Title: Marketing on regional markets
1Marketing on regional markets
2What is Marketing?
- Marketing is an organizational function and a
set of processes for creating, communicating, and
delivering value to customers and for managing
customer relationships in ways that benefit the
organization and its stakeholders. - AMA 2004
32007 and on...
- Marketing is the activity, set of institutions,
and processes for creating, communicating,
delivering, and exchanging offerings that have
value for customers, clients, partners, and
society at large. (Approved October 2007, by AMA)
4Differences between Domestic and
International/Regional Marketing
- Culture
- Markets- widespread and fragmented
- Information
- Politics
- Governments
- Law
- Technology
5More Differences...
- Economies- varying levels of development
- Finance different systems and regulatory bodies
- Currency
- Business diverse rules and cultural influences
- Control increased difficulty controlling and
coordinating across markets
6Dynamic Changes in World Markets and Politics...
- The rise of newly emerging markets
- Asia (China, India, ...)
- Ex-Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union
- EU Expansion (new members)
- Regional economic integration
- EU, NAFTA and others
- Decreased trade barriers liberalization
7More Changes and Influences...
- The Globalization question (pros/cons)
- The WTO
- Technology the Internet and other
- Increased importance of Small and Medium-Sized
Enterprises (SMEs) in international business
born globals!
8Are all Firms Ready to Go International?
- The firms readiness for internationalization how
experienced we are? - Immature
- Adolescent
- Mature
- Industry Differences
- Local/Global
- Growing/Decreasing
- Constantly changing
9We Need Proper People!
- Business Skills marketing, management, finance,
etc. - Langauge skills
- Cultural Knowledge
- Adaptability to new situations, lifestyles and
ideas - Proper attitude
10We Need Proper Organizational Climate!
- Proactive/Reactive
- Risk taking
- People who like their firm being INTERNATIONAL
and take that RISK and RESPONSIBILITY!
11MOTIVES OF INTERNATIONALIZATION
- Proactive Motives
- To seek profits
- Managerial initiative
- Technology competence/ unique product
- Foreign market opportunities/market information
- To achieve economies of scale
- Tax benefits
- Competitive pressures
- Small and saturated domestic market
- Overproduction/excess capacity
-
12Reactive motives
- Unexpected inquiries
- Extend sales of seasonal products
- Extend the product life cycle
- Proximity to international customers
(psychological/cultural distance) - Take an opportunity!
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14Internationalization theories
- 1. TWO TRADITIONAL THEORIES
- Life-cycle Theory
- The Uppsala model STEP BY STEP OR INCREMENTAL
THEORY - 2. BORN GLOBALS!
15Product life-cycle theory
- Traditionally believed that firms began exporting
when reaching the maturity stage of the product
life-cycle - Out-dated theory!
16Uppsala model
- Firms begin international activity in nearby
markets and only gradually move into more distant
markets - Enter through successive stages
- Stage 1 No regular export activities sporadic
exporting - Stage 2 Export via independent representatives
- Stage 3 Establishment of a foreign sales
subsidiary - Stage 4 Foreign manufacturing
- Not valid for all industries! A bit
old-fashioned BUT...
17Born globals!
- SMEs with fewer than 500 employees
- Rely on cutting edge technology in developing
unique product or process innovations - Usually managed by entrepreneurial visionaries
- - decision maker has a large influence over the
type of internationalisation followed
18Factors of Born Globals Rising
- Growing importance of niche markets
- Advances in process/technology production
- Flexibility of SMEs/Born Globals
- Global Networks
- Advances in information technology
- Internet born globals
-
19- FIRST RULE OF INTERNATIONALIZATION
- BE COMPETITIVE!
20If you want to internationalize you need to be
competitive...
- What are your core competitive advantages?
- Will customers/buyers realize them?
21National level of competitiveness
- The Porter Diamond
- Factor conditions
- Demand conditions
- Related and supported industries
- Firm strategy, structure and rivalry
- Chance
- Government
22Industry level
- Competition analysis in an industry C analysis
Porters approach - Analyze
- Market competitors
- Suppliers
- Buyers
- Substitutes
- New entrants
23 PORTERS MODEL
New entrants
Market competitors
Buyers
Suppliers
Substitutes
24Firm level
- Value Chain Analysis
- Competitive triangle
- Benchmarking
- RESOURCES!
- CORE COMPETENCES!
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26If you want to internationalize you need to be
competitive...
- The Porter Diamond
- Factor conditions
- Demand conditions
- Related and supported industries
- Firm strategy, structure and rivalry
- Chance
- Government
27Industry level
- Competition analysis in an industry C analysis
Porters approach - Analyze
- Market competitors
- Suppliers
- Buyers
- Substitutes
- New entrants
28- Value Chain Analysis
- Competitive triangle
- Benchmarking
- RESOURCES!
- CORE COMPETENCES!
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30- ENVIRONMENTAL SCANNING
- macro environment analysis for marketers
31PEST/SLEPT ANALYSIS
- Political Environment
- very complex due to the interaction of the
domestic, foreign, and international political
environments regulations, agreements,
governmental activities, export facilities,
information infrastructure, risks such as
ownerships, trade barriers... - Economic Environment
- a major determinant of market potential and
opportunities exchange rates, PPP, trade zones,
custom unions, FDI climates, GDP p.c., ... - country risk assesment! BERI index
32Sociocultural environment
- What is culture?
- collective programming of the mind which
distinguishes the memebers of one human group
from another... Includes system of values and
values are among the building bloks of
culture... (Hofstede, 1980)
33Visible and invisible parts of culture
- The visible behaviour (body language, cothing,
lifestyle...) - Values and social morals (family values, sex
roles, friendship patterens...) - Basic culture assumptions (national identity,
ethnic culture, religion,...)
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35High and low-context cultures
- Low context rely on spoken and written language
for meaning senders of the messeges encode their
messages, expecting that the recievers will
accurately decode the words used to gain a good
understanding of the intendend message - High context use and interpret more of the
elements surrounding the message to develop tehir
understanding of the message
36Elements of culture
- Language (verbal/non-verbal)
- Manners and customs
- Technology and material culture
- Social institutions
- Education
- Values and attitudes
- Aesthetics
- Religion
37Legal environment
- Law code law, common law, islamic law...
- Standards, regulations
- Interesting law areas for marketers
- Intelectual and property rights
- Consumer protection
- Dumping/antidumping
- Standardization of the products/services
- Tarrifs and duties
- Tax laws
- Labeling
- FDI...
38Information and technological environment
- Infrastructure
- Information technology
- Telcommunication technology
- Dynamics and changes!
39Ecological environment
- Costly advantage!
- Kioto agreement world rules for ecology?
40ALWAYS COMBINE...
- C analysis (competitors)
- Buyers, suppliers (five forces)
- PEST analysis
- Market potential analysis
- Sales potential
-
- INTEGRATION/COMBINATION OF ALL!
41- MARKET SELECTION WHICH MARKET SHOULD WE ENTER
OR NOT?
42Deciding about markets, regions...
- Segmentation
- The international market as a country or group of
countries - -Often the preferred approach
- The international market as a group of similar
customers from several countries
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44Market screening model
- Step 1 and 2 Defining criteria
- measurabiltiy, accesibility, profitability,
actionability - General characteristics (geographic location,
language, political factors, demography, economy,
industrial structure, technology, social
organization, religion, education, ...) - Step 3 Screening markets/countries
- Market atractiveness/size
- Competitive strength
- Step 4 Develop subsegments in each qualified
country and across country (geographic,
demographic, lifestyles, buyer behavior)
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47International marketing research and information
system
- Information system provides managers and other
decision makers with a continuous flow of
information. Scanning modes - Surveillance browsing through newspapers,
magazines, TV and if a story has a special
relevance, the marketer tracks its development
through monitoring. - Search seeking out specific information.
- Marketing research Gathering, analysing and
presenting information related to well defined
problem. Linked to decision making within the
firm.
48Marketing research
Macro environmental factors economy,
technology, legal, political, social
environment, competition
Micro environmental factors family, peer
groups, opinion leaders
Consumers
4 Ps
Customers behaviour, satisfaction, loyalty
- Market segmentation
- Target market selection
- Marketing programmes
- Performance and control
- Marketing research support
- The nature and scope of target markets
- The forces that shape the marketing system
- Evaluate marketing mix variables
- Evaluate success and failures of marketing
decisions
49Marketing research
- Secondary research conducted from the home base.
Consists of secondary data gathering, which is
defined as information that has already been
collected for other purposes and is thus readily
available. - Internal data sources and external data sources
- Advantages and disadvantages
- Primary research aims at collecting primary
data, which is defined as information collected
first-hand, generated by original research that
are tailor-made to answer specific research
questions. - Advantages and disadvantages
- Qualitative vs. quantitative research
50Primary research
- Quantitative research involve getting data from
a large representative group of respondents. The
objective is to quantify data and generalize the
results from the sample to the population of
interests. Typically these techniques apply some
form of statistical analysis. - Qualitative research involves getting data from
persons that are knowledgeable about the problem.
The objectives is to get initial and qualitative
understandings of the underlying reasons and
motives. Example focus groups, personal
interviews
51Primary research process
Identifying the research problem
Developing a research plan
Collecting data
Analysing data
Presenting the research findings
52Primary research process
- Identifying the research problem What
information do I need? Why do I need this
information? - Developing a research plan
Research approaches
Observation
Surveys
Experiments
Personal interviews Focus groups Surveys
quantitative research
qualitative research
Source Hollensen, 2001
53Primary research process
- Developing a research plan
54Primary research process
- Collecting data establish parameters, develop
instructions, check that data are gathered
correctly, efficiently and at reasonable cost. - Analysing data need creativity and scepticism!
- Presenting the research findings
55Key factors in international marketing research
- Size
- Comparability of data
- Reliability
- Validity internal and external
- Smaller markets
Importance of marketing research in
international marketing!
56Designing the marketing programme
- What to sell abroad?
- all products/services, selected
product/services, specially designed, new
products, differentiated products? - To whom? Segmentation and positioning.
57PRODUCT/SERVICE IN INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
- 4Ps 3Ps 2Ps people, process, physical
evidence, power, provision of services - SERVICES intangability, perishability,
heterogeneity, inseparability - Standardized, supported by equipment, personal
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60Some alternatives...
- SWYG/SWAB/GLOB
- one product, one message worldwide
- product extension, promotion adaptation
- product adaptation, promotion extension
- dual adaptation
- product invention
- STANDARDIZATION/ADAPTATION- crucial question!
61Managing products across borders
- the product life cycle
- product portfolio analysis
- image (national, product, company)
- branding (corporate, family, range, individual)
consistent, standardized, similar across borders - national, regional, global brands
- trademarks
- positioning
- new product development process (CAD, CAM, FMS)
- RD location(centrtalized, decentralized)
- technology transfer
62Different usage of products in different markets
- Segment and target market differences
- hwo, how, when, where it is used, buyer
preferences - Size
- Packaging
- Differing price sensitivities
- Preferred method and outlet of purchase...
63COO AND MADE IN...
- Country-of-origin effect
- Made in influence
- Brand influence (corporate/product/service)
64COO
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66INTERNATIONAL PRICING STRATEGY
- standardization(ethnocentric pricing)
- adaptation(polycentric pricing)
- invention (geocentric pricing)
- OBJECTIVES
- rate of return
- market stabilization
- demand led pricing
- competition led pricing
- pricing to reflect product differentiation
- market skimming
- market penetration
- early cash recovery
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68Why prices differ across markets?
- Level of competition
- Taxes
- Government regulation tariffs, duties,
non-tariff barriers - Margins
- Exporting costs
- Different costs labour, transport...
- Different exchange rates
69SETTING A PRICE
- COST-ORIENTED (return, early cash)
- MARKET-ORIENTED (stabilize position, skim the
profitable business, penetrate the market) - COMPETITION-ORIENTED (maintain,improve position,
meet and follow competition, reflect differences,
prevent entrants) - PROBLEMSin multinational pricing (coordination
of prices, transfer pricing to create barriers,
avoid domestic or foreign taxes, to manage the
level of involvement in markets) in managing
foreign currency and econoic conditions
(dumping) to obtain suitable payment in LDCs
administrative problems of cross-border transfer
of goods - GREY MARKETING/PARALLEL IMPORTS
70- CURRENCY ISSUES/fluctuations
- MODES OF PAYMENTS
- COUNTER-TRADES barter, compensation,
counter-purchase, offset, switch, buyback
71INTERNATIONAL LOGISTICS AND DISTRIBUTION STRATEGY
- international logistics and distribution strategy
as a source of competitive advantage - C components cost, character, continuity,
contol, coverage - Total distribution cost approach
- DTWIOPS/transport, warehouse, inventory,
order processing, packaging, lost sales/
72International distribution
- WHAT TO CONSIDER
- Customer characteristics
- B2B/B2C
- Product itsself
- Location/geographic conditions/infrastructure
- Competition
- Legal regulations
- Local business practices
73Channel structure
- Market coverage
- Intensive Distribution
- Selective Distribution
- Exclusive Distribution
- Channel length
- Control/Cost
- Degree of integration
- Vertical
- Horizontal
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75INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION STRATEGY
- intercultural aspects of advertising, personal
selling, public relations, sales promotion,
direct marketing - B2B specifics trade fairs, auctions, sales
confererences - diverse tools and techniques in different
countries in communication mix - Standardization/adaptation key issue
- THINK GLOBAL, ACT LOCAL?
76- MOST IMPORTANT INT/REG MARKETING ISSUE
- STANDARDIZATION VS. ADAPTATION
77Standardization/adaptation of marketing
programes...
- Why standardization?
- Economy of scale and scope
- Wider positioning
- Global brands
- Why adaptation?
- Market differences
- Price discrimination and differentiation
- Clear and focused positioning
78Jains model of S/A
79A.SHOHAM version of the Jains model
80- WHICH REGION WILL YOU ENTER?
- WHY AND HOW?
- DO YOU HAVE ENOUGH DATA ABOUT MARKETS AND
UNDERSTANDING OF CUSTOMERS? - ...