1 / 20

Chapter 12 The firm’s market-entry strategies

Chapter 12 The firm’s market-entry strategies. EXPORTING ?. FRANCHISING?. TURNKEY?. DIRECT INVESTMENT ?. LICENSING ?. Lecture plan. The firm’s foreign business strategy Exporting Contracting (licensing, leasing etc) Joint ventures Wholly-owned company

Download Presentation

Chapter 12 The firm’s market-entry strategies

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. Chapter 12The firm’s market-entry strategies EXPORTING ? FRANCHISING? TURNKEY? DIRECT INVESTMENT ? LICENSING ?

  2. Lecture plan • The firm’s foreign business strategy • Exporting • Contracting (licensing, leasing etc) • Joint ventures • Wholly-owned company • Advantages and disadvantages of various market entries • Strategic FDI plan issues

  3. Export-import management Company business strategies • Domestic strategies – investment in product development – expand domestic market share – diversify into new industry. • Foreign business strategies – exporting – international contracting – foreigndirect investment/foreign production

  4. The firm’s foreign business strategy 1. JV = Joint Venture 2. WOC = Wholly-Owned Company Source: adapted from R. Grosse & D. Kujawa, International Business, Irwin, 1992

  5. Exporting • World exports of goods ($US8880 billion in 2004) have declined in relative importance compared to foreign production ($US17,580 billion in 2003). • Most likely mode for serving a foreign market for a domestic firm starting in international business. – the business plan (export marketing plan) – many global companies combine exports and FDI

  6. Exports: advantages • Least costly and risky – L/C payment • Specialisation, economies of scale. • Open to any size or kind of firm

  7. Exports: disadvantages • Production costs in the home country may be higher. • Transport costs may make exporting uneconomical. • Trade barriers in target markets • Divided loyalties of O/S agents

  8. Types of international exporters • Casual exporter • domestic firms that do not do international business on a regular basis (< 5% of T/O) • Small-scale exporter • 5–20% of turnover • Experienced/global exporter • high ratio of its turnover through involvement in worldwide business deals (exports + FDI)

  9. Licensing • Licensor grants rights to intangible property to a Licensee in exchange for a royalty payment. • Time and territorial limits • Advantages: – speed of execution – low risk/investment cost – brand recognition – preliminary cooperation which may be expanded into FDI

  10. Licensing: disadvantages • Isolation from the market • Lack of managerial control • Limited life • Risk of technology loss

  11. Franchising • A franchisorsells limited brand use rights, products and services to a franchisee in return for a lump sum payment and a share of the franchisee’s profits. • 20% of US franchise systems have foreign operations (Japan, Canada, UK, Australia) - Domino’s Pizza vs Pizza Haven (200 in 7 years); - Dunkin’ Donuts vs Donut King • Low market entry costs and risks • Quality control is difficult due to big number of franchisees and geographic location.

  12. Subcontracting • Supply arrangement between a principal and a subcontractor • Advantages • low investment cost • speed • stable processing cost and quality • control of sales and marketing • can become the basis for later alliance • Disadvantages • risk of non-delivery or late delivery

  13. Contract for the construction of operating facilities that are transferred for a fee to the owner after commissioning Advantages high economic returns less risky than FDI Disadvantages lack of long-term market presence loss of control over technology client may turn into a competitor Turnkey operations

  14. Joint ventures • A legal entity jointly owned by two or more legally distinct organisations which share in the JV’s decision-making activities • Various options – 2 companies from the same country – foreign/local – 2 or more companies setting up a JV ina third country

  15. Joint ventures cont. • Advantages • partner’s local knowledge • cost/risk sharing • host government legislation • low risk of nationalisation • Disadvantages • technology control risk • less control over subsidiaries • management control conflicts

  16. Wholly-owned subsidiaries • A firm owns 100% of the stock • Trend in the motor-car sector (e.g. India, China) • Advantages • complete management control • optimum security for technology • ‘internalisation’ of operations • Disadvantages • high costs and risks • long lead time to first sale (especially for ‘Greenfield’ operations)

  17. China: joint ventures vs wholly owned Source: adapted from UNCTAD, World Investment Report 1999

  18. Strategic FDI plan issues • Investment location evaluation • see matrix on next slide • Strategic organisation • international group • business/product units • functional units • global matrix

  19. Investment location evaluation Source: Fig. 12.3, p.298

  20. Strategic FDI plan issues • Financial management and control • investment decisions • financing decisions • global money management • Global sourcing strategy • outsourcing • Global human resource strategies

More Related