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Welcome to class of Stages of International Marketing and Strategic Orientation by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Wi

Welcome to class of Stages of International Marketing and Strategic Orientation by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada. The International Model. Culture: Self Reliance Criterion (SRC) and Ethnocentrism.

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Welcome to class of Stages of International Marketing and Strategic Orientation by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Wi

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  1. Welcome to class of Stages of International Marketingand Strategic OrientationbyDr. Satyendra SinghUniversity of WinnipegCanada

  2. The International Model

  3. Culture: Self Reliance Criterion(SRC) and Ethnocentrism • SRC: one’s own cultural values, experiences, and knowledge as a basis for decisions • Ethnocentrism:one’s own culture or company knows best how to do things • SRC and ethnocentrism impede the ability to assess a foreign market in its true light

  4. The Obstacle • Meanings, values, symbols, and behavior relevant to our own culture are different from those of foreign cultures • Relying on one’s SRC could produce an inadequately adapted marketing program

  5. Avoiding the Obstacle • Define the goal in foreign-country cultural traits, habits, or norms, with natives of the target country. Make no value judgments. • Isolate the SRC influence on the goal. • Redefine the goal without the SRC influence.

  6. Developing a Global Mindset • Tolerance of cultural differences • Understanding such differences and accepting and working with others • Knowledge of • Cultures • History • Market potential • Economic, social, and political trends

  7. Example of Cultural Difference

  8. No Direct Foreign Marketing Regular Foreign Marketing Infrequent Foreign Marketing International Marketing Global Marketing Stages of International Marketing…

  9. Stages of International Marketing… • Stage 1: No Direct Foreign Marketing • Not active foreign customer seekers • Foreign markets via domestic wholesalers/distributors • Unsolicited orders • Internet • Stage 2: Infrequent Foreign Marketing • Variation in production levels or demands • No commitment to foreign market representation • If domestic demand , foreign activity  • Foreign agents may approach • Managers’ own foreign contacts

  10. Stages of International Marketing… • Stage 3: Regular Foreign Marketing • Dedicated production capacity to foreign markets • Own sales force/subsidiaries in foreign markets • Domestic market is still the prime focus, but as the foreign demand , production/products are adapted to meet those customer needs • Depend on foreign sales to meet goal (vs. as a bonus) • Stage 4: International Marketing • Fully committed and involved in international marketing • Planned productions for various foreign markets • Production of goods in foreign markets as well • At this stage, a firm is international or multi-national

  11. Stages of International Marketing • Stage 5: Global Marketing • Treats the world including home market as one • Market segments are defined by demographic and psychographic variables • Half of its revenue should come from foreign market • Global perspective is the focus

  12. EPRG Schema Orientation Strategic Orientations Domestic Marketing Extension Ethnocentric Multidomestic Marketing Polycentric Global Marketing Regio/Geocentric

  13. Strategic Orientations… • Domestic Market Extension Orientation (Stage 1/2) • Extension of domestic products into foreign markets • International markets are secondary • Prime focus—market excess domestic products abroad • Firm’s orientation is domestic • Multi-Domestic Market Orientation (Stage 2/3) • Realizes the difference b/w domestic & foreign markets • Different countries need different products • Separate marketing strategies for each country • Subsidiaries operate independent of one another • Products are adapted, advertising is localized • Might not standardize products

  14. Strategic Orientations • Regional/Global Orientation (Stage 4/5) • Truly global – single market • Emphasis on standardization—product/process • Strive for efficiencies of scale by standardizing market mix across national borders, whenever it is cost or culture effective • Pursue a global strategy for major brands or multi-domestic strategy for other brands

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