1 / 30

A Historical Perspective

A Historical Perspective. The Multinational Phase Foreign markets could be penetrated easily The Global Phase The appearance of strong foreign competitors in the U.S. was a major force behind the emergence of the global perspective The Antiglobalization Phase. Multi-national phase.

zasha
Download Presentation

A Historical Perspective

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Historical Perspective • The Multinational Phase • Foreign markets could be penetrated easily • The Global Phase • The appearance of strong foreign competitors in the U.S. was a major force behind the emergence of the global perspective • The Antiglobalization Phase

  2. Multi-national phase Anti-globalization phase Global phase 1980 2000 Local to Global …and Back? Local LEVEL OF LOCALIZATION Global TIME

  3. ANTI-GLOBALIZATION Inequality Women’s Rights Emigration Child labor Poverty Exploitation Democracy Culture Environment Anti-Globalization Anti-Capitalism Anti-Corporation

  4. NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS • Any non-profit organization which is independent of the government: UK: 275,000 France: 54,000 formed in 1987 India: 1,000,000 Worldwide: 2,000,000 • Anti-globalization NGO’s: • Economic Policy Institute (wages) • Sierra Club (environment) • Public Citizen (Ralph Nader, anti WTO) • International Forum on Globalization (NAFTA inspired) • Third World Network (Malaysian based) • Center for Science and Technology (India, environmental) • Consumer Unity and Trust Society (India, trade)

  5. THE ISSUES • Poverty • Income distributions are similar across countries, thus • Poverty is reduced by the pie getting bigger • Growth – can help or hinder poverty • Raw material exports • Labor intensive exports vs. capital intensive • Some government programs • Get mini capital to the poor, etc. • Free trade and growth • Scale economies & efficiencies • Protect local monopolies

  6. THE ISSUES • Child Labor (est.: 100-200 million under 15 work) • Education is a superior good • Vietnamese rice • As price (and exports) went up child labor diminished • Women • Gender wage gap, glass ceiling • R-A theory: globalization enhances competition • Unpaid household work ($ 11 trillion) • Women’s Edge (NGO) wants WTO to recognize

  7. THE ISSUES • Democracy • Globalization provides access to markets and more independence • Capital leaves radical environments • Culture • Language – two centuries of growth • Indigenous cultures – on the way or in the way? • WTO – ‘cultural exceptions’ – movies, etc. • Wage and labor standards • Labor unions • Emigration to US

  8. Key Concepts • Global Marketing • Refers to marketing activities coordinated and integrated across multiple country markets • International Marketing • An older term encompassing all marketing efforts in foreign countries, whether coordinated or not, involving recognition of environmental differences and foreign trade analysis

  9. Key Concepts • “Foreign” Marketing • Many global companies have banned use of the term “foreign” in their communications • Multidomestic Markets • Product markets in which local consumers have preferences and functional requirements widely different from one another’s and others’ elsewhere

  10. Key Concepts • Global Markets • Markets in which buyer preferences are similar across countries • Global Products • The key to success of the globally standardized products is that they are often the best-value products because they offer higher quality and more advanced features at better prices

  11. Multi-domestic vs Global markets High High-tech Multi-domestic markets LEVEL OF PRODUCT STANDARDIZATION Entertainment Low Food Global markets SIMILARITY OF PREFERENCES Highly similar Widely different

  12. Key Concepts • Global Brands • Brands which are available, well known, and highly regarded through the world’s markets • In global markets, with standardized products, a global brand name is necessary for success

  13. Key Concepts • Leading Markets • Characterized by strong and demand customers • Free from government regulation measures • Products and services incorporate the latest technology • Companies are strong at the high-end of the product line • Not necessarily the largest markets, although they often are

  14. Basic Marketing Concepts • Product Life Cycle • The S-curve which depicts how the sales of a product category progress over time • The stages typically involve Introduction, Growth, Maturity, Saturation, and possibly Decline • Relevant for market segmentation and product positioning • Market segmentation • Involves partitioning a given market into similar customer groupings for which uniform marketing strategies can be used • Product positioning • Refers to the perceptions or image that target customers have of a product or service or the image that the firm would like the customers to have

  15. The Product Life Cycle (PLC)

  16. Drivers Toward Globalization • Five Major Globalization Drivers • Market Drivers • Customer needs, global customers and channels, transferable marketing • Competitive Drivers • Competitors who go global provide reasons for firms to follow • Cost Drivers • Economies of scale, economies of scope, and sourcing • Technology Drivers • The Internet, global patent diffusion • Government Drivers • ISO 9001 – a global standard of quality certification

  17. Globalization Drivers Market Drivers Competitive Drivers • Common customer needs • Global customers • Global channels • Transferable marketing • Global competition • Global distribution Globalization Potential Technological Drivers Cost Drivers • Production technology • Telecommunications • Internet • Economies of scale • Economies of scope • Sourcing advantages Government Drivers • Free trade • Global standards • Regulations

  18. Localized Global Marketing • The Limits to Global Marketing • Negative Industry Drivers • Lack of Resources • Localized Mix Requirements • Antiglobalization Threats

  19. Localized Global Marketing • Global Localization • Due to the limits of global marketing • A global marketing strategy that totally globalizes all marketing activities is not always achievable or even desirable • A more common approach is for a company to globalize its product strategy by marketing the same product lines, product designs, and brand names everywhere but to localize distribution and marketing communications

  20. Developing Knowledge Assets • Knowledge Assets • Basically intangible assets • Learning Organizations • Organizations whose competitive advantage is in the ability of the organization to innovate, to create new products, to develop new markets, to adopt new distribution channels, to find new advertising media, and to discard outdated products and tired sales routines

  21. Global Marketing Objectives • Exploiting Market Potential and Growth • Gaining Scale and Scope Returns at Home • Learning from a Leading Market

  22. Global Marketing Objectives (cont’d) • Pressuring Competitors • Diversifying Markets • Learning How to do Business Abroad

  23. The Manager’s Three Roles • 1. THE FOREIGN ENTRY ROLE • Must learn the intricacies of working overseas • Must find the right middlemen • Must learn to evaluate other country markets qualitatively and quantitatively • Must understand the foreign customer’s needs and preferences in terms of products/services

  24. The Manager’s Three Roles • 2. THE LOCAL MARKETING ROLE • Basic marketing skills needed are the same • The only thing different is the marketing environment • Must usually be carried out with a resource person familiar with the local market • Must be able to leverage marketing skills learned in the home country into the new environment

  25. The Manager’s Three Roles • 3. THE GLOBAL MANAGEMENT ROLE • Must use the learning and experience gained from foreign entry and local marketing to derive global benefits for the firm in various markets • Must capture the scale advantages and other synergies created by more coordinated marketing • Involves global segmentation, positioning, standardization of products/services, branding, uniform pricing, global branding, and international logistics

  26. Takeaway THESE FACTORS: • increase in international trade & investment • emergence of free trade blocs • opening of closed economies HAVE LEAD TO: • greater global market opportunities • threat of disruption by anti-globalization forces

  27. Takeaway Not all industries are equally fit for global strategies. Analyze globalization drivers before following the “global imperative”.

  28. Takeaway A company enters a foreign market to do several things: • challenge a competitor • learn from lead customers • diversify its demand base • And, of course, • seek more revenue & profit growth

  29. Takeaway To compete effectively in the global marketplace one must: • have hands-on marketing experience in one/more foreign countries • learn how to enter markets • manage the local marketing effort in the foreign market

  30. Takeaway The job of a global marketing manager can be divided into: • foreign entry • local marketing abroad • global management

More Related