
Welding torches rather than automatic welding
machines are sold in developing countries
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The Promotional Mix
Advertising
Advertising refers to the paid, non- personal
presentation of ideas, goods, services
Cultural dimensions
Directness vs. indirectness
Humor
Gender roles
Explicitness
Sophistication
Popular vs. traditional culture
Information content vs. fluff
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Advertising
Among promotional mix elements, advertising
has the greatest similarities worldwide
is formulated and executed through global ad
agencies that have wholly owned subsidiaries,
joint ventures, and working agreements with local
agencies
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Global and Regional Brands
Global, regional brands
Higher cost
Allow one regional source for quality work
Suggest that a single image in the region is
important
Allow for regionalized organizations with
centralized functions
Are facilitated through the growth of global and
regional satellite and cable television
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Global Brand Values
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Advertising
Branding
Global, regional or national
Managers may convert or use a
combination
Private brands
Serious competitors
Alliances with international retailers
Trend common in Europe
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Advertising
Media
Satellite TV expands the availability of media
International print media available
Reader’s Digest has 48 foreign editions
Cinema and billboards are used heavily in Europe
In developing countries, vehicles equipped with
loudspeakers may be used
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Advertising
Internet Advertising
An affluent, reachable audience
Web contacts feature interactivity, shrinks distance
Involve customers in determining which messages
and information they receive
For some groups, the Internet may be among the
best media choices
LO8
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Advertising
Foreign environmental forces
Basic cultural decision for marketer: position the
product as foreign or local
Depends on the country, the product types, and
the target market
Language often an issue
back translation
plenty of illustrations with short copy
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Advertising
What should be the approach of the international
advertising manager?
Think globally, but act locally
Neither global nor local -”glocal”
Pan regional approach
Latin America
Middle East
Africa
Atlantic
LO7
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Personal Selling
Firms may choose personal selling instead of
advertising because of
relative cost
funds available
media availability
type of product
Manufacturers of industrial products rely on personal
selling
Firms may increase personal selling for consumer
products in developing countries
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Personal Selling
The Internet
would seem to eliminate the need for
personal selling, but perhaps not
Successful personal selling depends on
establishing trust
Evolving approaches to trust building in a
virtual environment
LO8
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Selling
International Standardization
An overseas sales force is similar to the home
country in
organization
sales presentation
training methods
Recruitment of salespeople in foreign countries can
be difficult
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Sales Promotion
Sales promotion includes any selling aids including
displays, premiums, contest, and gifts
Sociocultural and economic constraints make some
sales promotions difficult to use
If a premium is to fulfill the sales aid objective, it
must be meaningful to the purchaser
Sales promotion is generally less sophisticated
overseas than in the U.S.
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Public Relations
Public relations includes various methods of
communicating with the firm’s publics to secure a
favorable impression
Public relations
markets the firm
improves the firm’s image and overcomes negative
perceptions
may work through government agencies
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Pricing
Pricing is important in formulating marketing strategy
It is the only element in the marketing mix that can be
varied to achieve firm’s marketing objectives
Made more complex by
interaction with the other functional areas
environmental forces
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Interaction Between Marketing
and Other Functional Areas
Managers must consider how the marketing function
interacts with other functional areas
Finance wants prices that are profitable and produce
steady cash flow
Production supervisors want prices that create large
sales volumes, which permit long production runs
The legal department worries about possible
antitrust violations when different prices are set
according to type of customer
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Interaction between Marketing
and Other Functional Areas
The tax department is concerned with the
effects of prices on tax loads
The domestic sales manager wants export
prices to be high enough to avoid parallel
importing
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Standardizing Prices Is Difficult
Foreign national pricing
Local pricing in another country
International pricing
Setting prices for unrelated and related firms
Transfer pricing
Intracorporate price -the price of a good or service
sold by one affiliate to another - the home office to
an affiliate, or vice versa
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Distribution Strategies
Distribution decisions are often
interdependent with other marketing mix
variables
Standardizing distribution is not always
possible
The availability of channel members varies
in each market
Environmental forces present in different
markets can influence distribution choices
LO9
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Standardizing Distribution
Disintermediation refers to the unraveling of
traditional distribution structures
Most often the result of being able to
combine Internet with fast delivery services
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Channel Selection
Direct or indirect marketing
The first decision: use middlemen or not?
Export sales may be done by local agents if
management believes this is politically
expedient
a country’s laws demand it
Factors influencing channel selection
Market
Product
Company
Middlemen
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