Title: Competing in Foreign Markets
1Competing inForeign Markets
Chapter
2Chapter Outline
- Why Companies Expand into Foreign Markets
- Cross-Country Differences in Cultural,
Demographic, and Market Conditions - Multi-country Strategy vs. Global Strategy
- Strategy Options for Entering and Competing in
Foreign Markets - Exporting
- Licensing/Franchising
- Strategic Alliances/Joint Ventures
3Why is the World Economy Globalizing?
- Previously closed national economies are opening
up their markets to foreign companies - Privatization of formerly communist markets
- The reduction of trade barriers worldwide
- Importance of geographic distance is shrinking
due to the Internet - Communication and the transfer of information are
easier than they have ever been - The Internet and television are causing a
convergence of customer tastes and lifestyles
throughout the world
4What Is the Motivationfor Competing
Internationally?
5How Markets Differ from Country to Country
- Consumer tastes and preferences
- Consumer buying habits and demographics
- Market size and growth potential
- Government regulations and trade policies
- Driving forces
- Competitive pressures
One of the biggest concerns of companies
competing in foreignmarkets is whether to
customize their product offerings in
eachdifferent country market to match the tastes
and preferences of local buyers or whether to
offer a mostly standardized product worldwide.
6Two Primary Patternsof International Strategy
7Multi-Country Strategy
- Strategy is matched to local market needs
- Different country strategies are called for when
- Significant country-to-country differences in
customers needs exist - Buyers in one country want a product
differentfrom buyers in another country - Host government regulations are diverse and
complicated - Two drawbacks
- 1. More costly than a global strategy
- 2. Works against building a unified competitive
advantage
8Global Strategy
- Strategy for competing is similar or standardized
in all country markets - Involves coordinating strategic moves globally
- Works best when products and buyer requirements
are similar from country to country
9Fig. 7.1 How a Multicountry Strategy
Differs from a Global Strategy
10Strategy Options for Competing in Foreign
Markets
- Multi-country Strategy
- Global strategy based on
- Low cost
- Differentiation
- Focusing
- Exporting
- Licensing/Franchising
- Strategic alliances or joint ventures
11Export Strategies
- Involve using domestic plants as a production
base for exporting to foreign markets - Excellent initial strategy to pursue
international sales - Advantages
- Conservative way to test international waters
- Minimizes both risk and capital requirements
- Minimizes direct investments in foreign countries
- An export strategy is vulnerable when
- Manufacturing costs in home country are
higherthan in foreign countries where rivals
have plants - High shipping costs are involved
12Licensing Strategies
- Licensing makes sense when a firm
- Has valuable technical know-how or a patented
product but does not have international
capabilities to enter foreign markets - Desires to avoid risks of committing resources to
markets which are - Unfamiliar
- Politically/Economically unstable
- Disadvantage
- Risk of providing valuable technical know-how to
foreign firms and losing some control over its use
13Franchising Strategies
- Advantages
- Franchisee bears most of costs andrisks of
establishing foreign locations - Franchisor has to expend only theresources to
recruit, train, and support franchisees - Disadvantage
- Maintaining cross-country quality control
14Benefits of Global Alliances
- Gain scale economies in productionand/or
marketing - Fill gaps in technical expertiseor knowledge of
local markets - Share distribution facilities and dealer networks
- Direct combined competitive energies toward
defeating mutual rivals - Take advantage of partners local market
knowledge and working relationships with key
government officials in host country
15Pitfalls of Global Alliances
- Language and cultural barriers
- Different motives and conflicting objectives
- Time consuming slows decision-making
- Mistrust when collaborating in competitively
sensitive areas - Clash of egos and company cultures
- Becoming too dependent on another firm for
essential expertise over the long-term