Transcript PPT
Thriving in the Marketing
Environment:
The World is Flat
Chapter Objectives
• Understand business ethics and explain how marketers practice
ethical business behavior
• Explain how firms practice social responsibility
• Understand the big picture of international marketing, including
world trade flows and the decision criteria firms use in their
decisions to go global
• Explain the WTO, economic communities, and how countries protect
local industries by establishing roadblocks to foreign companies
• Understand how factors in the external business environment
influence marketing strategies and outcomes
• Explain the strategies that a firm can use to enter global markets
• Understand the arguments for standardization versus localization of
marketing strategies in global markets
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Real People, Real Choices:
Decision Time at Tupperware
• Tupperware Brands Corporation (Rick Goings)
• How to refresh brand perception?
Option 1: increase advertising in new markets
Option 2: utilize public relations
Option 3: build demand using word-of-mouth
TUPPERWARE.COM
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Welcome to the
New Era of Marketing
• Adopt a global focus
• Managers emphasis social profit: net
benefit for a firm and society from the
firm’s ethical practices and socially
responsible behavior
INTERFACEINC.COM
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Figure 3.1: Linking Ethics to Profits
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Doing Good: Ethical Behavior
in the Marketplace
• Business ethics: basic values that guide a
firm’s behavior
• Codes of ethics: written standards of
behavior to which everyone in the
organization must subscribe
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Consumerism: People Fighting Back
• The social movement directed toward
protecting consumers from harmful
business practices
• Consumer Bill of Rights: the right to be
safe, be informed, be heard, and choose
freely
PHILLIP MORRIS
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Discussion
• In 2006, the National Institutes of Health
released the results of a study showing
that young people tend to drink more in
areas with more alcohol advertising
compared to areas with less advertising
Do alcohol companies have an ethical obligation to
curtail their advertising in order to decrease drinking
rates among young people?
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Ethics in the Marketing Mix
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Making the product safe
Pricing the product fairly
Promoting the product ethically
Making the product available ethically
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Discussion
• Some people criticize advertising as being
deceptive
Do you agree or disagree?
What would be the advantages and disadvantages to
firms when they deceive consumers?
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Doing It Right: Promoting
Social Responsibility
• Social responsibility:
organizations
engaging in activities
that have a positive
effect on society and
promote public good
NFL Video
CORPORATE
RESPONSIBILITY
AT INTEL
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Doing It Right: Promoting Social
Responsibility (cont’d)
• Serving the Environment
• Serving Society: Cause Marketing
• Serving the Community:
Promoting Cultural Diversity
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Individual Activity
• Write down some thoughts about how
products/services have the potential to
harm you individually
In your opinion, do any products “cross the line” when
it comes to your level of comfort?
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Global Marketing
• World Trade: the flow of goods/services
among different countries – the value of all
exports/imports of the world’s nations
• Countertrade: trading products between
countries or supplying goods in return for
tax breaks from local government
(accounts for 25% of all world trade)
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Figure 3.3: North America Trade Flows
(in $billions)
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Figure 3.4: Decision Model for
Entering Foreign Markets
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Making the Decision to Go Global
• “Go” or “no go”: is it in the best interest of
the firm to remain in home market or to go
where opportunities exist?
• Which global markets are most attractive?
• Key to the decisions: market conditions
and creating a competitive advantage
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At the Borders
• Protectionism: quotas, embargoes, and
tariffs
• World Trade Organization (WTO): to “help
trade flow smoothly, freely, fairly, and
predictably”
• Economic communities promoting trade
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Discussion
• Do you think the WTO will succeed in
eliminating world trade barriers?
• What do you think are the positive and
negative aspects of a totally free
marketplace?
• What countries will win and which will lose
in such a world?
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The Global Marketing Environment
• A company going global must understand
local conditions in the targeted country
• Understanding the external environment:
economic, competitive, technological,
political, and cultural factors affect
marketers’ global strategies
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The Economic Environment:
Indicators of Economic Health
• Economic health =
market potential for firm
• Gross domestic product
(GDP): total dollar value
of goods/services a
country produces within
its borders in a year
• Per capita GDP: total
GDP/number of citizens
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Indicators of Economic Health (cont’d)
• Gross national product
(GNP): the value of all
goods/services produced
by a country whether in
its borders or not
• Economic infrastructure:
quality of country’s
distribution, financial, and
communications systems
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Level of Economic Development
• Less developed country (LDC)
Economic base is often agricultural
Attractive markets for staples and inexpensive items
• Developing countries
Economy shifts emphasis from agriculture to industry
• Developed countries
Offer wide range of opportunities for international
marketers
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The Business Cycle
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Prosperity
Recession
Recovery
Depression
Inflation
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The Competitive Environment
• Competitive intelligence: gathering and
analyzing publicly available information
about rivals to develop superior marketing
strategies
Collected from news media, the Internet, and publicly
available government documents
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The Competitive Environment (cont’d)
• Competition in the microenvironment
• Competition for consumer’s discretionary income
• Competition among products to satisfy the same
consumer’s needs/wants
• Competition among brands offering similar
goods/services on the basis of brand reputation or
perceived benefits
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The Competitive Environment (cont’d)
• Competition in the macroenvironment
(overall structure of industry)
Monopoly
Oligopoly
Monopolistic competition
Perfect competition
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The Technological Environment
• Technology provides firms with important
competitive advantages
• Patent: legal document giving inventors
exclusive rights to produce/sell a particular
invention in that country
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The Political and Legal Environment
• Local, state, national, and global laws and
regulations affect businesses
• The law in the United States
To make sure businesses compete fairly with each
other
To make sure that businesses don’t take advantage of
consumers
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The Political and Legal Environment
(cont’d)
• Political Constraints on Trade
Economic sanctions
Nationalization
Expropriation
• Regulatory constraints on trade
Local content rules: a proportion of a product must
consist of components supplied by industries in the
host country or economic community
• Human rights issues
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The Sociocultural Environment
• Demographics
• Cultural values
Collectivist versus individualistic cultures
• Norms, customs, mores, and conventions
• Language
• Ethnocentrism: the tendency to prefer
products from one’s own culture
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Discussion
• Some countries have criticized U.S.
business for exporting American culture
What about American culture might be objectionable?
Can you think of some products that U.S. marketers
export that can be objectionable to some foreign
markets?
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Group Activity
• What global external environment factors would
you consider to be critically relevant for the
following products (form a small group and pick
one of the products listed below):
Coffee
Cars
Video games
Sporting events
Computers
Soda
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How “Global” Should a Global
Marketing Strategy Be?
• Market-entry strategy: the level of commitment
to operate in another country
Figure 3.4
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How “Global” Should a Global
Marketing Strategy Be? (cont’d)
• Exporting
• Contractual agreements
Licensing
Franchising
• Strategic alliances
Joint venture
• Direct investment
• Born-global firms
LOGITECH
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Global Marketing: Choosing a
Marketing Mix Strategy
• Standardization vs. localization
Standardization: offer the same products in all
markets
Localization: offer a customized marketing mix for
each country
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Global Marketing: Choosing a
Marketing Mix Strategy (cont’d)
• Product decisions
Straight extension strategy
Product adaptation strategy
Product invention strategy
Backward invention
• Promotion decisions: whether or not to
modify promotions
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Global Marketing: Choosing a
Marketing Mix Strategy (cont’d)
• Price decisions
Free trade zones
Gray market goods
Dumping
• Distribution decisions
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Group Activity
• Form a small group and formulate either a
brief standardized or local strategy in a
foreign country (of your choice) for one of
the following products:
Tide laundry detergent
Verizon cellular phone service
Direct TV service
Hollister clothing
Weber gas barbecue grills
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Real People, Real Choices
• Tupperware Brands Corporation (Rick
Goings)
• Rick chose option 2: Utilize public relations
Since the campaign launched in April 2005,
Tupperware has seen a significant increase in the
number of media exposures it has gotten
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Discussion
• The World Trade Organization seeks to
eventually remove all barriers to world trade.
• Do you think this will ever be a reality?
• What do you think are the positive and negative
aspects of a totally free marketplace?
• Which countries will win and which will lose in
such a world?
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Marketing in Action Case:
You Make the Call
• What is the decision facing New Balance?
• What factors are important in
understanding this decision situation?
• What are the alternatives?
• What decision(s) do you recommend?
• What are some ways to implement your
recommendation?
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Keeping it Real: Fast Forward to Next Class
Decision Time at Plan-it Marketing
• Meet Cindy Tungate, president Plan-it
Marketing, a marketing research firm
• Plan-it’s client Priceline needs help in
planning its business
• The decision: What marketing research
strategy will maximize results for
Priceline?
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