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International Marketing

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Globalisation and the global economy. My thoughts, then ... Candidates? See me in break. 6. Janet Keilar. 7. Information and IM. Importance of information ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: International Marketing


1
International Marketing
  • Tim Beal
  • Lecture 2
  • 9 March

2
Today
  • Housekeeping
  • Janet Keilar using library online databases
  • Information and IM
  • Globalisation and the global economy
  • My thoughts, then Fletcher and Brown if time

3
Housekeeping
  • Apologies for change in time
  • Tutorial list during break
  • Tutorials start next week
  • Blackboard any problems?
  • Course homepage - URL case sensitive
  • http//www.vuw.ac.nz/caplabtb/m302w04/

4
Textbook Fletcher Brown
  • Should be sufficient copies in Victoria Book
    Centre
  • And 2nd hand
  • Any problems?

5
Class Representative
  • Candidates?
  • See me in break

6
Janet Keilar
7
Information and IM
  • Importance of information
  • Limits of information
  • Skills linking information and marketing
  • What sort of information?
  • Glance at sources

8
Importance of information for IM
  • Recent issue of Hong Kong Monitor
  • MNCs setting up regional HQs in HK
  • why HK?
  • clean government, low taxes, banking and
    financial facilities, rule of law BUT MAIN FACTOR
    WAS
  • Information

9
Still in China
  • Sun Zi (c 400BC)
  • Know yourself, know your enemy, a hundred
    battles, a hundred victories
  • The more we know and understand the better our
    marketing is likely to be
  • True domestically, even more so internationally
  • But its not easy..

10
Skills we seek to develop
  • Ability to gather information
  • Analyse information
  • Formulate strategies
  • Facts are for illustration not memorisation
  • Because facts change

11
Beyond facts and figures
  • Dating
  • Complexity
  • Contestability
  • Not sufficient

12
Dating
  • World is constantly changing
  • last weeks facts may be of no use
  • may be misleading
  • questions need to be constantly re-asked
  • NZ butter in Russia, Thai tourists to NZ

13
Complexity
  • World in hugely complex
  • Relevant data and information boundless
  • Couldnt cover everything

14
Contestability
  • few facts are unchallenged
  • facts are often contradictory
  • Opinions more so
  • Some say global economy will prosper, others say
    no
  • Need to develop ability to cope with
    contradictory facts and opinions

15
Never sufficient
  • Marketing goes beyond facts
  • Human beings complex and often unpredictable
  • Facts only take us so far
  • Fijians with freezers, ice cream sold last year
  • Doesnt tell what will happen if we introduce new
    brand to Fijian market

16
What sort of information?
  • What is it that we are seeking information on?
  • Customers
  • Competitors
  • Business environment

17
Business environment
  • laws and regulations
  • technology
  • Social and demographic trends
  • political changes
  • cultural and religious factors..

18
Criteria
  • Too much information can be as bad as too little
  • One reason for word limits and executive
    summaries
  • Information must be
  • Up-to-date
  • Relevant
  • authoritative
  • actionable

19
Globalisation and the global economy
  • Why the world trades comparative advantage
  • Limits of comparative advantage
  • Terms of Trade
  • Globalisation to global markets

20
Global economy and IM
  • Marketing an economic activity
  • Takes place within specific economic environment
  • Controllable and uncontrollable variables
  • environment uncontrollable variables
  • larger the organisation more effect it has on
    environment
  • Interaction with political, socials and
    technological factors

21
Why the world trades
  • 16-18th Mercantilists
  • Controlled trade in order to make nation strong
  • Focus on gold and silver (specie)
  • Adam Smith and successors argued for free trade
  • David Ricardo and comparative advantage

22
David Ricardo 1772-1823
23
Comparative advantage
  • Not the same as absolute advantage/ competitive
    advantage
  • Advocates specialisation even if no competitive
    advantage
  • Ricardos example - wool and wine
  • 2 country 2 product model
  • Labour only cost of production
  • Cost of transport ignored

24
Labour required per unit
25
Why trade?
  • Both wool AND wine are cheaper in Portugal
  • Yet trade is advantageous to both - why?
  • Bale of wool worth 3 barrels of wine in Portugal
    rather than 2 in Britain
  • British wool seller gets more wine exporting to
    Portugal than selling at home
  • Despite British wool being more expensive

26
Portugals advantage
  • British prices 2 wine 1 wool
  • Portugal 3 wine 1 wool
  • Portuguese wine seller gets
  • 1/3 bale of wool in Portugal
  • 1/2 bale of wool in Britain

27
Both sides gain
  • Specialise
  • Portuguese specialise in wine
  • British specialise in wool
  • by trading they get more of the other commodity
    than they would have if they had produced it
    themselves
  • How much more?

28
Prices change
  • Trade alters prices
  • British price of wine will drop
  • gtgt somewhere between original British price
  • 2 barrels of wine per bale of wool
  • and original Portuguese price
  • 3 barrels of wine per bale of wool
  • International pricegtgtgt(say) 2.5

29
Gains from trade
  • Comparative advantage does not tell us what
    international price will be
  • at 2.8 British gain more, at 2.2 Portuguese gain
    more
  • Both gain, but gains of trade not necessary equal
  • Other problems with theory

30
Limitations of comparative advantage
  • Transport and distribution ignored
  • Assumes that factors of production are mobile
  • Often are not eg European agriculture

31
CAP
  • European Unions Common Agricultural Policy
  • NZ produces dairy products 1/4 price of EU
  • no over-wintering costs
  • NZ, because small market lacks economies of scale
  • Manufacturing more expensive

32
Reasons for having range of production
  • Countries may resist specialisation for many
    reasons
  • Social eg rural depopulation, unemployment
  • Security - food, military equipment, etc.
  • Technological - need to participate in new
    technologies

33
Terms of Trade
  • Relationship of export to import prices
  • Raw materials versus (high tech) manufactures
  • fluctuate
  • Deteriorate over time
  • 1962 1 BMW 50 litres of milk
  • 2002 1 BMW 100 litres of milk
  • Milk doesnt change, cars do

34
Marketing to rescue
  • commodity prices fluctuate and tend to fall over
    time
  • Log prices now very log lumber giant CarterHolt
    posted 676m loss last year
  • IM aims to change commodities into branded
    products
  • Important for NZ to seek ways of adding value to
    our primary commodities
  • Zespri, Cervana are examples

35
Globalisation, then and now
  • Aspects of globalisation not new
  • Silk Road linking China and Europe
  • 19th century onwards great growth in
    international trade
  • post World War II liberalisation process
  • Chinas opening up
  • collapse of Soviet Union
  • changes in transportation, information and
    communications technology

36
Combination
  • Modern globalisation product of combination of
    economic, political and technological factors
  • eg trade grows because
  • transport cheaper
  • communications easier and cheaper
  • lowering of political barriers such as tariffs

37
Result
  • Move from separate local and national economies
    to borderless economy
  • e-commerce most advanced example
  • distance often irrelevant

38
Exchange rates
  • Ricardos wine and wool expressed in labour
  • trade uses money often US (also Euros)
  • Eg tourism
  • yen falls 10 against US
  • baht falls 20 against US
  • NZ falls 15 against US
  • Consequences?
  • In IM price becomes more of an uncontrollable
    variable
  • What is current state of NZ?

39
Globalisationgtgtglobal markets
  • Great growth in world trade and income
  • liberalisation of global economy
  • more next week
  • falling transport and communication costs
  • mobility of capital, technology, products
  • relative immobility of labour
  • Creation of dynamic and volatile global markets

40
dynamic and volatile global markets
  • Demand Societies becoming
  • richer and less self-sufficient
  • changing society and lifestyles
  • Supply
  • new products eg TVs, computers
  • old products now available globally eg tourism,
    out of season fruit
  • IM constantly combining continuity with change

41
Globalisation a perspective from Fletcher
Brown
  • Learning Objectives
  • After studying this chapter, you should be able
    to
  • Evaluate the forces of globalisation and the
    underlying philosophy of globalism
  • Assess the motivations for globalisation and the
    six-stage internationalisation process
  • Identify the elements relevant to global
    planning
  • Use a global strategy framework
  • Examine basic global competitive strategy
    profiles and the pitfalls of global marketing
    and
  • Explore the rise of Asian competitors and their
    steps in regional and global market development.

42
Introduction
  • As we commence the new millennium, the world is
    becoming increasingly globally linked in terms
    of
  • Production
  • Technology
  • Capital
  • People
  • Information
  • Business

43
Globalisation
  • What is globalisation
  • Globalism trends
  • Globalism as a philosophy

44
What Is Globalisation
  • Globalisation is the process by which firms
    operate on a global basis, organising their
    structure, capabilities, resources, and people in
    such a way as to address the word as one market.

45
Globalism Trends
  • A myriad of forces are coming together which are
    triggering the globalisation of industries,
    companies and individuals. Trade blocks are
    forming which are consolidating market regions
    such as the EEC, North America, Japan and the
    Asia-Pacific area.

46
Globalism as a Philosophy
  • Globalism is a philosophy based on an
    integrated, standardised world where people buy,
    sell and share common products, services and
    ideas.

47
Globalism as a Philosophy
  • Hamel and Prahalad contend that core
    competencies for a firm must pass three tests
  • Customer value
  • Competitor differentiation
  • Extendibility

48
Motivations for Globalisation
  • Yip classifies the drivers of globalisation
    under four headings
  • Market drivers
  • Cost drivers
  • Government drivers
  • Competitive drivers

49
Characteristics of the Global Firm
  • Has a business concept rather than a geographic
    concept with a focus on how you do business
    rather than where you do business
  • Is decentralised rather than centralised and is
    willing to do business in any location
  • Adopts a holistic view of its operation
  • Consciously eliminates the isolation that
    precludes the sharing of information
  • Builds trust between members of the organisation

50
Characteristics of the Global Firm
  • Goes out of its way to be a good corporate
    citizen
  • Operates as a co-ordinator among members of its
    network
  • Actively works to avoid duplication of its
    facilities
  • Encourages horizontal communication
  • Understands the world wide economies of the
    business.

51
Global or Multinational Questions
  • Which approach provides a better picture for
    developing future competitive position?
  • Which elements of the marketing mix or aspects of
    the value chain can be effectively standardised
    or modified?
  • Which external or environmental variables require
    analysis?
  • What is the impact of global telecommunications,
    media and computing?
  • How does a multinational firm convert to a global
    company?
  • Is true globalisation really ever possible?

52
Global Strategy Framework
  • Step 1
  • Develop a core strategy
  • Step 2
  • Internalisation of the strategy
  • Step 3
  • Integrates the strategy across countries

53
Basic Competitive Strategy Profiles
  • Global Leader Strategy
  • Global Challenger Strategy One
  • Global Challenger Strategy Two
  • Global Follower Strategy
  • Global Niche Strategy One
  • Global Strategy Two
  • Global Collaborator Strategy

54
Global Leader Strategy
  • Innovator in technologies, products and markets
    with high global share and wide country market
    coverage.

55
Global Challenger Strategy One
  • Frontal or encirclement attack on the leader in
    all markets with increasing country market
    coverage and high global share but less than the
    leader.

56
Global ChallengerStrategy Two
  • Flanking or bypassing world leader with
    increasing country market coverage and high
    global share but less than the leader.

57
Global Follower Strategy
  • Rapid imitation of leader or challenger with
    moderate country market coverage and emphasis on
    price sensitive markets.

58
Global Niche Strategy One
  • Rapid penetration of narrow market segments by
    selective targeting of country markets and a
    small share of their overall market.

59
Global Niche Strategy Two
  • Infiltration, slow penetration of selected
    narrow markets with focus on selected country
    markets and a low share of the overall market.

60
Global Collaborator Strategy
  • Innovator in research and development of
    technologies, products and markets, sets
    standards and shares them with other firms.

61
The Pitfalls of Global Marketing
  • Once the global strategy is right, the pitfalls
    of global marketing lie in implementation. This
    may involve a combination of vertical
    integration, joint ventures and alliances
    depending upon regulatory, competitive and market
    conditions in target countries.

62
Globalisation From a Macro Perspective
  • Socio/cultural
  • Economic/financial
  • Political/legal
  • Technology

63
Summary
  • Products, markets, companies and life styles are
    becoming more global as people travel and
    communication links provide real time reporting
    of events.
  • A global strategy framework assists firms in
    assessing the external factors, internal
    capabilities and the benefits and costs of global
    strategies.

64
Today
  • Information for IM
  • Globalisation and the global economy

65
Next week
  • The political framework of globalisation
  • Changing social fabric
  • Visiting speaker from the Philippines
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