International Market Expansion
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Transcript International Market Expansion
Presented By
Robert Cascio, Doctoral Candidate
Department of Marketing
College of Business, UCF
June 2011
Seminar for Study Abroad Program
University of Jaén
DAY 1 (2.5 hours):
Part I: Culture
• Attitudes, Beliefs, Color, Communication, Context, Values;
introduce Hofstede’s Topology
• Class Exercise
Part II: Diffusion | Segment, Target, and Position
• Adopter types, adoption process, adoption factors, etc.
• Video
Part III: Market Entry Steps and Options
• Entry Method – Licensing, Joint Venture, Direct Investment
• In-Class Case
Overview of Case for Monday and Homework.
DAY 2 (2.5 hours):
Case Study Quiz
Case Study Presentations
1. Position yourself as the International Market Development
team
2. Prepare a 7 to 10-minute boardroom-style presentation to
convince the CEO and top executives that your strategy is
the best alternative to take. Review rubric. Discuss peer
evaluation.
3. Discussion of strategies
Game Theory Discussion
Recent Customer Service Research Findings
between the North America and Europe.
Culture–ways
of living, built up by a group of
human beings, that are transmitted from one
generation to another
Culture has both conscious and unconscious
values, ideas, attitudes, and symbols
Culture is acted out in social institutions
Culture is both physical (clothing and tools)
and non-physical (religion, attitudes, beliefs,
and values)
Family
Education
Religion
Government
Business
These
institutions function to reinforce
cultural norms.
“Culture is the collective programming of the mind
that distinguishes the members of one category of
people from those of another.”
-Geert Hofstede
A
nation, an ethic group, a gender group, an
organization, or a family may be considered as
a category.
Attitude–learned
tendency to respond in a
consistent way to a given object or entity
Belief–an organized pattern of knowledge that
an individual holds to be true about the world
Value–enduring belief or feeling that a specific
mode of conduct is personally or socially
preferable to another mode of conduct.
Red–associated
with blood, wine-making,
activity, heat, and vibrancy in many countries
but is poorly received in some African
countries.
White–identified with purity and cleanliness in
the West, with death in parts of Asia.
Gray–means inexpensive in Japan and China,
but high quality and expensive in the U.S.
Yellow
indicates a
merchant in
India
Red signifies
good luck and
celebration in
China
In England
and the U.S.,
“Something
Blue” on a
bride’s garter
symbolizes
fidelity
Speaking English around
the Globe
Nonverbal
Communication
• There are more people
• Westerners tend to be
who speak English as a
foreign language than
native speakers
• 85% of European teens
study English
• Sony, Nokia, Matsushita
require managers to speak
English
verbal; Asians value
nonverbal communication
• In Japan, bowing has many
nuances
• In the Mideast, Westerners
should not show the soles
of shoes or pass documents
with the left hand
High Context
• Messages are explicit and
• Information resides in
context
• Emphasis on background,
basic values, societal status
• Less emphasis on legal
paperwork
• Focus on personal
reputation
Saudi Arabia, Japan
Low Context
specific
• Words carry all information
• Reliance on legal
paperwork
• Focus on non-personal
documentation of
credibility
Switzerland, U.S.,
Germany
Power
Distance
Individualism/Collectivism
Masculinity
Uncertainty Avoidance
Long-term Orientation
Group rules:
• 1 marketing major in each group
• 1 finance major in each group
• 1 laptop owner in each group
Assignment
• 10 minutes to prepare
• 3 minutes each to present
Group 1: Explain 2 different
entry methods
Group 2: VIA Ready Brew,
Breakfast value meal; keep
focus international please
Group 3: Starbucks vs.
McDonalds; globally, who is
better positioned
The mental stages through which an individual passes
from the time of his or her first knowledge of an
innovation to the time of product adoption or purchase
• Awareness
• Interest
• Evaluation
• Trial
• Adoption
Innovation
is something new; five factors
that affect the rate at which innovations
are adopted include:
•
•
•
•
•
Relative advantage
Compatibility
Complexity
Divisibility
Communicability
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Slalom Waterski
Wakeboard
Wakeskate
Kiteboard
Handglide
Paraglide
Volcanoboard (ashboarding)
Represents
an effort to identify and
categorize groups of customers and
countries according to common
characteristics
The
process of evaluating segments and
focusing marketing efforts on a country,
region, or group of people that has
significant potential to respond
Focus on the segments that can be
reached most effectively, efficiently, and
profitably
Positioning
is required to differentiate
the product or brand in the minds of
the target market.
Defined
as the process of identifying
specific segments—whether they be
country groups or individual consumer
groups—of potential customers with
homogeneous attributes who are likely to
exhibit similar responses to a company’s
marketing mix.
Demographics
Psychographics
Behavioral
characteristics
Benefits sought
Skiing became a sport in
Norway where it was
invented 4,000 years ago.
Income
is a valuable segmentation variable
• 2/3s of world’s GNP is generated in the Triad but
only 12% of the world’s population is in the Triad
Do
not read into the numbers
• Some services are free in developing nations so
there is more purchasing power
For
products with low enough price,
population is a more important variable
Benefit
segmentation focuses on the
value equation
• Value=Benefits/Price
Based
on understanding the problem a
product solves, the benefit it offers, or the
issue it addresses
Standardized
global marketing
• Mass marketing on a global scale
• Undifferentiated target marketing
• Standardized marketing mix
• Minimal product adaptation
• Intensive distribution
• Lower production costs
• Lower communication costs
Concentrated
marketing
global
• Niche marketing
• Single segment of
global market
• Look for global depth
rather than national
breadth
• Ex.: Chanel, Body
Shop
Differentiated
marketing
global
• Multi-segment
targeting
• Two or more distinct
markets
• Wider market
coverage
• Ex.: P&G markets Old
Spice and Hugo Boss
for Men
Locating
a brand in
consumers’ minds over
and against competitors in
terms of attributes and
benefits that the brand
does and does not offer
• Attribute or Benefit
• Quality and Price
• Use or User
• Competition
Local
consumer culture
positioning
• Identifies with local cultural
•
•
•
Clydesdale =
Which Beer?
•
meanings
Consumed by local people
Locally produced for local
people
Used frequently for food,
personal, and household
nondurables
Ex.: Budweiser is identified with
small-town America
Trade barriers are
falling around the
world
Companies need to
have a strategy to enter
world markets
Starbucks has used
direct ownership,
licensing, and
franchising for shops
and products
In 2008, Starbucks had 12,000 cafes in 35
countries and sales of $10.8 billion. Its goal
is to reach 40,000 units worldwide.
It
depends on:
• Vision
• Attitude toward risk
• Available investment
capital
• How much control is
desired
A
contractual agreement whereby one
company (the licensor) makes an asset
available to another company (the licensee) in
exchange for royalties, license fees, or some
other form of compensation
• Patent
• Trade secret
• Brand name
• Product formulations
Partial
or full ownership of operations
outside of home country
• Foreign Direct Investment
•Forms
–Joint ventures
–Minority or majority
equity stakes
–Outright acquisition
IKEA, with affordable furniture and
housewares, spent $2 billion in Russia.
Top Target Countries
for U.S. Investment
1.
2.
3.
United Kingdom
Canada
The Netherlands
2000 cumulative total by U.S.
companies = $1.2 trillion
Top Foreign Countries
Investing in the U.S.
1.
2.
3.
United Kingdom
Japan
The Netherlands
2000 investment by foreign
companies in U.S. = $1.2
trillion
Entry
strategy for a single target country
in which the partners share ownership of a
newly-created business entity
Builds upon each partner’s strengths
Examples: Budweiser and Kirin (Japan),
GM and Toyota, GM and Russian
government, Ericsson’s cell phones and
Sony, Ford and Mazda, Chrysler and BMW
Advantages
• Allows for risk sharing–
financial and political
• Provides opportunity to
learn new environment
• Provides opportunity to
achieve synergy by
combining strengths of
partners
• May be the only way to
enter market given
barriers to entry
Disadvantages
• Requires more investment
•
•
•
•
than a licensing agreement
Must share rewards as well
as risks
Requires strong
coordination
Potential for conflict among
partners
Partner may become a
competitor
Start-up of new operations
• Greenfield operations or
• Greenfield investment
Merger with an existing enterprise
Acquisition
of an existing enterprise
Examples: Volkswagen, 70% stake in
Skoda Motors, Czech Republic
(equity), Honda, $550 million auto
assembly plant in Indiana (new
operations)
Gladwell, M. (2000). The Tipping Point. New York:
Little, Brown, and Company.
Hofstede, G. (2001). Culture's Consequences.
Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Keegan, W. J. (2011). Global Marketing (Vol. 6th
Edition). Boston: Prentice Hall.
• This is the required text for the Global Marketing
elective course at UCF.
Rogers, E. M. (1986). The Diffusion of Innovations (3rd
ed.). New York: The Free Press.
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