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Title: PART SIX MANAGING INTERNATIONAL OPERATIONS International Business


1
PART SIXMANAGING INTERNATIONAL
OPERATIONSInternational Business
  • Chapter Sixteen
  • Marketing Globally

2
Chapter Objectives
  • To understand a range of product policies and the
    circumstances in which they are appropriate
    internationally
  • To grasp the reasons for product alternations
    when deciding between standardized versus
    differentiated marketing programs among countries
  • To appreciate the pricing complexities when
    selling in foreign markets
  • To interpret country differences that may
    necessitate alterations in promotional practices
  • To comprehend the different branding strategies
    companies may employ internationally
  • To discern complications of international
    distribution and practices of effective
    distribution
  • To perceive why and how emphasis in the marketing
    mix may vary among countries

3
Marketing Strategies
  • Marketing the performance of a wide range of
    business activities directed at satisfying needs
    and wants through the exchange process
  • Marketing strategies depend upon a firms
  • marketing orientation
  • target market(s)
  • When firms select target markets, they may choose
    market segments that exist in more than one
    country.
  • Ways of identifying consumer market segments
    within and across countries include demographics
    (income, age, gender, religion) and
    psychographics (attitudes, values, lifestyles).

4
Marketing Orientations
  • production orientation emphasizes production
    variables such as efficiency, quality, and/or
    capacity used internationally for selling
    commodities and passive exports and for serving
    foreign market segments that resemble domestic
    markets
  • sales orientation assumes that global customers
    are reason-ably similar and that the same product
    can be sold at home and abroad
  • customer orientation stresses sensitivity to
    customer needs, i.e., identifying and serving the
    needs of the customer
  • strategic marketing orientation commits to
    continuously serving foreign markets and to
    making incremental adapta-tions to satisfy local
    customers draws upon elements of the
    production, sales, and customer orientations, as
    appropriate
  • societal marketing orientation requires that
    activities be con-ducted in a way that preserves
    or enhances the well-being of all stakeholders
    addresses the environmental, health, social, and
    work-related problems that arise in foreign
    operations

5
Fig. 16.1 Marketing in International Business
6
Product Policy Reasons for
Making Alterations
  • Legal reasons explicit product-related legal
    requirements vary widely by country but are
    usually meant to protect customers, the
    environment, or both. Protective packaging laws
    and product standards are very complicated legal
    issues.
  • Cultural reasons cultural factors affecting
    product demand may or may not be easily discerned
    While religious beliefs offer clear guidelines
    regarding product acceptability, other factors
    such as color, design, and artistic preferences
    are more subtle.
  • Economic reasons levels of income,
    differences in income distri-bution, and the
    extent and condition of available infrastructure
    can all affect demand for a given product
    Price-reducing alterations may be required if a
    firm expects to enter an emerging market.
  • Firms usually prefer to standardize basic
    components while
    altering critical end-use characteristics.

7
Product Policy Other
Considerations
  • Extent and Mix of the Product Line
  • Whereas narrowing a product line allows for the
    concentration of effort and resources, the
    broadening of a product line may capture
    distribution economies.
  • Product Life-cycle Considerations
  • A product facing declining sales in one country
    may have growing or sustained sales in another
    such country differences can lead to an extended
    life for a specific product.
  • Differences will likely exist across countries
    in both the shape
    and the length of a products life cycle.

8
Pricing
  • Price the value asked for a product
  • Although usually expressed as a monetary value,
    in countertrade
    transactions, it might not be.
  • The complexities of pricing are exacerbated in
    the international arena.
  • Pricing decisions must assure the firm of
    sufficient funds to replenish inventory.
  • In the long-run, price must be low
    enough to generate sufficient demand
    but high enough to yield a profit.
  • The Internet is causing more firms to compete
    for the same business as customers gain
    increasing access to global products and global
    prices.

9
Pricing Complexities
  • Government Intervention
  • Every country has laws that either directly or
    indirectly affect prices to the final customer.
  • Price controls may set either maximum or minimum
    prices for designated products.
  • The WTO permits a government to establish
    restric-tions against any imports that enter the
    country at a price below the price charged to
    customers in the exporting country (dumping).
  • A firm may charge different prices in different
    regions or countries because of differing
    competitive and demand factors.

10
Pricing Complexities
  • Market diversity, i.e., country variation,
    leads to many ways of segmenting the market for a
    given product. Depending upon market conditions,
    a firm may adopt any of the following pricing
    strategies
  • skimming price sets a high price for a new
    product aimed at market innovators Over time,
    the price will be progressively lowered in
    response to demand and supply conditions, i.e.,
    the presence of additional competitors.
  • penetration price sets an aggressively low
    price (i) to discourage competition and (ii) to
    attract a maximum number of customers (some of
    whom will hopefully switch from competitors
    brands)
  • cost-plus price sets the price at a desired
    margin over cost

11
Pricing Complexities
  • Price Escalation in Exporting
  • Common reasons for price escalation in export
    sales are (i) tariffs and (ii) the often greater
    distance to the market.
  • If standard markups occur within a distribution
    channel, either lengthening the channel or adding
    expenses at additional points within the network
    will increase the delivered cost of a product.
  • To compete in export markets, a firm may have to
    sell its products to intermediaries at
    reduced prices in order to lessen the amount
    of price escalation.
  • A firm may choose to exclude fixed costs in the
    price calculation of products
    exported to developing countries
    in order to be price competitive in those
    markets.

12
Fig. 16.3 Price Escalation in Exporting if
Companies Use Cost-plus Pricing
13
Pricing Complexities
  • Currency Values and Inflation Rates
  • Currency fluctuations affect a firms
    competitiveness and, ultimately, its
    profitability
  • Sales contracts may specify that payment
    be made in a given currency.
  • High inflation in a host country negatively
    affects the value of a firms foreign receipts
  • A firm may need to adjust
    its margins
    downward in order to remain competitive.
  • ? High inflation in a home country negatively
    af- fects the costs of a firms foreign-sourced
    inputs
  • A firm may need to source locally in order
    to remain competitive.

14
Effect of Taxes and Inflation on Pricing An
Example
  • Assumptions beginning cost 1,000 inflation
    36 tax rate 40
    after-tax profit goal on replacement cost 30
  • IF STOCK IS SOLD AND FUNDS IF STOCK IS SOLD AND
    FUNDS ARE COLLECTED WHEN STOCK ARE COLLECTED ONE
    YEAR IS PURCHASED AFTER STOCK IS PURCHASED
  • Cost 1,000 Replacement cost 1,360
  • Mark-up 500 Replacement mark-up
    320
  • Sales price 1,500 Sales price 1,680
  • - Cost 1,000 - Original cost 1,000
  • Taxable income 500 Taxable income
    680
  • - Tax _at_40 200 - Tax _at_ 40 272
  • After-tax income 300 After-tax
    income 408

15
Pricing Complexities
  • Fixed-cost vs. Variable-cost Pricing
  • The extent to which producers can set prices at
    the retail level varies substantially by country.
  • There is substantial variation in whether, where,
    and for which products customers expect to be
    able to negotiate a price.
  • Local laws and customs may limits firms
    abilities to set optimal prices.
  • In many cultures prices are simply the starting
    point in the bargaining process.

16
Import-Export Price Negotiations An Example
  • Goal to delay a pricing commitment
    while discussing a whole
    package of other commitments
  • IMPORTERS REACTION EXPORTERS RESPONSE
  • 1. Offer is too expensive What is meant by
    expensive?
  • Determine what price is acceptable.
  • 2. Budget is insufficient How large is the
    importers budget?
  • Determine the time frame and explore
    payment alternatives.
  • 3. Offer does not fit needs Insist on specific
    details of real needs.
  • Repackage offer in light of new info.
  • 4. Offer is not competitive Determine details of
    competitors offers.
  • Reformulate offer in non-comparative
    ways stress uniqueness of offer.

17
Promotion
  • Promotion the presentation of messages intended
    to help sell a product
  • direct and indirect forms of communication
    designed to inform, persuade, and/or remind a
    target audience about an organization, its
    products, and/or its positions
  • Promotion Mix the particular combination
    of elements used in a promotion strategy
  • ? personal selling
  • ? advertising
  • ? sales promotion activities
  • ? publicity/public relations activities

18
Promotion The Push-Pull Mix
  • Push strategy direct marketing techniques
    designed to create immediate demand, i.e.,
    personal selling
  • primarily used when a product is relatively
    expensive and distribution is
    tightly controlled
  • Pull strategy indirect marketing techniques
    designed to create final demand, i.e.,
    advertising, sales promotion, and
    publicity/public relations
  • The cross country push-pull mix is determined by
  • types of distribution systems
  • the cost and availability of media
  • customer attitudes toward sources of information
  • the relative price (affordability) of a product

19
Promotion The Standardization of Advertising
Programs
  • Advertising any paid form of
    media (nonpersonal) presentation
  • The advantages of standardized advertising
    include
  • substantial cost savings
  • improved quality (effectiveness) at the local
    level
  • rapid entry into new country markets
  • The challenges of standardized advertising
    include
  • translation content, meaning, images
  • legality differing views on consumer protection,
    compe- titive protection, standards of
    morality, and nationalism
  • message needs national differences in
    perceptions and product demand

20
Branding
  • Brand a name, term, symbol, and/or design
    intended to identify a product or product line
    and differentiate it in the marketplace
  • Trademark a brand, or part of a brand, i.e., a
    mark, that is granted legal protection because it
    is capable of legal appropriation
  • MNEs must consider the following branding
    options
  • brand vs. no brand
  • manufacturers brand vs. private brand
  • one brand vs. multiple brands
  • worldwide brands vs. local brands
  • Overall, the portion of local brands to
    international (regional or global) brands
    is decreasing.
  • continued

21
  • Challenges to regional and global brands include
  • language factors the translation and
    pronunciation of brand names the cultural
    sensitivity of shapes, symbols, and colors
  • brand acquisitions local brands may be
    well-known but expensive and strategically
    difficult to maintain
  • country-of-origin images products from
    particular countries may be perceived as being
    particularly desirable and of relatively high
    quality
  • generic and near-generic names generic names may
    either stimulate or frustrate the sales of the
    firm from whom a name is expropriated

22
Distribution
  • Distribution the physical and legal path that
    products follow from the point of production to
    the point of consumption
  • Distribution channel the set of interdependent
    individuals and organizations that take title to
    or assist in the transfer of a title to a product
    from producer to final customer banks
    --- transportation companies
  • producers --- wholesalers --- retailers
  • agents brokers
  • Often, geographic barriers and poor transport
    infrastructure divide a country into distinctly
    viable and non-viable markets.
  • The selling of goods through unauthorized
    distributors, i.e., the gray
    market, causes a firms operations in different
    countries to complete with one another, thus
    preventing them from pricing according
    to local market conditions.

23
Distribution The
Difficulty of Standardization
  • Each country has its own national distribution
    system that is historically intertwined with its
    cultural, economic, and legal environments.
  • Factors that influence the distribution of
    consumer products within a country include
  • citizens attitudes towards their own retailers
  • the ability (or inability) to pay retail workers
  • retailers trust in their employees
  • legislation affecting chain and
    individually-owned stores
  • restrictions on the size of stores and their
    hours of operation
  • the financial ability of retailers to carry large
    inventories
  • the efficacy of the national postal system

24
Distribution Distributor and
Channel Selection
  • Firms should handle the distribution function
    internally if
  • sales volume is high
  • human, capital, and financial resources are
    sufficient
  • the nature of the product demands that the
    producer deal directly with customers
  • customers are global
  • it is possible to gain a competitive advantage
  • The more complex and expensive a product, the
    greater the importance of after-sales service.
  • Firms may need to invest in service centers,
    which in turn can become important sources of
    revenues and profits.
  • continued

25
  • Criteria for the selection of potential
    distributors include
  • financial strength
  • quality of connections
  • the extent of a distributors other commitments
    regarding both complementary and competitive
    products
  • the state of a distributors equipment,
    facilities, and personnel
  • trustworthiness and contract enforcement issues
  • A new client must convince a desired distributor
    of the viability of its firm and its products.
  • A new client may need to offer distributors extra
    incentives or be willing to enter into exclusive
    arrangements.
  • Firms may choose a combination of internal
    distribution and outsourced distribution
    services.

26
Distribution Hidden Costs
  • Differences in national distribution systems that
    may contribute to increased costs include
  • poor infrastructure port, roads, warehouse
    facilities
  • levels within a distribution system multi-tiered
    wholesale systems
  • retail inefficiencies an insistence upon counter
    service
  • government restrictions laws protecting small
    retailers or limiting hours of operation
  • lack of retail storage space more frequent,
    smaller deliveries required to prevent
    stock-outs

27
The Internet and Electronic Commerce
  • Opportunities
  • E-commerce offers firms a unique opportunity
    to market their products worldwide.
  • The Internet permits suppliers to deal
    more quickly with their customers.
  • Challenges
  • ? Customers worldwide can quickly compare prices
    from different distributors, thus intensifying
    price competition.
  • ? Differentiation is difficult because the same
    web ads and prices reach customers
    everywhere.
  • ? Internet ads and prices must comply with the
    laws of each country where a firm
    markets its products.

28
Internet Usage by Region, 2005
  • WORLD OF WORLD INTERNET OF POP.
    OF WORLD
  • REGIONS POPULATION USAGE USAGE RATE
    USERS
  • Africa 900,465,411 13,468,600 1.5
    1.5
  • Asia 3,612,363,165 302,257,003
    8.4 34.0
  • Europe 730,991,138 259,653,144 35.5
    29.2
  • Middle East 259,499,772 19,370,700 7.5
    2.2
  • North Amer. 328,387,059 221,437,647 67.4
    24.9
  • Latin Amer. 546,917,192 56,224,957 10.3
    6.3
  • Oceania 33,443,448 16,269,080 46.6
    1.8
  • WORLD 6,412,067,185
    888,681,131 13.9 100.0
  • Source Miniwatts International, Ltd.

29
Managing the Marketing Mix Gap Analysis
  • Gap analysis a method for estimating a firms
    potential sales of a given product by
    determining the difference between the total
    market potential and gaps in usage, competition,
    product line offers, and distribution
  • Total market potential the total potential
    sales of all competitors within a given product
    market (category)
  • The difference between total market potential and
    current sales, i.e., the gap, is due to
  • usage patterns
  • product line characteristics
  • distribution coverage strategies
  • the effect(s) of competitors strategies
  • Gap analysis helps managers determine both the
    size of and the reasons for the differences
    between market potential and actual sales.

30
Fig. 16.4 Gap Analysis
31
Implications/Conclusions
  • Marketing is a social and managerial process
    through which individuals and organizations
    satisfy their needs and objectives through the
    exchange process.
  • A standardized approached to worldwide mar-keting
    means maximum uniformity in products and programs
    amongst countries in which sales occur.

32
  • A variety of legal, cultural, and economic
    con-ditions may cause firms to alter their
    marketing strategies, but the cost of adaptation
    must be measured against the potential gain in
    sales.
  • Gap analysis is a tool that help firms deter-
    mine (i) why they have not yet maximized their
    market potential in given countries and (ii)
    what parts of the marketing mix to empha-size in
    which countries and regions.
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