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Cultural Dynamics in

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International Marketing 15th edition Philip R. Cateora, Mary C. Gilly, and John L. Graham As shown in Exhibit 4.5, the United States scores the highest of all ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cultural Dynamics in


1
International Marketing 15th edition
Chapter 4 Cultural Dynamics in Assessing global
Markets
Philip R. Cateora, Mary C. Gilly, and John L.
Graham
2
Introduction (1 of 2)
  • Culture is pertinent to the study of
    international marketing.
  • Culture is pervasive in all marketing activities
    pricing, promotions, channels of distributions,
    product, packaging and styling.
  • The priority of needs and wants and the manner in
    which they are satisfied are functions of culture
    that eventually dictate styles of living.
  • Markets constantly change and markets and market
    behavior are part of a countrys culture.

3
Introduction (2 of 2)
  • One cannot truly understand how markets evolve or
    how they react to a marketers effort without
    appreciating that markets are a result of
    culture.
  • In fact, markets are a result of the three-way
    interaction of a marketers efforts, economic
    conditions, and all other elements of the
    culture.
  • Marketers are constantly adjusting their efforts
    to cultural demands of the market, but they are
    also acting as agents of change whenever the
    product or idea being marketed is innovative.

4
Overview
  • The importance of culture to an international
    marketer
  • Definition and origins of culture
  • The elements of culture
  • The impact of cultural change and cultural
    borrowing
  • Strategies of planned and unplanned change

5
Global Perspective Equities and eBay Culture
Gets in the Way
  • Liberalization of the Japanese and the French
    capital markets have given Japanese consumers
    more freedom of choice in their investments and
    brought down transaction costs for institutional
    and retail investors in France.
  • Culture is the overriding factor as e-Bay, the
    successful online auction site in America, is
    facing difficulties in Japan and France.
  • For example, in Japan there is no American-style
    risk-taking culture (only 12 of households
    invest in stocks, while in America, about 55
    invest in stocks) and in France there are laws
    that restrict operations.

6
Example
  • Yahoo website is a great example of an
    organization that understands the importance of
    adapting to culture
  • http//everything.yahoo.com/index.php?world
  • The Chinese view of relationship (2 min. video)
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vqingy5JAt8wfeature
    related
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vyA_D29BkXNkfeature
    related

7
Cultures Pervasive Impact
  • Culture affects every part of our lives, every
    day, from birth to death, and everything in
    between.
  • As countries move from agricultural to industrial
    to services economies, birthrates decline and
    global changes in values are occurring.
  • Consequences of the cultural impact
  • Birth rates - Japan (Year of the Dragon and Year
    of the Fire Horse)
  • Consumption patterns Alcohol and Tobacco
  • Consumption consequences Life Expectancy,
    Stomach cancer
  • It is imperative for foreign marketers to learn
    to appreciate the intricacies of cultures
    different from their own if they are to effective
    in foreign markets.

8
Birthrates (per 1000 women)
Exhibit 4.1
9
Consumption Patterns (annual per capita)
Exhibit 4.2
10
Consequences of Consumption
Exhibit 4.3
11
Human Universals
Use Metaphors
Create Art
Consider aspects of sexuality private
Conceive of success and failure
Are ethnocentric
Have a fear of snakes
Express emotions with face
Trade and transport goods
Reciprocate
Imitate outside influences
Resist outside influences
12
Human Universals
Use Metaphors
Create Art
Consider aspects of sexuality private
Conceive of success and failure
Are ethnocentric
Have a fear of snakes
Express emotions with face
Reciprocate
Trade and transport goods
Resist outside influences
Imitate outside influences
13
Definitions and Origins of Culture
  • Traditional definition of culture
  • Culture is the sum of the values, rituals,
    symbols, beliefs, and thought processes that are
    learned, shared by a group of people, and
    transmitted from generation to generation.
  • Individuals learn culture in three ways
  • Socialization (growing up)
  • Acculturation (adjusting to a new culture)
  • Application (decisions about consumption and
    production)

14
Origins, Elements, and Consequences of Culture
Exhibit 4.4
15
Geography
  • Exercises a profound control
  • Includes climate, topography, flora, fauna, and
    microbiology
  • Influenced history, technology, economics, social
    institutions and way of thinking
  • The ideas of Jared Diamond and Philip Parker
  • Jared Diamond
  • Historically innovations spread faster east to
    west than north to south
  • Philip Parker
  • Reports strong correlations between latitude
    (climate) and per capita GDP

16
Why do we all Love Flowers?
  • Geography
  • History
  • Technology and economics
  • Social institutions
  • Cultural values
  • Aesthetics as symbols

17
History
  • History - Impact of specific events can be seen
    reflected in technology, social institutions,
    cultural values, and even consumer behavior
  • Tobacco was the original source of the Virginia
    colonys economic survival in the 1600s
  • American values and institutions influenced by
    Adam Smiths book The Wealth of Nations
  • Military conflicts in the Middle East brought
    about new cola alternatives such as Mecca Cola,
    Muslim Up, and Arab Cola.

18
Political Economy and Technology
  • Political Economy - Three approaches to
    governance competed for world dominance
  • Fascism
  • Communism
  • Democracy/free enterprise
  • Technology
  • Jet aircraft, air conditioning, televisions,
    computers, Internet, etc.
  • None more important than the birth control pill
  • Although America has the best healthcare
    technology, people in many countries have greater
    longevity lifestyle choices are important

19
Social Institutions (1 of 4)
  • Family
  • Religion
  • School
  • The media
  • Government
  • Corporations

20
Social Institutions (2 of 4)
  • Family
  • Nepotism
  • Role of extended family
  • Favoritism of boys in some cultures
  • Gender equality is changing
  • Religion - Major Religions
  • First institution infants are exposed to outside
    the home
  • Impact of values systems
  • Misunderstanding of beliefs
  • An American women jailed in Saudi Arabia for
    sitting with man at Starbucks

Next
21
Major Religions
  • Christianity 2 Billion followers
  • Islam 1.2 Billion followers
  • Hinduism 860 Million followers
  • Buddhism 360 Million followers
  • Confucianism 150 Million followers

Back
22
Social Institutions (3 of 4)
  • School the most important social institution
  • Direct link between a nations literacy rate and
    its economic development
  • Difficult to communicate with a market when a
    company must depend on symbols and pictures
  • The media it has replaced family time
  • TV and the Internet
  • American educational system produces a lower
    percentage of college graduates than 12 other
    countries including Russia, Japan, and France

23
Social Institutions (4 of 4)
  • Government - influences the thinking and
    behaviors of adult citizens
  • Propaganda through media
  • Passage, promulgation, promotion, and enforcement
    of laws
  • Corporations - most innovations are introduced to
    societies by companies
  • Spread through media
  • Change agents

24
Elements of Culture (1 of 4)
  • Values
  • Rituals
  • Symbols
  • Beliefs
  • Thought processes

25
Elements of Culture (2 of 4)
  • Cultural values Geert Hofstede
  • Individualism/Collectivism Index
  • Reflects the preference of behavior that promotes
    ones self interest
  • Power Distance Index
  • Measures the tolerance of social inequality
  • Uncertainty Avoidance Index
  • Measures the tolerance of uncertainty and
    ambiguity
  • Cultural Values and Consumer Behavior

26
Hofstedes Indexes Language, and Linguistic
Distance
Exhibit 4.5
27
Elements of Culture (3 of 4)
  • Rituals patterns of behavior and interaction
    that are learned and repeated
  • Marriages , funerals, baptisms, graduations
  • Symbols
  • Language
  • Linguistic distance relationship between
    language and international marketing
  • Aesthetics as symbols
  • Insensitivity to aesthetic values can offend,
    create a negative impression, and, in general,
    render marketing efforts ineffective or even
    damaging

Next
28
Language
  • According to www.ethnologue.com
  • A total of 7,413 known living languages exist in
    the world
  • 311 being spoken in the U.S. 297 in Mexico, 13
    in Finland, and 241 in China
  • EU has 20 official languages
  • India alone has 452 known languages!

Back
29
Elements of Culture (4 of 4)
  • Beliefs
  • Superstitions play a large role in a societys
    belief system and therefore, to make light of
    superstitions in other cultures can be an
    expensive mistake
  • The number 13 in the western hemisphere is
    considered unlucky, where as the number 8 in
    China connotes prosperity
  • The practice of Feng Shui
  • Thought processes
  • Difference in perception between the East and the
    West
  • Focus vs. big-picture

30
Cultural Sensitivity and Tolerance
  • It is imperative that the marketer be attuned to
    the nuances of culture so that a new culture can
    be viewed objectively, evaluated and appreciated
  • Cultures are not right or wrong, better or worse,
    they are simply different
  • The more exotic the situation, the more
    sensitive, tolerant, and flexible one needs to be
  • There must be an appreciation of how cultures
    change and accept or reject new ideas

31
Cultural Change
  • Dynamic in nature it is a living process
  • Paradoxical because culture is conservative and
    resists change
  • Changes caused by war or natural disasters
  • Society seeking ways to solve problems created by
    changes in environment
  • Culture is the means used in adjusting to the
    environmental and historical components of human
    existence

32
Cultural Borrowing
  • A responsible effort to learn from others
    cultural ways in the quest for better solutions
    to a societys particular problems
  • Imitating diversities of other cultures make
    cultures unique
  • Contact can make cultures grow closer or further
    apart
  • Habits, foods, and customs are adapted to fit
    each societys needs
  • The marketer must eventually gain cultural empathy

33
Similarities An Illusion
  • A common language does not guarantee a similar
    interpretation of word or phrases
  • Difference between British and American English
  • http//www.woodlands-junior.kent.sch.uk/customs/qu
    estions/americanbritish/index.html
  • Just because something sells in one country
    doesnt mean it will sell in another
  • Cultural differences among member of European
    Union a product of centuries of history

34
Resistance to Change
  • Gradual cultural growth does not occur without
    some resistance
  • New methods, ideas, and products are held to be
    suspect before they are accepted
  • Resistance to change varies between cultures
  • The most important factor in determining how much
    of an innovation will be accepted is the degree
    of interest in the particular subject, as well as
    how drastically the new will change the old

35
Planned and Unplanned Cultural Change
  • Determine which cultural factors conflict with an
    innovation
  • Change those factors from obstacles to acceptance
    into stimulants for change
  • Marketers have two options when introducing and
    innovation to a culture
  • They can wait (unplanned change)
  • They can cause change (planned change)
  • Cultural congruence
  • Marketing products similar to ones already on the
    market in a manner as congruent as possible with
    existing cultural norms

36
Summary (1 of 2)
  • A complete and thorough appreciation of the
    origins and elements of culture may well be the
    single most important gain to a foreign marketer
    in the preparation of marketing plans and
    strategies
  • Marketers can control the product offered to a
    market its promotion, price, and eventual
    distribution methods but they have only limited
    control over the cultural environment within
    which these plans must be implemented

37
Summary (2 of 2)
  • When a company is operating internationally each
    new environment that is influenced by elements
    unfamiliar and sometimes unrecognizable to the
    marketer complicates the task
  • Special effort and study are needed to absorb
    enough understanding of the foreign culture to
    cope with the uncontrollable features
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