International Marketing
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Transcript International Marketing
The Competitive Market
there is a limit to the products that can be supported
in a market
the competitive market is the specific products
in a category as well as companies that produce
them
market share is the percentage that a product
takes of the total dollars spent within a particular
category
market segments are narrower categories
The Competitive Market
One of the big issues becomes, how does a company
increase its market share?
1.
Take sales away from its competitors
2. Increase the size of the market
One of the big ways to increase the size of the market is….
International Marketing
Starbucks moves into India!
The Wall Street Journal – October 10, 2011
• Starbucks sets out to perk up sales by making a
long-awaited entry into one of the world’s fastestgrowing markets (deal to be closed soon…)
• Within the next 3 months, announce partnership
with Tata Coffee Ltd. to open stores in India.
• Starbucks outlets are likely to be located in retail
stores and hotels, associated with Tata group.
• Traditionally drinkers of tea, Indians have of
been taking to order espressos, etc at quick service
cafes as a growing middle class increasingly
adapts to Western tastes
• India's restrictive foreign-ownership laws could
prove to be a challenge for Starbucks. Local
foreign-investment rules limit a foreign singlebrand retailer to holding 51% of its joint venture
with a local partner.
HSBC – “The World’s Local Bank”
HSBC prides itself on understanding customers and
business at a local level around the world – this is
their USP
Their tag-line (slogan) “The World’s Local Bank”
shows how important this concept is to them
Let’s look at some of their advertising…
HSBC Television Advertising
Local Customs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JK_NinOmFWw
Golf in Japan
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GHuO6qmiSgg
The Wrong Flower
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jrbu0lCWjk
International Marketing
Use same methods in international marketing
Marketing Mix (4 P’s)
Target Market
Consumer Profiling & Segmentation
Competitive Advantage
Unique Selling Proposition
BUT, it needs to suit the local market
Research and local knowledge is critical
Marketing Mix
Product
Packaging needs to be in the right language
Regulations must be followed
Understand competitors there, size of product
Design (make up colour, cars)
Price
Need to factor in transportation costs, tariffs, tax impacts, insurance,
exchange rates, etc.
Tariffs: tax placed on good being imported into a country
Must calculate “landed cost” – the total, end cost to go into that
country
Consider the type of currency used
Marketing Mix cont’d
Promotion
Portrayal of women’s roles
Forbidden products and regulations
What channels are most effective?
Language
Placement
Channels of distribution
Ethical issues, customs, and regulations
Wholesale, retail, need to be assessed
Understand the impact of the “black market”
Consider your options for distribution
3 Approaches to International Marketing
1.
Global strategy - minimal changes for new markets
McDonalds or Coke
Very few pure global companies - Pringles
2. Adaptation strategy - making changes in product
or promotion to meet target's needs/wants/culture
Nike - clothing, sizes, climate, cultural sports;
Nestle – Milo drink in South Africa (soccer theme)
3. Customized strategy - developing a totally new
product to meet specific market needs
Coke in China (herbal flavours)
Marketing Strategy Depends on…
1. Geographical Factors - high population areas,
2.
3.
4.
5.
climate, land type; product, price (costs), place
Economic Factors - money, how developed the
country is, employment rates; price, place,
product, promotion
Political Factors - role of government, trade
barriers; place, product, price
Legal Factors - laws that govern the country;
product, promotion
Cultural Factors – Name some examples…
What Can Happen if this Approach is
Not Used?
Coors put its slogan “Turn it Loose” into Spanish,
where it was read as “suffer from diarrhea”
Clairol introduced the “Mist Stick”, a curling iron,
into German only to find out that “mist” is slang
for manure
Scandinavian vacuum manufacturer Electrolux
used the following in an American campaign:
“Nothing sucks like an Electrolux”
In Chinese, the Kentucky Fried Chicken slogan
“finger-lickin' good” came out as “eat your fingers
off”
More Global Marketing Bloopers
The Coca-Cola name in China was first read as
“Ke-kou-ke-la”, meaning “Bite the wax tadpole” or
“female horse stuffed with wax”, depending on the
dialect. Coke then researched 40,000 characters to
find a phonetic equivalent “ko-kou-ko-le”,
translating into “happiness in the mouth”
Pepsi's “Come alive with the Pepsi Generation”
translated into “Pepsi brings your ancestors back
from the grave”, in Chinese
In Italy, a campaign for Schweppes Tonic Water
translated the name into “Schweppes Toilet Water”
Globalization
Customization
Product Adaptation
Promotional Adaptation