Title: Market Assessment and Analysis
1Market Assessment and Analysis
- Daniel F. Duran
- BSAD 350 International Business
- Whittier College
2Heineken Brews Up Global Strategy
- Within a few years of its founding, in 1864,
Heineken was exporting beer to France, Italy,
Spain, Germany, and the Far East. In 1914
Heinekens managers decided to export beer to the
United States, and contracted with Van Munching
Company to distribute its products in North
America. - After World War II, Alfred Heineken came to New
York to study marketing and advertising with Van
Munching, and returned to the Netherlands in 1948
with knowledge to help launch Heineken into other
foreign markets worldwide.
3Heineken Brews Up Global Strategy (cont.)
- Heineken has refused to establish a brewery in
the United States. Why? - Heineken learned from the experience of other
breweries. Lowenbrau had begun to brew in the
U.S. and sales began to drop. The beer was no
longer an import and lost its cachet as an
authentic Bavarian beer. Heineken continues to
ship its beer into the U.S. market even though it
might be cheaper to produce it there. - Heineken recently bought Van Munching Company,
and now owns its U.S. distribution arm outright.
4Foreign Market Analysis
- To successfully increase market share, revenue,
and profits, firms must normally follow three
steps - Assess alternative markets
- Evaluate the respective costs, benefits, and
risks of entering each - Select those that hold the most potential for
entry or expansion
5Selection of Foreign Markets
Initial Screening Basic Needs Potential/Foreign
Trade Investment
Second ScreeningEconomic and Financial Forces
Third ScreeningPolitical and Legal Forces
Fourth ScreeningSociocultural Forces
Fifth ScreeningCompetitive Forces
Final SelectionPersonal Visit
6Initial Screening
- Basic Need Potential
- Identify locales where product or service is
needed - Foreign Trade and Investment
- Assess similar products already in market
- International Trade Statistics Yearbook (U.N.)
- Limitations of Import data
- Foreign Exchange indexing
- changing restrictions of liberties
- import situation may change
- political change
7Assessing Alternative Foreign Markets
- Market potential
- The first step in foreign market selection is
assessing market potential. Many publications
provide data about population, GDP, per capita
GDP, public infrastructure, and ownership of such
goods as cars and televisions. Such data permit
firms to conduct a preliminary screening of
foreign markets. - Levels of competition
- To assess the competitive environment, a firm
should identify the number and sizes of firms
already competing in the target market, their
relative market shares, their pricing and
distribution strategies, and their relative
strengths and weaknesses, both individually and
collectively.
8Second Screening--Financial and Economic Forces
- Inflation Rate
- Exchange Rate
- Interest Rates (Nominal and Real)
- Credit Availability
- Volatility of all
9Second Screening--Financial and Economic Forces
- Market indicators
- Measures of relative market strength
- Market factors
- Estimates demand for specific products
10Second Screening--Financial and Economic Forces
- Trend Analysis
- Cluster Analysis
- All analysis should be updated regularly
11Third Screening--Political/Legal Forces
- Market entry barriers
- Profit repatriation barriers
- Political instability
- Taxes
- Standards
- Price controls
12Assessing Alternative Foreign Markets (cont.)
- Legal and political environment
- A firm may choose to forego exporting its goods
to a country that has high tariffs and other
trade restrictions in favor of exporting to one
that has fewer or less significant barriers.
Conversely, trade policies and/or trade barriers
may induce a firm to enter a market via FDI. - Sociocultural influences
- Managers assessing foreign markets must also
consider sociocultural influences, which, because
of their subjective nature, are often difficult
to quantify. To reduce the uncertainty associated
with these factors, firms often focus their
initial internationalization efforts in countries
culturally similar to their home markets.
13Fourth Screening--Sociocultural Factors
- Language
- Regional Dialects
- Education
- Religious Attitudes
- Holidays
- Social Values
14Fifth Screening--Competitive Forces
- Size and strength of competitors
- Competitors promotion methods
- Competitors product mixes
- Prices
- Distribution channels employed
- Market share distribution
- Market coverage
15Evaluating Costs, Benefits, and Risks
- Costs
- Two types of costs are relevant at this point
direct and opportunity. Direct costs are those
the firm incurs in entering a new foreign market
and include costs associated with setting up a
business operation. Opportunity costs are those
that result from entering one market as opposed
to anothera firm forfeits or delays its
opportunity to earn profits in one market by
dedicating its resources to another. - Benefits
- Among the most obvious potential benefits are the
expected sales and profits from the market.
Others include lower acquisition and
manufacturing costs, foreclosing of markets to
competitors, competitive advantage, access to new
technology, and the opportunity to achieve
synergy with other operations.
16Evaluating Costs, Benefits, and Risks (cont.)
- Risks
- Generally, a firm entering a new market incurs
the risks of exchange rate fluctuations,
additional operating complexity, and direct
financial losses due to inaccurate assessment of
market potential.
17Final Selection
- Field Trip
- Research local markets
- Secondary data (UN IMF, WTO, et al)
- Primary data
- Cultural problems
- Technical problems
- Research as a Reality
- Highly developed in Developed Countries
- Less Developed Countries simpler and less of it