GLOBAL PRODUCT POLICY 1: DEVELOPING NEW PRODUCTS
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Transcript GLOBAL PRODUCT POLICY 1: DEVELOPING NEW PRODUCTS
Global Marketing Management
Masaaki Kotabe & Kristiaan Helsen
Third Edition
John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2004
Chapter 11
Kotabe & Helsen's Global Marketing
Management, Third Edition, 2004
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Chapter 11
Global Product Policy Decisions I:
Developing New Products for
Global Markets
Chapter 11
Kotabe & Helsen's Global Marketing
Management, Third Edition, 2004
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Chapter Overview
1. Global Product Strategies
2. Standardization Versus Customization
3. Multinational Diffusion
4. Developing New Products for Global
Markets
5. Global NPD and Culture
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Kotabe & Helsen's Global Marketing
Management, Third Edition, 2004
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Introduction
A cornerstone of a global marketing mix program
is the set of product policy decisions that
multinational companies (MNCs) constantly need
to formulate.
The range of product policy questions may
include:
– What new products should be developed for
what markets?
– What products should be added, removed, or
modified for the product line in each of the
countries in which the company operates?
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Management, Third Edition, 2004
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Introduction (contd.)
– What brand names should be used?
– How should the product be packaged and
serviced?
Examples of improper product policy decisions in
global marketing:
– Ikea in the United States
– Proctor & Gamble in Australia
– U.S. Car Makers in Japan
– Ford in Brazil
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1. Global Product Strategies
Three global strategies to penetrate foreign
markets:
– Extension strategy
– Adaptation strategy
– Invention strategy
Five strategic options for the global marketplace:
Strategic Option 1: Product and Communication
Extension -- Dual Extension
Strategic Option 2: Product Extension -Communications Adaptation
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Kotabe & Helsen's Global Marketing
Management, Third Edition, 2004
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1. Global Product Strategies (contd.)
Strategic Option 3: Product Adaptation -Communications Extension
Strategic Option 4: Product and Communications
Adaptation -- Dual Adaptation
Strategic Option 5: Product Invention
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Management, Third Edition, 2004
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2. Standardization Versus Customization
Five forces favoring a globalized product strategy:
1. Common customer needs
2. Global customers
3. Scale economies
4. Time to market
5. Regional market agreements
Degree of Standardization
– Modular Approach
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Management, Third Edition, 2004
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2. Standardization versus Customization
(contd. )
– Core-Product (Common Platform) Approach
» Balancing act between standardization and
adaptation
» Overstandardization vs. overcustomization
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Management, Third Edition, 2004
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3. Multinational Diffusion
Examples:
– Microsoft’s Xbox videogame
– NTT DoCoMo’s iMode
The Adoption of new products is driven by three
types of factors:
– Individual Differences
– Personal Influences
– Product Characteristics
1. Relative advantage
2. Compatibility
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3. Multinational Diffusion (contd.)
3. Complexity
4. Trialability
5. Observability
Other country characteristics used to predict new
product penetration patterns include:
– Homogeneous population
– Lead countries
– Lag countries
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Management, Third Edition, 2004
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3. Multinational Diffusion (contd.)
–
–
–
–
Cosmopolitanism
Mobility
Labor force profile
Individualism and national innovativeness (see
Exhibit 11-4)
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4. Developing New Products
for Global Markets
Identifying New Product Ideas
– 4 C’s:
» Company
» Customers
» Competition
» Collaborators
New Product Development (NPD) Process
Screening (see Exhibit 11-5)
Concept Testing
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4. Developing New Products
for Global Markets (contd.)
– Conjoint Analysis
– To Standardize or not to Standardize
Test Marketing
Timing of Entry: Waterfall versus Sprinkler
Strategies (see Exhibit 11-11)
– Waterfall Strategy: Global phased rollout where
new products trickle down in a cascade-like
manner
– Sprinkler Strategy: Simultaneous worldwide
entry
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5. Global NPD and Culture
Global linkages between the new product
development process and national cultures where
cultural differences heavily influence the NPD
process.
Differences between European and North
American new product development programs:
– The NPD process among European firms is
much more formalized.
– European Go/No Go standards tend to be far
stricter than American norms.
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5. Global NPD and Culture (contd.)
– NPD projects within European firms are more
likely to have a well-defined project leader and
an assigned team of players than projects run by
North American companies; European teams
are much more multifunctional than American
teams.
– European companies punish project leaders less
in case of failure, reward intrapreneurs more
generously, and offer more seed money for pet
projects.
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5. Global NPD and Culture (contd.)
Japanese Companies and Product Churning:
– Japanese companies strongly believe in rushing
new products to the markets with little or no
market research and then gauge the market’s
reaction.
– Japanese NPD managers constantly listen to the
“voice of the customers.”
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Kotabe & Helsen's Global Marketing
Management, Third Edition, 2004
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Copyright © John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2004
Chapter 11
Kotabe & Helsen's Global Marketing
Management, Third Edition, 2004
18