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McDonalds Internationally

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Understand just how much international expansion McDonald's is partaking in. ... Sociologist George Ritzer, author of 'The McDonaldization of Society', states ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: McDonalds Internationally


1
McDonald's Internationally
By Eric Kenny Ekta Shah Rachel Sigley George
Tsakanias Mariemir Viruet
2
What we're looking to teach you...
  • Were hoping from this presentation you will
  • Learn a bit about the history of McDonalds.
  • Understand just how much international expansion
    McDonalds is partaking in.
  • Criticism/Opposition to McDonalds
  • SWOT Analysis
  • Few small legal cases involving McDonalds
  • McDonalds in India and China
  • Infrastructure
  • Politics

3
  • Began in 1940
  • Located in 122 Countries
  • 51 million people are served a day at
    30,000 different locations
  • Independent local business people own and operate
    more than 70 of McDonalds globally
  • In 2004, Morgan Spurlock came out with a
    documentary titled Super Size Me that looked at
    the fast food corporation as a contributor to
    obesity
  • In about 30 markets outside the U.S., McDonalds
    restaurants are operated by developmental
    licensees who own the business and pay McDonalds
    royalties based on a percentage of sales.

Quick Facts About McDonalds
4
In the beginning...
  • Began by two brothers
  • Dick McDonald
  • Mac McDonald
  • Started off as a hot dog stand in CA 1937
  • Hot Dog stand moves to Rt.66 and becomes a
    Hamburger Joint.
  • Offers 25 menu items
  • Becomes car hop
  • Highly profitable teen hang
    out

1st McDonalds Hamburger Cost .15
5
First McDonald's
6
In the beginning...
  • Brothers realize Burgers were most profitable
  • Close down restaurant and reopen as a Speedy
    Service System
  • Offer only burgers, shakes, and fries
  • McDonalds is franchised to several
    locations1953
  • First McDonalds to feature the Golden Arches
  • Ray Kroc discovers McDonalds 1954
  • Creates McDonalds Systems Inc to start
    franchising 1955
  • Renamed to McDonalds Corporation 1960

A McDonalds in Downey, CA is the oldest
operating McDonalds today opened in 1953
7
In the beginning...
  • In 1967 the first McDonalds outside of the US
    opens up
  • Richmond, British Columbia
  • Big Mac and Apple Pie introduced 1968
  • 1971 McDonalds really starts going global
  • Asian Tokyo Ginza District, Japan
  • European Netherland, Munich, Germany
  • 1974 McDonalds Starts the Ronald McDonald
    House Charities as a non-profit organization to
    improve the health and well being of children.
    In 1985 the first RMHC opened internationally in
    the Netherlands.

McDonalds in Germany offered Beer as a part of
their menu
8
International Expansion
9
Across the Globe...
  • 1967 - Canada Puerto Rico (first restaurants
    outside the U.S.)
  • 1971 - Tokyo, Japan, Amsterdam, Netherlands
    Sydney, Australia
  • 1979 - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • 1990 - Moscow, Russia China
  • The Chinese characters "Mai Dang Lao" are used to
    phonetically approximate the word
    "McDonald's.
  • 1992 - Casablanca, Morocco Czech Republic
  • 1993 - The first McDonald's at sea opens aboard
    the Silja Europa, the world's
    largest ferry sailing between Stockholm and
    Helsinki.
  • 1994 - Restaurants open in Bahrain, Bulgaria,
    Egypt, Kuwait, Latvia, Oman, New Caledonia,
    Trinidad and United Arab Emirates.
  • 1996 - First restaurant opens in India.
  • 50-50 joint venture partnership between
    McDonalds Corporation (USA) and two Indian
    businessmen.
  • Two separate operations in Northern Western
    India.
  • Partners and their management teams trained
    extensively in Indonesia the U.S.

10
International Taste Offerings
  • India Sandwich sauces, shakes and soft-serve
    products do not contain eggs in order to offer
    more variety to vegetarian customers.
  • Uruguay McHuevo (hamburger with a poached egg on
    top)
  • Norway McLaks (grilled salmon sandwich
    with dill sauce)
  • Germany Beer
  • Thailand Samurai Pork Burger (sausage patty in
    teriyaki sauce)
  • Taiwan Rice Burger

11
Importance of Expanding Internationally
  • U.S. fast food market showed signs of saturation
    by early 1980s after 3 decades of rapid growth.
  • Foreign revenues and profit have grown 22
    annually since early 1980s.
  • By end of 2000, the foreign restaurants generated
    21B (53) of the corporations 40B in revenues.
  • Foreign markets are sources of valuable new ideas.

12
Foreign Markets Valuable Idea Source
  • Dutch
  • Prefabricated modular restaurants
    (temporary easily moved)
  • Widely used for big outdoor events
  • Sweden
  • Enhanced meat freezer now used throughout entire
    firm
  • Singapore
  • Small, limited menu satellite restaurants (low
    overhead)
  • Now in hospitals and sports arenas in the U.S.

13
Expansion...
  • Expansion rate slowed in the last few years due
    to declining operating margins and focus on
    improving existing restaurants and menu
    offerings.
  • International expansion was led by late CEO, Jim
    Cantalupo, who passed away of a heart attack in
    April 2004, age 60.
  • By the late 1990s, McDonalds aggressive
    expansion resulted in cannibalization of its own
    sales because stores were built too close to each
    other.
  • In 2003,the focus changed from adding new
    restaurants to building sales at
    existing restaurants.
  • Struggling European and South Korean restaurants
  • U.K. - public concerns over unhealthy menu items
  • Germany South Korea - adverse economic
    conditions
  • Between 2003 and 2004, underperforming
    restaurants were closed in the
    U.S., Japan, Latin America and Jamaica.
  • SARS concerns had a negative impact on sales in
    2003 in many Asian countries.

Jim Cantalupo
14
McDonald's In China
15
McDonald's In China
  • McDonald's has most certainly had a profound
    effect on China.
  • When the first McDonald's opened in Beijing more
    than a dozen years ago, 40,000 people lined up to
    observe a Big Mac and get their picture taken
    with the infamous Ronald McDonald.
  • McDonald's is growing faster in China than in the
    United States.
  • McDonalds owns operates more than
    600 stores across 105 cities in
    China.
  • More than 100 more McDonald's stores
    will be added annually to
    Chinese cities within
    the coming years.

16
China Menu Items
  • While offering the basic burger and fries,
    McDonalds in China also offers
  • Szechuan-style spicy chicken wings
  • Seafood Soup
  • Rice
  • Oriental Sauces
  • Taro and Red Bean Dessert

Red Bean Dessert
17
In China, It's All About Who You Know
  • In 1992, McDonalds opened its first restaurant
    in Beijing and the restaurant enjoyed good sales.
  • 2 years into the 20-year lease, the city
    government told McDonalds to move the
    restaurant.
  • The location would be used for another complex
    planned by a developer from Hong Kong.
  • McDonalds tried to enforce its contract by
    taking the government to court, but it lost the
    case.
  • In the West, contract law governs business
    transactions.
  • In China, personal power and relationships/connect
    ions determine how business is conducted.

18
...Guanxi...
  • Guanxi literally means relationships
  • Concept is deeply rooted in Chinese culture
    (based on 2000-year-old Confucian ideology).
  • Guanxi is crucial for building long-term
    relationships and doing business in China.
  • McDonalds did not have the same connections as
    the Chinese developer.
  • By not accepting the governments
    decision gracefully and taking it to
    court, McDonalds damaged
    its reputation with
    the city government

Chinese Symbol for Guanxi
19
Chinese Infrastructure
  • In 1997 China passes first franchise law. Prior
    to this, all McDonalds restaurants were
    corporately owned and operated.
  • Demand for western style conveniences is
    increasing as Chinas middle class grows.
  • Drive-through fast food windows

In December 2005, China got its first drive thru
in the heart of the central business district of
Dongguan Guangdong Province, thirty years after
the first McDonalds US drive thru was
established
20
McDonald's In India
21
McDonald's In India
  • Limited menu, fresh food, fast service and
    affordable prices have been the pillars behind
    McDonalds success in India. Intense competition
    and demands for a wider menu, drive-through and
    sit-down meals - encouraged the fast food giant
    to customize product variety without hindering
    the efficacy of its supply chain

McDonalds in India offers home delivery. Also
if you go to a McDonalds restaurant and order
food, you take a seat and they bring it to your
table.
  • While there are some 150-200 million middle-class
    people in India that can afford McDonalds there
    is also a vast majority of the Indian population
    that is still too poor to afford it

22
The Sacred Cow...
  • For thousands of years, India's Hindu culture has
    revered the cow and does not eat the meat of the
    scared cow. In addition there are some 140
    million Muslims in India, who do not eat pork.
  • To respect and adapt to Indian culture,
    McDonald's created an Indian version
    of burgers which are made from mutton
    and chicken. All foods are segregated
    vegetarian and non-vegetarian, due to the fact
    that many Hindus are vegetarians.

23
Indian Menu Items
  • Vegetarian Menu
  • Veg McCurry
  • McAloo Tikki
  • McVeggie
  • Pizza McPuff
  • Crispy Chinese
  • Paneer Salsa Wrap

24
Indian Menu Items
  • Non-Vegetarian Menu
  • Chicken Maharaja Mac
  • McChicken
  • Filet-O-Fish
  • Chicken Mexican Wrap
  • Chicken McGrill
  • Chicken McCurry Pan

25
Problems in India
  • McDonalds strategy of positioning itself as a
    family restaurant with an emphasis on local menus
    and local values seems to be working well in
    India. But to what extent McDonalds can continue
    its growth in India remains uncertain. McDonalds
    is more than just another American fast food
    chain. It carries a symbolic load of
    AmericannessAmerican variant of capitalism and
    its overwhelming domination over the global
    economy. It is also a symbol of American cultural
    imperialism. For this reason, McDonalds
    operations in India, like other parts of the
    world, will continue to face opposition from
    religious fundamentalists, environmentalists,
    protectionists, animal rights activists, and
    anti-globalization protestors.

26
Indian Infrastructure
  • New menu items specifically for vegetarians are
    introduced.
  • It is made aware that the food is produced
    locally to show investment in Indian
    Infrastructure.
  • McDonalds developed and maintains community
    parks to prevent public resentment.

27
Indian Infrastructure
  • Unique supply chain created
  • Operates best when chain is balanced
  • Necessary to maintain food freshness

McDonalds transferred its food processing
centers to India to increase efficiency
28
Giving Back to the Community
  • In Mumbai, there is an event called McDonalds
    Spotlight. This is an annual interschool
    performing arts competition. This competition is
    open to all secondary school students.
  • Since 2002, McDonalds has participated in World
    Childrens Day. On this day, McDonalds raises
    money for any charity of their choice. Usually
    educational programs

29
Strengths
  • Sociologist George Ritzer, author of The
    McDonaldization of Society, states that
    McDonaldization is a transformation of
    rationalization, moving away from traditional to
    rational modes of thought, and scientific
    management. 
  • Ritzer has highlighted 4 major concepts of
    McDonaldization
  • Efficiency - the optimal method for accomplishing
    a task
  • Calculability - objective should be quantifiable
    (i.e. sales) rather
    than subjective (i.e. taste)                 
  • Predictability - standardized and uniform
    services
  • Control - standardized and uniform employees

30
Strengths
  • These concepts have led to the stability and
    expansion of McDonalds in the overseas market,
    especially in East Asia, where more and more
    McDonalds franchises are opening constantly,
    leading to the belief that maybe one day every
    restaurant will be taken over by McDonalds
    itself.
  • McDonalds franchises in various countries also
    offer a variety of meals to better help customers
    in choosing food that is best accustomed to
    peoples beliefs.
  • For example, various faiths dont permit people
    eating pork or beef. The substituting of an
    existing meal with an alternative food can lead
    to the creation of new menu items, therefore,
    keeping the volume of customers high at all times
    as long as the expectations of customers are met
    with the outcome of higher revenues.

31
Weaknesses
  • Declining market share
  • Weak product development
  • Disgruntled franchisees
  • Quality and taste of products
  • Slowed revenue and income growth

32
Opportunities
  • McJobs Program
  • McDonalds is one of the top 25 companies that
    has focused in hiring people with disabilities,
    giving them a chance to make a living like
    everyone else, leading to the creation of the
    McJobs Program.
  • Looking to employ disabled people is what
    McDonalds focuses on because, according to John
    Yeh, employment of persons with disabilities is
    a win-win situation for employers, persons with
    disabilities, and service providers.
  • Considered the best employer for Asians
  • McDonalds worldwide willingly hires people
    constantly in order to supplement the growing
    need of employees for its growing franchise in
    over 101 countries.

33
Threats
  • The American fast-food market has become
    increasingly competitive as rivals such as Burger
    King, Wendy's and Taco Bell fight to maintain
    their market share.
  • Strength of competition
  • More health-conscious consumers
  • Changing demographics
  • Fluctuation of foreign exchange rates Economies

34
Recommendations
  • Focus on already existing operations before
    continuing expansion in order to increase their
    profit margin.
  • Continue focusing on expanding in India and China
    because they are both developing countries with
    increasing economies and high populations.
  • Add more menu choice and variety to promote
    healthier lifestyles.

35
McFactoids
  • Today, the company operates more than 30,000
    restaurants in approximately 120 countries on
    five continents
  • Since its founding in 1955, McDonalds has sold
    well over 100 billion hamburgers
  • McDonalds prepares more than 6.8 million pounds
    of French fries every day
  • Advertisting Age named McDonalds marketer of the
    year for 2004
  • Ranked 5th for Social Responsibility by Fortune
    magazine
  • All franchisees are independent, full-time
    operators
  • Approximately 70 of McDonalds restaurant
    businesses
    world-wide are owned and operated by
    franchisees

36
Criticism...
  • Often blamed for Obesity
  • Blamed for excessive packaging waste
  • Anti-Globalization protests
  • Seen as American symbol of economical resource
    dominance
  • Exploitative advertising
  • Suffering and exploitation of livestock
  • High calorie foods

37
...In the courts
  • In 1994, McDonald's successfully forced
    Elizabeth McCaughey of the San Francisco Bay Area
    to change the trading name of her coffeeshop
    McCoffee, which had operated under that name for
    17 years.
  • In 1994, McDonald's sued a restaurant in
    Kingston, Jamaica, because of trademark
    infringement, although it had opened in 1971,
    before McDonald's entered the Jamaican market.
  • In 1996, McDonald's lost a legal battle at the
    Danish Supreme Court to force Allan Pedersen, a
    mincemeat sandwich vendor, to drop his shop name
    McAllan.
  • In 1996, McDonalds forced Scottish sandwich shop
    owner Mary Blair of Fenny Stratford,
    Buckinghamshire to drop McMunchies as her trading
    name.
  • In 2001, McDonald's lost a 9-year legal action
    against Frank Yuen of McChina Wok Away, Chinese
    takeway outlets in various part of the UK.
  • In South Africa, however, McDonald's had to
    battle against the country's trademark laws,
    which stated that a registered trademark had to
    be used within a certain period of time. This
    resulted in a local company announcing plans to
    launch its own fast-food chain using the
    McDonald's name, although the South African High
    Court eventually ruled in McDonald's favor.

38
McAfrika
  • In 2005 McDonalds had some opposition when they
    decided to name one of their burgers in Africa
    the McAfrika
  • Believed to have a negative connotation
  • Improper to the starving people of Africa

"It's inappropriate and distasteful to launch a
hamburger called McAfrika' when large portions
of southern Africa are on the verge of
starvation"
39
What's in your carrots?
  • To extend the shelf life of carrots that come
    with a happy meal, McDonalds was dipping their
    carrots in hydrogen peroxide and mixing it with
    acetic acids
  • It is said by some that this is not necessarily
    unhealthy, but still, would you want to be eating
    hydrogen
    peroxide?

40
Beef Fries?
  • In 2001 McDonalds was sued by three vegetarians,
    including two Hindus, claiming that McDonalds
    used beef fat in the oil to make their fries
    despite McDonalds claim that it was using 100
    vegetable oil.
  • In 2002, McDonalds conceded by offering 10
    million in compensation to the plaintiffs and
    offered an apology for misleading the public
    about the ingredients used for their fries and
    hash browns.

41
You Don't Say?
  • According to Fast Food Nation by Eric Schlosser
    (2001), nearly one in eight workers
    in the US has at some time
    been employed by McDonald's. The
    book also states that McDonalds
    is the largest private operator of
    playgrounds in the U.S., as well
    as the single largest purchaser
    of beef, pork, and potatoes.

42
References
  • www.mcdonalds.com
  • www.mcdonaldsindia.com
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mcdonalds
  • http//www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/06/05/national
    /main511109.shtml
  • http//www.mcspotlight.org/media/press/mcds/aftenp
    osten180405.html
  • http//www.mcspotlight.org/media/press/mcds/dailym
    ail150304.html
  • http//www.ithaca.edu/ithacan/articles/0311/13/opi
    nion/1dont_blame_.htm
  • http//www.ntac.hawaii.edu/products/Vol420Emp.Bri
    efs/EB-Vol4-Iss07-Employer
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McDonaldization
  • http//www.mcdonaldsindia.com/aboutus/supplychain/
    index.html
  • http//www.rajluhar.com/raj/finalproject.htm
  • http//www.franchisetochina.com/f13.htm
  • www.licenseenews.com
  • McDonalds Everywhere Management Focus Article
  • Hill, Charles (2005). Global Today. McGraw Hill
    College, NY. p.90-92
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