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International Business

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End of term extra credit opportunities. Presentations. Nike-Reebok debate. Presentations on ... The Nike-Reebok debate. A town meeting on global sourcing. A ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: International Business


1
International Business
International Business 10e Daniels/Radebaugh/Sulli
van
  • Chapter Sixteen
  • Marketing Part II

2004, Prentice Hall, Inc
16-1
2
End of term extra credit opportunities
  • Presentations
  • Nike-Reebok debate

3
  • Presentations on
  • a country or
  • a region (even a town/city in U.S.)
  • some other subject in global business
  • Up to 18 points can be added to class
    participation grade
  • Grade can go above 100

4
The Nike-Reebok debate
  • A town meeting on global sourcing
  • A few students play role of top executives in
    Nike Reebok
  • Others play roles of other stakeholders
    (employees, foreign suppliers, etc.)
  • Volunteer now for executive roles
  • Up to 8 points added to midterm grade

5
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6
Midterm 2
  • 25 to 28 multiple choice questions
  • You choose 1 of 2 essays
  • Slides for review session are on the class web
    site

7
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8
Marketing - Last time
  • Basic concept - process by which the firms
    abilities, products, and services are brought to
    the attention of customers, then sold and
    delivered
  • Kinds of product policies
  • Video introduction Globally integrated vs.
    multidomestic marketing
  • Forecasting demand in a new market
  • Sales per 1,000 population?
  • Alterations from country to country
  • Gap analysis for countries where you already sell

9
Today
  • International management of
  • Distribution
  • Pricing
  • Promotion
  • Dental News and Hotresponse case
  • The Alpha Dental question on the midterm

10
How to Fail at Exporting
  • Failure to obtain qualified export counseling
  • Failure to develop a master international
    marketing plan
  • Insufficient commitment by top managers
  • Insufficient care in selecting overseas agents or
    distributors
  • Chasing orders from around the world instead of
    establishing a base of profitable operations and
    orderly growth

17-8
11
Distribution
  • Definition The course that goods take between
    production and consumption
  • physical path and
  • legal title Who buys the product from the maker
    and sells it to others closer to the final
    customer?

12
  • Shipping is part of distribution
  • But more important is the companies and the
    process through which the product is sold
  • to retailers
  • to the final customer

13
  • A distributor a firm that buys from maker or a
    larger distributor and sells to a retailer or a
    smaller distributor (or sometimes to the final
    customer)

14
Direct Selling
  • Selling direct to foreign retailers or end users
  • Often difficult
  • But gives you control of the process
  • Avoids risk of a lazydistributor

17-10
15
Pricing is much more complex in international
business
  • Changing values of currency
  • Diversity of markets
  • Costs of transportation, warehousing
  • Tariffs, quotas
  • Government regulations
  • Distribution methods have to differ from one
    country to the next

16
Distribution systems result in price escalation
  • It is impossible to build huge stores in many
    countries
  • So many buyers must be reached through complex
    channels
  • They typically buy at small stores within walking
    or public transit distance from home
  • Small distributors serve the small stores

17
Price escalation
Sell to retailer for 1.50
US production cost 1
U.S. retailer sells for 2.25
Ship sell to retailer in Canada for 1.60
Ship sell to distributor in Japan
Canada retailer sells for 2.40
Tariff .05Shipping .20Your cost1.25
Big distributor buys for 1.875, takes 20
markup, sells for 2.25
Store in Japan has high costs, adds 60, sells
for 4.32
Small distributor adds 20, sells for 2.70
18
Selling is complex everywhere but even more so
abroad
  • Need to provide a sales program
  • Promotional materials, services, training of
    sales people discounts for quantity, credit
  • Dont be quick to cut the base price

19
  • Government involvement no consistency
  • Some laws set minimum prices to prevent
    monopoly, Japan, Germany protect small stores
  • Many prohibit selling below cost
  • Others set maximum prices

20
Promotion Determining the Push/Pull Mix
  • PULL
  • You encourage demand through techniques such as
    advertising
  • PUSH
  • You sell through direct sales techniques
  • A complex distribution system encourages push
    techniques

21
Local media
  • Coke, Unilever provide free samples at big
    religious pilgrimages in India

22
International Branding Decisions
  • Brand versus no brand
  • Manufacturers brand versus private brand
  • One brand versus multiple brands
  • Worldwide brand versusmultiple brands
  • What to do with acquisitions?

16-15
23
more complexities
  • Cost and availability of media to reach target
    markets
  • Government regulation
  • little commercial TV in Scandinavia
  • Can you standardize your message globally?

24
What do customers think of your country?
  • In some countries people think foreign products
    are better
  • But they may still be suspicious of real
    foreigners

25
Language differences always create problems
  • Chevrolet Nova
  • Braniff Airlines introduces leather airline seats
  • English Fly on leather
  • Spanish Vuele en cueros

26
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27
From Ch 17 Government can help a lot
  • In the U.S., the Export Assistance Center of the
    International Trade Administration (Department of
    Commerce) provides useful help
  • In San Jose, the Silicon Valley Center for
    International Trade Development can be useful

28
  • Government agencies can
  • Provide information on the process of exporting
  • Provide information on events such as trade fairs
  • Connect you with U.S. embassies who can find
    potential agents, distributors
  • Critique your export strategy

29
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30
Conclusions from the Dental News case
  • Dental News exists because
  • There are few distributors of dental equipment in
    poorer countries
  • Communications media from rich countries dont
    tell dentists in poorer nations what they can get
    and how
  • So its hard to be a dentist in these nations

31
Final hint on the Alpha Dental question
  • When dealing with the steps part of the
    question, be sure that the first steps you
    suggest really are things you can do first

32
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33
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34
Chapter Review
  • Introduce techniques for assessing sizes for
    given countries
  • Describe a range of product policies and the
    circumstances in which they are appropriate
  • Contrast policies of standardized versus
    differentiated marketing programs for each
    country in which sales are made
  • Emphasis how environmental differences complicate
    the management of marketing worldwide
  • Discuss major international considerations within
    the marketing mix
  • Product
  • Pricing
  • Promotion
  • Branding
  • distribution

16-16
35
Chapter Objectives
  • Introduce techniques for assessing sizes for
    given countries
  • Describe a range of product policies and the
    circumstances in which they are appropriate
  • Contrast policies of standardized versus
    differentiated marketing programs for each
    country in which sales are made
  • Emphasis how environmental differences complicate
    the management of marketing worldwide
  • Discuss major international considerations within
    the marketing mix
  • Product
  • Pricing
  • Promotion
  • Branding
  • distribution

16-2
36
Gap Analysis studies opportunities in areas where
you are now selling
16-7
37
Gap Analysis
  • Gap analysis identifies market segments you are
    not serving adequately
  • Types of gaps
  • Distribution What sales do we lose because
    people get others products more easily?
  • Product line What sales do we lose because
    others have the kinds of products people want?
  • Competitive What sales do we lose because
    people just like others products better?
  • Usage Are people using less of the product than
    elsewhere?

38
Product Policy
  • Your basic attitude toward what you offer the
    consumer

39
  • Production Orientation little emphasis on
    marketing
  • Assumes customers want lower prices or higher
    quality (or both)
  • Used for
  • commodity sales products where you cant create
    differentiation
  • Passive exports, reducing surpluses in home
    market
  • Small markets
  • Sales orientation You decide on the product,
    then try to sell it
  • Tends to work poorly in international trade

40
  • Customer orientation What can we sell in
    Country A?
  • Strategic marketing Try to use whichever of the
    others will maximize profits

41
Why will you alter products from one nation to
another?
  • Legal requirements
  • When foreign laws are less strict people
    poorer, should you sell a cheaper product?
  • Indirect effects
  • High gas taxes leadto smaller cars

16-10
42
  • Cultural reasons
  • Toyota builds big pickup truck, it doesnt sell
    till its redesigned with space for a 10-gallon
    hat
  • Toyota sent standard seatbelts to US, faced
    safety recall because McDonalds french fry
    grease dissolved the fabric
  • Religious
  • Economic
  • Cheaper Barbies for poorer nations
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