International Marketing Chapter 7
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Transcript International Marketing Chapter 7
International Marketing
Chapter 7
Building the Knowledge Base
Copyright © 1999 by Harcourt Brace & Company
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following address: Permissions Department, Harcourt Brace & Company, 6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando,
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Defining the Issue
What
is Marketing research?
…links
consumer, customer, and public
to the marketer through information….
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International and Domestic
Research
Use
of similar tools and techniques as
in domestic research, but the
environments differ
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The Primary Differences:
New
(Duties, Exchange Rates, Entry Modes, etc.)
New
parameters
environments
Legal, Customs, Culture
Number
of factors involved
Broader definition of competition
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Recognizing the Need for
Research
•CRITICISMS
•Subjective Assessment
•Less rigorous
•Less Formal
•Less Quantitative
•Discontinuous After
Initial Entry
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Reasons Executives View International
Research as Unimportant:
Lack of sensitivity to differences in consumer
tastes and preferences.
Limited appreciation for the different marketing
environments abroad.
Lack of familiarity with national and international
data sources and the inability to use them.
Limited business experience in a country or with
a specific firm may be used as a substitute for
organized research.
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The Benefits of Research
V(dr)
- V(d) > C(r)
V(dr) is the value of the decision with research
V(d) is the value of decision without research
C(r) is the cost of research
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Determining Research Objectives
Going
International: Exporting
Going
International: Importing
Market
Expansion
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Going International: Exporting
Foreign-Market
Opportunity Analysis
Total and per capita GNP, mortality
rates, and population data
Individual market data product data,
market trends, and restrictions
Governmental restrictions
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Information Needs for the
Importing Decision:
Identify markets that produce desired supplies or materials
Reliability of a foreign supplier and consistency of its
product or service quality
government rules and regulations
Product or service quality
Length of delivery time
Government rules & regulations - foreign and domestic
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Market Expansion Data Needs:
Detailed information for penetrating a market
Designing or fine-tuning the marketing mix
Monitoring the political climate of a country.
Determining Secondary Information
Requirements
– What do you really need to know?
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A Sequential Process of Researching
Foreign Market Potential
Stage One
Preliminary Screening for Attractive Country Markets
Key Question:
Which Foreign Markets Warrant Detailed Investigation?
Stage Two
Assessment of Industry Market Potential
Key Question:
What is the Aggregate Demand of Each Market Selected?
Stage Three
Company Sales Potential Analysis
Key Question:
How Attractive is the Potential Demand for Company Products /Services?
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Most Critical International
Information for U.S. Firms
Government Data
–
–
–
–
Tariff information
U.S. export/import data
Nontariff measures
Foreign export/import
data
– Data on government
trade policy
Corporate Data
– Local laws and
regulations
– Size of market
– Local standards and
specifications
– Distribution System
– Competitive activity
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Sources of Data
Governments
International
organizations
Service organizations
Trade associations
Directories and newsletters
Databases
Other firms
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Evaluating Data
Is it appropriate to the task at hand?
What is the quality of the data source?
What is the quality of the data?
How compatible and comparable are the data to
your problem?
Are data categories comparable?
Are there any societal implications of obtaining
data?
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The Primary Research Process
Determining
information requirements
Industrial versus consumer research
Determining research administration
Determining the research technique
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Determining Information
Requirements
Formulate
research questions to
determine precisely the information that
is sought.
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Industrial Versus Consumer
Research
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Determining Research
Administration
Centralized? The research specifications are designed
by the home office and forwarded to country operations for
implementation.
Coordinated? An intermediary such as an outside
research agency brings headquarters and country operations
together
Decentralized? Headquarters established the broad
thrust of research and delegates design and implementation to
the local countries.
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Top 7 U.S. Research Firms
D&B Marketing Information Services
Information Resources Inc.
The Arbitron Company
Westat Inc.
Maritz Marketing Research
Walsh International/PMSI
The Kanter Group
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Determining the Research
Technique
Soft Data or Hard Data?
Developing the Sampling Plan
Interviews?
Data Collection
Focus Groups?
Analyzing & Interpreting the data
Presenting Data\
Observation?
Follow Ups
Surveys?
Relevant
Question Format
Timely
Question Content
Flexible
Question Wording
Accurate
Exhaustive
Convenient
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What you don’t want is:
How do we Gather Information?
Environmental Scanning
Scenario Building
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Delphi Studies
International Marketing
Chapter 8
The Export Process
Motivations to Internationalize
Proactive
Motives
Profit advantage
Unique products
Technological advantage
Reactive
Exclusive information
Managerial urge
Tax benefit
Economies of scale
Motives
Competitive pressures
Overproduction
Declining domestic sales
Excess capacity
Saturated domestic markets
Proximity to customers and ports
The Foreign Sales Corporation (FSC)
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Change Agents
Internal change agents
External change agents
Enlightened management
New management
Significant internal event
Demand
Other firms
Distributors
Banks
Chambers of commerce
Export agents
Governmental activities
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Key Managerial Characteristics
Affecting Export Involvement
Education
International
Exposure
Expertise
International
orientation
Commitment
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Internationalization Stages
Innate,
or start-up, exporters
Partially interested exporter
Experimental exporter
Export adaptation
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Internationalization concerns
Stage 1:
Stage 2:
Stage 3:
Stage 4:
Stage 5:
Stage 6:
The completely uninterested firm
The partially interested firm
The exploring firm
The experimental exporter
The experienced small exporter
The experienced larger exporter
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Main Corporate Concerns
for the Firm
Financing
Information on business practices
Communication
Providing technical advice
Sales effort
Obtaining financial information
Handling documentation
Physical product
Marketing information gathering
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Corporate Strategy and
Exporting
The
impact on the perception of risks
The impact on profits
Profit and Risk
During Export
Initiation
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International Marketing
Product Adaptation
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Copyright © 1999 by Harcourt Brace & Company
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the following address: Permissions Department, Harcourt Brace & Company, 6277 Sea Harbor Drive,
Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.
Product Variables
Augmented Product
Tangible Product
Core Product
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Standardization versus
Adaptation?
The
fundamental international product
decision!
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The Alternatives in
Approaching International
Markets:
Sell
the Product
as it is
Internationally
Modify
Product
for Different
Countries or
Regions
Design
New
Products for
Foreign Markets
Incorporate All
Differences into
One Product and
Introduce it
Globally
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Sell the Product as it is
Internationally
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Modify Product for Different
Countries or Regions
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Design New Products for Foreign
Markets
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Incorporate All Differences into
One Product Design and Introduce
it as a Global Product
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Factors Encouraging
Standardization:
Economies
of scale in production
Economies in product R&D
Economies in marketing
Shrinking” of the world marketplace /
economic integration
Global competition
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Factors Encouraging
Adaptation:
Differing
use conditions
Government and regulatory influences
Differing consumer behavior patterns
Local competition
True to the marketing concept
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Factors Affecting Adaptation:
Market
Characteristics
Product
Characteristics
Decision
to Alter
Domestic
Product
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Company
Considerations
The Market Environment
Government
Regulations
Nontariff Barriers
Customer Characteristics, Expectations,
and Preferences
Economic Development
Competitive offerings
Climate and geography
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Product Characteristics
Product
Constituents
Branding:Translation-Transliteration-Transparency-Transculture
Packaging
Appearance
Method of Operation or Usage
Quality
Service
Country-of-Origin Effects
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Company Considerations
Organizational
capabilities?
“Is
it worth it?”
“Can we afford not to do it?”
Can a specific ROI be attained?
Quality, price, and user perceptions?
Warranties?
Managerial talent?
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Product Counterfeiting
…costs U.S. firms over $60 billion a year!
Counterfeiting is estimated at 2% to 5% of total world
trade annually!
The largest number of counterfeit goods come from:
– Brazil
– Taiwan
– Korea
– India
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