Transcript Document
Marketing II
The Chang School-Ryerson University
Continuing Education
CMKT 200 Fall 2005
Instructor: Armand Gervais
Email: [email protected] preferred
Web: www.ryerson.ca/~agervais
Office: Bus 308
Phone: 416-979-5000 Ext 4215
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Lecture 2 Agenda
Don’t Forget Name Tags
Global Marketing
Video Wal-Mart
Break
Discussion Video
Simulation
To Do’s for next weeks class
Time to work in Groups
REACHING GLOBAL MARKETS
NOW THE WORLD CAN BREATHE
EASIER…ONE NOSE AT A TIME
Breathe Right
Worldwide success
DYNAMICS OF WORLD TRADE
World Trade Flows
Global perspective
FIGURE 7-1
Illustrative world
trade flows for
manufactured
goods and
commodities
(billions
of dollars)
DYNAMICS OF WORLD TRADE
Global perspective (cont)
Countertrade
Trade feedback effect
United States perspective
Gross domestic product
Balance of trade
Competitive Advantage of Nations
DYNAMICS OF WORLD TRADE
Competitive Advantage of Nations
Factor conditions
Demand conditions
Related supporting industries
Company strategy, structure, and rivalry
Economic Espionage
FIGURE 7-2
Porter’s
“diamond” of
national
competitive
advantage
Concept Check
1. What is the trade feedback effect?
A: The phenomenon in which a
country’s imports affect its exports
and vice versa.
Concept Check
2. What variables influence why some
companies and industries in a country
succeed globally while others lose ground
or fail?
A: Factor conditions; demand
conditions; related and supporting
industries; and company strategy,
structure, and rivalry.
EMERGENCE OF A BORDERLESS
ECONOMIC WORLD
Decline of Economic Protectionism
FIGURE 7-3 How protectionism affects
world trade
EMERGENCE OF A BORDERLESS
ECONOMIC WORLD
Decline of Economic Protectionism
(cont)
Tariffs
Quota
World Trade Organization
Rise of Economic Integration
European Union
FIGURE 7-4 The countries of the
European Union in 2002
Map of Euro Countries
Euro Coins and Currency
1 Euro Coin (Common Side)
5 Euro Bank Note (Common Side)
1 Euro Coin (Greek)
5 Euro Bank Note (French)
EMERGENCE OF A BORDERLESS
ECONOMIC WORLD
Rise of Economic Integration (cont)
North American Free Trade Agreement
Asian Free Trade Agreements
EMERGENCE OF A BORDERLESS
ECONOMIC WORLD
A New Reality: Global Competition among
Global Companies for Global Customers
Global Competition
Strategic alliances
EMERGENCE OF A BORDERLESS
ECONOMIC WORLD
A New Reality: Global Competition
(cont)
Global Companies
Multidomestic marketing strategy
Global marketing strategy
Global Consumers
Emergence of Networked Global
Marketplace
Diet Pepsi Ad
Brazil
The Global Teenager
500 million consumers
Concept Check
1. What is protectionism?
A: It is the practice of shielding one or
more sectors of a country’s
economy from foreign competition
through the use of tariffs or quotas.
Concept Check
2. The North American Free Trade
Agreement was designed to promote free
trade among which countries?
A: United States, Canada, and Mexico
Concept Check
3. What is the difference between a multidomestic
marketing strategy an a global marketing strategy?
A: A multidomestic marketing strategy means
that firms have as many different product
variations, brand names, and advertising
programs as countries in which they do
business. A global marketing strategy
standardizes marketing activities when there
are cultural similarities and adapts them when
cultures differ.
A GLOBAL
ENVIRONMENTAL SCAN
Cultural Diversity
Cross-cultural analysis
Values
Customs
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
Cultural Symbols
Semiotics
Eiffel Tower
Cultural lessons for Coca-Cola
Parthenon
Cultural lessons for Coca-Cola
A GLOBAL
ENVIRONMENTAL SCAN
Cultural Diversity (cont)
Language
Back translation
Cultural ethnocentricity
Consumer ethnocentrism
A GLOBAL
ENVIRONMENTAL SCAN
Economic Considerations
Stage of Economic Development
Economic Infrastructure
Consumer Income and Purchasing Power
Coca-Cola in Russia
Financial investments in bottling and distribution
FIGURE 7-5 How purchasing power
differs around the world
A GLOBAL
ENVIRONMENTAL SCAN
Economic Considerations (cont)
Currency exchange rates
A GLOBAL
ENVIRONMENTAL SCAN
Political-Regulatory Climate
Political Stability
Trade Regulations
Checking Political Risk
Ranking favorable business climates
Concept Check
1.Semiotics involves the study of
________________________
cultural
symbols and their
________________________
role
in the assignment of
________.for people
meaning
Concept Check
2. When foreign currencies can buy more
Canadian dollars, are Canadian products
more or less expensive for a foreign
consumer?
A: Less expensive.
GLOBAL MARKET-ENTRY STRATEGIES
FIGURE 7-6 Alternative global marketentry strategies
GLOBAL MARKET-ENTRY
STRATEGIES
Exporting
Licensing
Joint Venture
Direct Investment
Creative
Cosmetics
in Japan
Creative Export
Marketing
McDonald’s in Moscow, Russia
McDonald’s in Moscow, Russia
Customers Waiting Outside
Customers Eating Inside
Concept Check
1. What mode of entry could a company
follow if it has no previous experience in
global marketing?
A: Indirect exporting through
intermediaries.
Concept Check
2. How does licensing differ from a joint
venture?
A: In licensing, the firm offers the right to a
trademark, patent or trade secret, in
return for a fee or royalty. In a joint
venture, a foreign and a local firm to
produce some product or service. The
two companies share ownership, control,
and profits of the new entity.
CRAFTING A WORLDWIDE
MARKETING EFFORT
Product and Promotion Strategies
Product extension
Product adaptation
Product invention
FIGURE 7-7 Five product and promotion strategies
for global marketing
CRAFTING A WORLDWIDE
MARKETING EFFORT
Distribution Strategy
Gillette in
Greece
Same global message
Gillette in
Germany
Same global message
Gillette in
United States
Same global message
FIGURE 7-8 Channels of distribution in global
marketing
CRAFTING A WORLDWIDE
MARKETING EFFORT
Pricing Strategy
Dumping
Gray market
Concept Check
1. Products may be sold globally in three
ways. What are they?
A: Product extension, product
adaptation, and product invention.
Concept Check
2. What is dumping?
A: Dumping is when a firm sells a
product in a country below its
domestic price or below its actual
cost.
Is Wal-Mart Good For
America
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/walmart/view/
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Wal-Mart Facts
100 million: The number of people who shop at Wal-Mart's 3400 American stores every week.
50 million: The amount of square footage Wal-Mart plans to add this year, including 50-55 new Wal-Mart
stores, 220-230 new Supercenters, 35-40 new Sam's Club and 130-140 new international stores. [View a chart
of Wal-Mart locations worldwide, as of Jan. 31, 2004.]
1.2 million: The number of Wal-Mart associates in the U.S. Any full- or part-time Wal-Mart employee, up to
and including the CEO, is considered an "associate," in Wal-Mart parlance. Internationally, Wal-Mart employs
an additional 330,000 associates.
600,000: The number of new employees Wal-Mart hires each year. The company's turnover rate is 44 percent -close to the retail industry average.
1979: The year Wal-Mart's sales first top $1 billion.
$256 billion : Wal-Mart's sales in 2003. In the words of Wal-Mart CFO Tom Schoewe, Wal-Mart's sales are
equal to "one IBM, one Hewlett Packard, one Dell computer, one Microsoft and one Cisco System -- and oh,
by the way, after that we got $2 billion left over."
35: The number of Wal-Mart Supercenters in China.
$15 billion: The amount of Chinese products Wal-Mart estimates it imports each year; others suggest the
number may be higher.
$120 billion: The U.S. trade deficit with China in 2003.
8 percent: The amount of total U.S. retail sales, excluding automobiles, accounted for by Wal-Mart.
$9.98: The average full-time hourly wage for a Wal-Mart employee. The average full-time hourly wage in metro
areas (defined as areas with a population of 50,000 or more) is $10.38. In some urban areas it is higher: $11.03
in Chicago, $11.08 in San Francisco, and $11.20 in Austin.
To Do’s for Next Class
Before you leave today sign attendance sheet
Email me your contact information Student ID, Email, and
contact number
Please include a little about yourself:
Program, Major, work experience etc.
Complete the assigned readings download through library
Form teams and review simulation
www.marketplace6.com
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., McGraw-Hill/Irwin