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Explore the differences between domestic and international marketing, the importance of product strategies, promotional strategies, and the effects of the internet on global marketing.
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Learning Objectives Welcome to class of International Marketing Dr. Satyendra SinghProfessor, Marketing and International BusinessUniversity of WinnipegCanadas.singh@uwinnipeg.cahttp://abem.uwinnipeg.cawww.abem.ca/conference
Learning Objectives Objectives: • Explain why there are differences between domestic and international marketing • Explain why international marketing managers may wish to standardize the marketing mix regionally or worldwide • Explain why standardizing the marketing mix globally is often impossible • Discuss the importance of distinguishing among the total product, the physical product, and the brand name
Learning Objectives • Explain why consumer products generally require greater modification for international sales than do industrial products or services • Discuss the product strategies that can be formed from three product alternatives and three kinds of promotional messages • Explain “glocal” advertising strategies • Discuss some of the effects the Internet may have on international marketing • Discuss the distribution strategies of international marketers
International Marketing • Develop marketing strategies by assessing the firm’s potential foreign markets and analyzing the many alternative marketing mixes • Must plan and control a variety of marketing strategies • Rather than a single unified and standardized one • Coordinate and integrate those strategies into a single marketing program
Standardize, Adapt, or Formulate Anew? • Management would prefer global standardization of the marketing mix • Significant cost savings • Longer production runs • Standardized advertising, promotional materials, and sales training • Standardized corporate image • Standardized pricing strategies • Easier control and coordination • Reduction of preparation time • Often not possible
Product Strategies • Product is central to marketing mix • Total product includes • Physical product • Brand name • Accessories • After-sales service • Warranty • Instructions for use • Company image • Package
Types of Products… • IndustrialProducts • Many can be sold unchanged worldwide (computer chips) • If changes are required, they may be cosmetic (printing instructions in another language) • In developing countries problems with • Overload of equipment • Maintenance • Local legal requirements
Types of Products… • Consumer Products • Require greater modification to meet local market requirements than do industrial products • Some can be sold unchanged to certain market segments • Large automobiles, sporting equipment, and perfumes • Greater dissimilarity as you go down the economic strata
Types of Products • Services • Marketing of services similar to that of industrial products • Services easier to market globally compared to consumer products • Laws and customs may force changes
Foreign Environmental Forces… • Sociocultural Forces • Dissimilar cultural patterns generally require changes in food and other consumer goods • May require • Redesign of product • Different meanings of colors • Different meanings of brand name • Translation of instructions or labels
Foreign Environmental Forces… • Legal Forces • Laws concerning • Pollution • Consumer protection • Operator safety • Laws prohibiting classes of imports • Food and pharmaceuticals influenced by laws concerning purity and labeling • Legal forces may prevent use of brand name worldwide • In some countries brand may be registered to someone else
Economic Forces Great disparity in income throughout world Obstacle to product standardization Many industrialized country products too expensive for developing country consumers Must either simplify the product or produce a different, less costly one Foreign Environmental Forces…
Physical Forces Climate and terrain prevent international product standardization Heat High humidity Special packaging High altitudes Baking products and motors Rough roads Foreign Environmental Forces
Promotional Strategies… • Promotion • Any form of communication between a firm and its publics • To bring about a favorable buying action and achieve long-lasting confidence in the firm and the product or service it provides
Promotional Strategies • Distinct promotional strategies based on combination of three alternatives • Marketing the same physical product everywhere • Adapting the physical product for foreign markets • Designing a different physical product with • (a) the same message • (b) adapted message or • (c) different message
Same product-same message Avon, Maidenform Same product-different message Honda’s campaign in America is different than in Brazil Product adaptation-same message In Japan, Lever Brothers puts Lux soap in fancy boxes to encourage gift sales Product adaptation-message adaptation In Latin America, Tang is sweetened and promoted as mealtime drink Different product-same message Product is produced in low cost plastic squeeze bottle for developing countries, but advertised the same Different product for the same use-different message Welding torches rather than automatic welding machines are sold in developing countries Six Common Promotional Strategies
The Promotional Mix • Advertising • Personal selling • Sales promotion • Public relations • Publicity
Advertising… • Paid, nonpersonal presentation of ideas, goods, or services by identified sponsor • Among promotional mix elements, advertising • Has the greatest similarities worldwide • Is formulated and executed through global ad agencies that have wholly owned subsidiaries, joint ventures, and working agreements with local agencies
Global and Regional Brands • Reasons for increase in global and regional brands • Cost • Better chance of obtaining one regional source for high-quality work • Belief that single image throughout region is important • Establishment of regionalized organizations with many functions centralized • Growth of global and regional satellite and cable television
Impact of Culture on Advertising • Directness vs. indirectness • Comparison • Humor • Gender roles • Explicitness • Sophistication • Popular vs. traditional • Information content vs. fluff
Branding Global, regional or national Managers may convert or use a combination Private brands Serious competitors Alliances with international retailers Trend common in Europe Advertising…
Media Satellite TV expands availability of media International print media available Reader’s Digest has 48 foreign editions Cinema and billboards used heavily in Europe In developing countries, vehicles equipped with loudspeakers Advertising…
Advertising… • Internet Advertising • An affluent, reachable audience • Web contacts feature interactivity, shrinks distance • Involve customers in determining which messages and information they receive • For some groups, Internet may be among the best media choices
Advertising… • Foreign Environmental Forces • Basic cultural decision for marketer: position the product as foreign or local • Depends on the country, the product types, and the target market • Language often an issue • back translation • plenty of illustrations with short copy
Advertising • What should be the approach of the international advertising manager? • Think globally, but act locally • Neither global nor local-”glocal” • Pan regional approach • Latin America • Middle East • Africa • Atlantic
Personal Selling… • Importance of personal selling compared to advertising depends on • Relative cost • Funds available • Media available • Type of product • Manufacturers of industrial products rely on personal selling • Marketers may increase use of personal selling for consumer products in developing countries
Internet Would seem to eliminate the need for personal selling, but may not be so Successful personal selling depends on establishing trust Evolving approaches to trust building in a virtual environment Personal Selling…
Personal Selling • International Standardization • An overseas sales force is similar to the home country in • Organization • Sales presentation • Training methods • Recruitment of salespeople in foreign countries can be difficult
Sales Promotion • Any various selling aids, including displays, premiums, contest, and gifts • Sociocultural and economic constraints make some sales promotions difficult to use • If premium is to fulfill the sales aid objective, it must be meaningful to the purchaser • Sales promotion is generally less sophisticated overseas than in U.S.
Public Relations • Various methods of communicating with the firm’s publics to secure a favorable impression • Markets firm • Improves image and overcomes negative perceptions • May work through government agencies
Pricing • Important and complex consideration in formulating marketing strategy • One of the marketing mix elements that can be varied to achieve firm’s marketing objectives • Made more complex by • Interaction with the other functional areas • Environmental forces
The finance people want prices that are profitable and conducive to steady cash flow Production supervisors want prices that create large sales volumes, which permit long production runs Legal department worries about possible antitrust violations when different prices are set according to type of customer Interaction between Marketing and Other Functional Areas
The tax people are concerned with effects of prices on tax loads The domestic sales manager wants export prices to be high enough to avoid parallel importing The marketer must address all these concerns and consider Legal forces Environmental forces Interaction between Marketing and Other Functional Areas
Standardizing Prices • Difficult if desirable • Foreign National Pricing • Local pricing in another country • International Pricing • Setting prices for unrelated and related firms • Transfer pricing • Intracorporate price, price of a good or service sold by one affiliate to another, the home office to an affiliate, or vice versa
Distribution Strategies • Distribution Decisions • Often interdependent with other marketing mix variables • Standardizing Distribution • Two fundamental constraints • The variation in availability of channel members • The environmental forces present in these different markets
Standardizing Distribution • Disintermediation • Unraveling of traditional distribution structures • Most often the result of being able to combine Internet with fast delivery services
Direct or Indirect Marketing The first decision: whether to use middlemen Export sales may be consummated by local agents if Management believes this is politically expedient Country’s laws demand it Factors Influencing Channel Selection Market Product Company Middlemen Channel Selection