Transcript Document
Marketing
Process of planning and executing
the conception, pricing, promotion,
and distribution of ideas, goods,
and services to create exchanges that satisfy
individuals and organizational objectives
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©2004 Prentice Hall
Marketing Mix
How to develop the firm’s products
How to price those products
How to sell those products
How to distribute those products to the
firm’s customers
Who is the Target Market?
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©2004 Prentice Hall
The Elements of the Marketing Mix for
International Firms
Marketing Mix
Product
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Pricing
Promotion
Place
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Key Decision-Making Factors
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Standardization versus customization
Legal forces
Economic factors
Changing exchange rates
Target customers
Cultural influences
Competition
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Standardization versus Customization
Should the firm adopt an ethnocentric
approach?
Should it adopt a polycentric
approach?
Should it adopt a geocentric approach?
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Standardized International Marketing
Advantages
Reduces marketing costs
Facilitates centralized
control of marketing
Promotes efficiency in
R&D
Results in economies of
scale in production
Reflects the trend toward
a single global
marketplace
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Disadvantages
Ignores different
conditions of product use
Ignores local legal
differences
Ignores differences in
buyer behavior patterns
Inhibits local marketing
initiatives
Ignores other differences
in individual markets
©2004 Prentice Hall
Customized International Marketing
Advantages
Reflects different
conditions of product use
Acknowledges local
legal differences
Accounts for differences
in buyer behavior
patterns
Promotes local marketing
initiatives
Accounts for other
differences in individual
markets
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Disadvantages
Increases marketing costs
Inhibits centralized control
of marketing
Creates inefficiency in
R&D
Reduces economies of
scale in production
Ignores the trend toward a
single global marketplace
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Product Life Cycle
Intro
Growth
Maturity
Decline
Sales
Profit
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Break Even Analysis
$
Total Revenue
Curve = Selling
Price X Units
Cost Curve =
Fixed Costs +
Variable Costs
BE = Total Fixed Costs/Price – Variable Costs
Units
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Pricing Policies
Standard price policy
Two-tiered pricing
Market pricing
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Conditions for Market Pricing
Firm must face different demand
and/or cost conditions in the countries
in which it sells its products
Firm must be able to prevent arbitrage
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Risks to Market Pricing
Complaints about dumping
Damage to its brand name
Development of a gray market for its
products
Consumer resentment against
discriminatory prices
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Promotion Mix
Advertising
Personal Selling
Sales Promotion
Public Relations
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Factors affecting Advertising Strategy
The message it wants to convey
The media available for conveying the
message
The extent to which the firm wants to
globalize its advertising effort
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Advantages of Personal Selling for
International Firms
Local sales representatives understand
local culture, norms, and customs
Personal selling promotes close,
personal contact with customers
Personal selling makes it easier for
firm to adopt valuable market
information
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Distribution Issues
Physically transporting its goods and
services from where they are created to
the various markets in which they are
to be sold
Selecting the means by which to
merchandise its good in the markets it
wants to serve
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Basic Parts of a Distribution Channel
The manufacturer
A wholesaler
The retailer
The actual customer
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Distribution Channel Options
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Using E-Commerce
http://www.prettygarlic.com
and disintermediation.
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