Transcript Slide 1

International Business
by
Yong-Sik Hwang
Sejong University
Same product, different
marketing…
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Market Segmentation
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The process of dividing the firm’s total customer base
into homogeneous clusters that allows management to
formulate unique marketing strategies for each group.
Within each market segment, customers exhibit similar
characteristics, including income level, lifestyle,
demographic profile, or desired product benefits.
Internationally, common market segment variables
include income level, culture, legal system, etc.
E.g., Caterpillar targets its earthmoving equipment using distinctive
marketing approaches to several
major market segments, such as
construction firms, farmers, and the
military.
Global Market Segment
• A group of customers that share common
characteristics across many national markets.
• Firms target these buyers with relatively uniform
marketing programs, regarding product, pricing,
communications, and distribution
• Such segments often follow global media, embrace
new fashions or trends, and have much disposable
income.
Examples
• Young people worldwide (e.g., MTV, Levi’s)
• The global segment of jet-setting business executives
• People worldwide with elevated cholesterol (e.g., Pfizer and Lipitor)
Positioning
• The firm’s objective in pursuing global market
segments is to create a unique positioning of its
offerings in the minds of target customers.
• Positioning -- the firm develops both the product
and its marketing to evoke a distinct impression in
the customer's mind, emphasizing differences from
competitive offerings.
• In the international construction industry, Bechtel
positions itself as providing sophisticated technical
solutions for major infrastructure projects worldwide.
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Global Positioning Strategy
• Internationalizing firms aim for a global positioning
strategy, i.e., one in which the offering is positioned
similarly in the minds of buyers worldwide.
• Starbucks, Volvo, and Sony are good examples of
companies that successfully use this approach.
Consumers around the world view these strong
brands in the same way.
• Global positioning strategy is beneficial because it
reduces international marketing costs by minimizing
the extent to which management must adapt
elements of the marketing program for individual
markets.
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Volvo’s positioning in 1980s
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Standardization and Adaptation
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Adaptation: Modifying elements of the marketing
program to accommodate specific customer
requirements in individual foreign markets
Standardization: Efforts to make marketing program
elements uniform, so as to target entire regions of
countries, or even the global marketplace, with a
similar product or service
Goal: To strike some ideal balance between adaptation
and standardization
Standardization
Adaptation
Tradeoffs Between
Standardization and Adaptation
Standardization is pursued
when:
•Global market segments exist
•Products have universal
specifications (as in industrial
products)
Complete
Standardization
Advantages:
• Cut costs
• Improve planning and control
• Do global branding
Adaptation is pursued when the
market has unique characteristics
based on language, culture,
regulations, income level,
economic conditions, infrastructure
Complete
Adaptation
Advantages:
• Meet customer needs more
precisely
• Differentiate products
• Comply with government
regulations
Standardization and
Adaptation: A Balancing Act
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Adaptation is costly and may require substantial changes to
the marketing mix, especially when many national markets
are involved.
Firms pursue a regional strategy,
in which marketing elements are
formulated across a geographic region.
Dell strikes a balance between
standardization and adaptation. The
basic machines are identical worldwide, while the
keyboards and software are varied to suit local conditions.
Regional Solutions may be more Practical
• As a compromise, some firms will pursue standardization as
part of a regional strategy, where international marketing
program elements are formulated to exploit commonalities
across a geographic region, instead of across the world.
• General Motors markets distinctive car models for each of
China (for example, Buick), Europe (Opel, Vauxhall), and
North America (Cadillac, Saturn).
• Convergence of regional preferences, regional economic
integration, harmonization of product standards, and
growth of regional media and distribution channels, all
make regional marketing more feasible than pursuing
global standardization.
Global
International
Local
Global Branding
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Well-known global brands include: Electronics
(Playstation), personal care products (Gillette), toys
(Barbie), food (Cadbury), beverages (Heineken), credit
cards (Visa), movies (e.g., Star Wars), pop stars (Lady
Gaga), and sports stars (David Beckham).
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A strong global brand enhances:
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Efficiency and effectiveness of marketing programs
The ability to charge premium prices
The firm’s leverage with resellers
Brand loyalty
Trust and confidence in the product
Top Global Brands by Region
Global Product Development
• In developing international products, managers
emphasize their commonalities across countries
rather than the differences between them.
• A basic product incorporates only core features that
are then varied at the margins for individual markets.
• A global new-product planning team is a group
within a firm that determines which product elements
will be standardized and which will be adapted
locally, and how products will be launched.
International Pricing
• Pricing is complex in international business, due to
multiple currencies, trade barriers, added costs, and
typically longer distribution channels.
• Prices affect sales and profits. An inverse relationship
often exists between profits and market share.
• Firms face pressure to lower prices abroad, mainly due
to lower income levels.
• Conversely, prices can
escalate due to tariffs, taxes,
transportation, intermediary
markups, and after-sales service.
₤ $¥
€
Factors That Affect International Pricing
• Nature of the market: Local purchasing power and
distribution infrastructure are important factors.
• Nature of the product or industry: A specialized or
highly advanced product, or an industry with few
competitors, may necessitate charging a higher price.
• Type of distribution system: Channels are
complex in some countries, which pushes prices up.
• Location of the production facility: Locating
manufacturing near customers or in countries with
low-cost labor facilitates lower prices.
Three Pricing Strategies
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Rigid cost-plus pricing: Set a fixed price for all export
markets by adding a flat percentage to the domestic
price to compensate for the added costs of doing
business abroad.
Flexible cost-plus pricing: Set price to accommodate
local market conditions, such as customer purchasing
power, demand, and competitor prices.
Incremental pricing: Set price to cover only variable
costs, not fixed costs. This assumes that fixed costs are
already paid from sales in the home or other countries.
Steps in Setting the Price of a Product Abroad
International Price Escalation
• The problem of end-user prices reaching
high levels in the export market
• Caused by multilayered distribution channels,
intermediary margins, tariffs, and other added costs
associated with the foreign market
• May result in an excessively high retail price in the
target market, creating a competitive disadvantage
for the exporter
• Various strategies to reduce price escalation
Strategies to Combat
International Price Escalation
1. Shorten the distribution channel: That is, bypass some
intermediaries in the channel
2. Redesign product to remove costly features: E.g.,
Whirlpool developed a no-frills washing machine
3. Ship products unassembled, as parts and components,
qualifying for lower import tariffs: Do final assembly in the
foreign market, using low-cost labor, or in Foreign Trade
Zones
4. Have product reclassified using a different tariff
classification to qualify for lower tariffs.
5. Move production or sourcing to another country to take
advantage of lower labor costs or favorable currency rates
Strategies for Dealing
With Varying Currency Conditions
Transfer Pricing
• The pricing of intermediate or finished goods
exchanged among the subsidiaries and affiliates of
the same corporate family located in different
countries
• May be used to repatriate profits from countries that
restrict MNEs from taking their earnings out of the
country
• May be used to shift profits out of a high corporate
tax county into a low corporate tax one, thereby
increasing companywide profits
Gray Marketing
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Legal importation of genuine products into a country by
those other than authorized intermediaries.
• Buy the product at a low price in one country, import it
into another country, and sell it there at a higher price
Causes:
• Large difference in pricing of same product between two
countries, often the result of company strategy
• Exchange rate differences
of products priced in two
different currencies
Manufacturer Concerns Over Gray Markets
• Risk of tarnished image when customers realize
the product is available at a lower price through
alternative channels
• Strained relations between the manufacturer and
its distributors, as the latter lose sales
• Disrupted company activities, including:
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Sales forecasting
Pricing strategies
Merchandising
Marketing
Strategies to Cope With Gray Markets
1. Aggressively cut prices in countries and regions
targeted by gray market brokers
2. Hinder the flow of products into markets where
gray market brokers procure the product
3. Design products with exclusive features that
strongly appeal to customers
4. Publicize the limitations of gray market channels
International Advertising
• Firms conduct advertising via media, which
includes direct mail, radio, television, cinema,
billboards, transit, print media, and the Internet.
• Advertising spending on major media amounted to
$100 billion in both Western Europe and Asia.
• In the United States, advertising expenditures
totaled over $160 billion.
• Advertising is influenced by local factors, such as
availability of media, literacy, regulations, culture,
and local customs, as well as the goals of the firm.
Standardization in International Advertising
Media Characteristics in Selected Countries
The Largest Global Ad Agencies
International Distribution
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Distribution is the most inflexible of the marketing
program elements—once established, it may be difficult to
change.
The most common international distribution approaches
are via independent intermediaries (for exporters) and
establishing a subsidiary directly in the market (FDI).
Both types of channels must
perform a range of downstream
marketing activities.
The firm should seek to minimize
channel length in order to minimize
final prices and decrease complexity.
Global Account Management
• Under globalization, foreign customers seek uniform and
consistent prices, quality, and customer service.
• Global account management means serving a key
global customer in a consistent and standardized
manner, regardless of where in the world it operates.
• For example, Wal-mart is a key global account for
Procter & Gamble, purchasing many P&G products.
• Each global customer is assigned a global account
manager, or team, which provides the customer with
coordinated marketing support and service across
various countries.