Title: IME 3
1IME 3
- Think Globally and Act Locally Marketing in a
Multinational Environment
2Chapter Objectives
- Understand the big picture of international
marketing - Understand how economic, political, legal, and
cultural issues influence global marketing
strategies and outcomes Explain the strategies a
firm can use to enter global markets - Understand the arguments for standardization
versus localization of marketing strategies in
global markets
3World Trade
- World trade refers to the flow of goods and
services among different countries - the value of
all the exports and imports of the worlds
nations - What products do you own that were made in the
U.S.? In other countries?
4Factors affecting entry to other Countries
5Market Conditions to Consider
- How much domestic demand exists for the firms
products? - What is the potential for market demand abroad?
- Is the firm able to secure a competitive
advantage in foreign markets? - What competitive advantages does each country
have relative to competing countries?
6Competitive Advantage of Nations
- Michael Porter describes four keys to a nations
competitive advantage relative to other countries - Demand conditions
- Related and supporting industries
- Factor conditions
- Company strategy, structure, rivalry
7Borders, Roadblocks, and Communities
- Protectionism is a government policy which seeks
to provide home companies an advantage over
foreign companies by implementing trade barriers - Import quotas
- Embargoes
- Tariffs
- Red tape
8GATT and the WTO
- The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
was developed by the United Nations after World
War II and sought to moderate trade conflicts - It has been replaced (1995) by the World Trade
Organization (WTO)
9WTO
- Objective to help trade flow smoothly, freely,
fairly, and predictably - Role acts as a forum for negotiations among
countries, settles trade disputes, and assists
developing countries with training programs
10Economic Communities
- Countries band together to form an alliance
- Such economic communities coordinate trade
policies and ease restrictions on trade across
the member borders - EU (European Union)
- NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement)
- ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations
11The Global Marketing Environment
- Economic Environment
- Political and Legal Environment
- Cultural Environment
12Economic Environment
- Indicators of Economic Health
- Demographic Characteristics
- Economic Infrastructure
- Internet Coverage
- Levels of Economic Development
13Indicators of Economic Health
- Gross Domestic Product (GDP) - the dollar value
of goods and services a country produces within
its borders within one year - Gross National Product (GNP) - the value of all
goods and services produced by a countrys
individuals or organizations whether in or out of
country borders
14Economic Indicators
- Countrys Demographic Characteristics
- birth rates
- size of different age groups
- Economic Infrastructure
- quality of a countrys distribution, financial,
and communications systems - Internet Coverage
- percent of population online
15Economic Development
- Less Developed Countries (LDC)
- lowest stage of economic development
- Developing Countries
- economies shift from agriculture to industry
standards of living, education, and use of
technology rise - Developed Countries
- economically advanced countries the G7 countries
(U.S., U.K., Canada, France, Italy, Germany,
Japan)
16Political and Legal Environment
- Political Issues
- economic sanctions
- nationalization
- expropriation
- Regulatory Issues
- product requirements
- local content rules
- Human Rights Issues
17Cultural Environment
- Values
- Norms and Customs
- Symbols and Superstitions
- Language
- Ethnocentricity
- Cultural Change
18Ethnocentrism
- The tendency to prefer products or people of
ones own culture over those from other countries - Ethnocentric consumers are likely to feel
ethically wrong in buying products from other
countries because they want to support their
domestic economy
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20How Global Should a Global Marketing Strategy Be?
- Market Entry Strategies
- Product Decisions
- Price Decisions
- Distribution Decisions
21Market Entry Strategies
Domestic strategy
-
Exporting strategy
Contracting licensing, franchising, or
subcontracting
Level of commitment, risk and control
Strategic alliance
Direct investment
22Standardization versus Localization
- Standardization suggests that greater
efficiencies and economies of scale are generated
when all marketing is the same in each country - Localization recognizes that customer
satisfaction will be highest when the marketing
mix is tailored to local needs and wants
23Product Decisions
- Sell the same product in the new market (straight
extension strategy) - Modify the product for the new market (product
adaptation strategy) - Develop a brand new product for that new market
(product invention strategy) - Ford Probe
24Promotional Decisions
- Will the same promotional message work in the
different markets? - Standardized strategies are more likely to work
when cultural factors are similar, and when
target customers are in cosmopolitan urban areas
25Price Decisions
- Costs associated with transportation, tariffs,
differences in currency exchange rates, and
bribes may make a product more expensive in one
country than another - Gray marketing - unauthorized party imports
products and sells them for less. - Dumping - a company prices its products lower
than at home in order to establish a market