vodafone presentation - BUEC342
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Vodafone enters Japan
Josh Proulx, Mario Panizzon, Patricia Ting, Steffen Janzen, Stuart Young
Introduction
Explore what we’re talking about:
Ideas – movie, graphs or other attention
grabbing idea
Vodafone’s History
Founded in 1984
Became Vodafone in 1991
Merged with Airtouch in 1999
Vodofone’s Business
Leading Mobile Telecommunications Co.
Global presence in Europe, Middle East,
Africa, Asia Pacific, and the US
こんにちは! [Konnichi wa]
Population: 127 million
Pop. Growth Rate: -0.19%
GDP per capita: 34,000
Literacy Rate: 99%
Life Expectancy: 82.12 years
HDI: 0.96 (10th)
Religion: Shinto and Buddhism
GINI Index: 38.1 (63rd)
Japanese Culture
Bow as traditional greeting
Age equals respect
Negations are subtle and indirect
High-context culture
Direct eye contact is not the norm
Japanese Culture (Josh edit it)
Hofstede
Keitai Culture
◦ Cell phones are integral to life
◦ Well adapted to advanced technologies
Political Environment
PM in 2001 was Junichiro Koizumi
Emperor (figurehead), Diet (legislative),
Cabinet (ministers of state), and judiciary
Prior to WWII, military totalitarian state
Democratic Constitution 1947
Stable environment for investors
◦ Smooth transitions between gov’ts
◦ Political violence virtually non-existent
Legal Environment
1997 revised Telecommunications
Business Law removing FDI limitations
Tariffs are low, but have non-tariff barriers
Legal system is civil law
Restrictions on Japanese lawyers limit
foreign investors
Courts are slow
Corporate Tax Rate 42% in 2001
Economic Environment (2001)
(mario edit)
World’s 2nd largest economy
Stimulus packages & restructuring
Manufacturing (electronics, cars)
Growing FDI (doubled in 1999)
Low openess to foreign trade
◦ No free trade aggreements
Deflation
Business Environment
2nd
largest telecommunications market
Market players/market share
◦ NTT DoCoMo: 58.4%
◦ KDDI Group: 27%
◦ J-Phone Group: 14.6%
Market Trends
◦ PHS handsets & Digital Phones
◦ Internet access – iMode
◦ 3G networks being developed
SWOT Analysis
Strengths
J-Phone brand equity
Highly successful parent company
J-Phone has 3G license
Local knowledge from J-Phone
Vodafone has successfully entered other foreign
markets
Vodafone has well-diversified assets
Well developed global supply chain
Weaknesses
No experience in East Asian markets
Low quality phones/products
Lagging in technology
New to Japanese culture
Weak Japanese wireless infrastructure
Opportunities
Low import tariffs
2nd largest telecom market
Explosive growth in mobile market
Internet
Loyal employees (culture in Japan)
Consumers adapt well to new technologies
Unattractive to switch cell phone providers
Aging, well to do consumer group
Threats
NTT dominance!!!
Non-tariff trade barriers
High consumer expectations (well-educated,
technology conscious)
Non-english consumer base
Legal system – businesses settle outside of court
Recessionary market
Inability to lay-off employees
Challenging advertising environment
High corporate tax rate (compared to UK +12%)
Why Enter Japan?
“The industrial logic behind Vodafone’s
expensive foray into Japan was that such a
vibrant market would give it a technological
edge over domestic and European rivals.”
◦ The Business Times
“Vodafone [entered] with two aims: to exploit
Japan's lead in mobile telecoms to boost
Vodafone's fortunes elsewhere, and to use
Vodafone's global scale to win a larger share of
the Japanese market.“
◦ The Economist
Entrance to Market (josh can you
make this into a nice timeline? ^^)
1999: Inherited small operating interests
in 9 companies from merger with
Airtouch
1999 October: increased interests to 20%
2000 June: 9 companies restructured as JPhone Communications
2001: gradually increased direct stake in JPhone to 69.7%
Entrance to Market
Vodafone purchased shares of Japan TeleCom , British
Telecom, and J-Phone Comm in order to gain control
Evaluation
Four topics:
◦
◦
◦
◦
Problems with 3G
Globalized Strategy
Management
Final Straws
Evaluation – Problems with 3G
Late launch of 3G network compared to
competitors
3G service quality poor
Re-launching of 3G network
Lost market share and customers
Evaluation – Globalized Strategy
Decided to use economies of scale
◦ European handsets
Failed to factor in local consumers
◦ Phone were technologically behind
◦ Demanding consumers
Evaluation - Management
Tried to revamp management to save
company
◦ 2004 Shiro Tsuda (former DoCoMo VP)
◦ 68 days later replaced by Bill Morrow
Management failed to turn company
around
Evaluation – Final Straw
New number portability rules
Three new competitors
Threatened regulation of pre-paid market
Continued poor performance
Market Exit Strategy
2005 applied to delist Vodafone KK from
Tokyo Stock Exchange
2006 sold to SoftBank for 15.1billion USD
Conclusion
Smooth entrance to Japanese market
Failure to provide relevant services to the
Japanese consumer
Takeaways:
◦ Globalized strategy may not always work
◦ Don’t forget about the consumer
◦ Watch your competitors