Title: Global Marketing Management
1Global Marketing Management
Introduction to Global Marketing
- Warren J. Keegan
- Bodo B. Schlegelmilch
2Marketing A Universal Discipline
- The management process responsible for
identifying, anticipating and satisfying customer
requirements profitably. (The Chartered
Institute of Marketing) - Marketing is a social and managerial process by
which individuals and groups obtain what they
need and want through creating and exchanging
products and value with others. (Kotler,
Armstrong, Saunders and Wong, 2001 5)
- Marketing is the process of planning and
executing the conception, pricing, promotion, and
distribution of ideas, goods, and services to
create exchanges that satisfy individual and
organizational objectives. (The American
Marketing Association)
3Marketing A Universal Discipline
- Marketing (1) the process of focusing resources
and objectives of an organization on
environmental opportunities and needs - Marketing (2) a set of concepts, tools,
theories, practices, procedures, and experiences - Although a universal discipline, marketing
practice varies from country to country
4The Marketing Concept (1)
- Concept has chanced dramatically
- 1950s
- Focus on products
- 1960s
- Focus on customer orientation
- Development of marketing mix product, price,
promotion, place (4Ps)
5The Marketing Concept (2)
- 1990s
- Focus on customer in the context of the broader
external environment - E.g. competition, government policy and
regulation - Focus on stakeholder value
- E.g. employees, customers, shareholders, society
6The Marketing Concept (3)
- Today
- Two key tasks of marketing
- Focus on customer and his/her environment
- Create value for consumers and stakeholder
- Shift towards
- Focus on managing strategic partnerships
- Positioning of firm in value chain to optimize
value creation - Profit as a measure of success, not an end in
itself
7The Three Key Elements of Marketing
VALUE
DIFFERENTIATION
FOCUS
8The Three Key Elements of Marketing - Value
- Goal create value that is greater than the value
created by competitors - Strategy
- Expand or improve product and/ or service
benefits - Reduce the price
- Combine these two elements
9The Three Key Elements of Marketing -
Differentiation
- Goal create competitive advantage through
differentiation - Advantage can exist in any element of a companys
offer e.g. product, price, advertising - Competitive advantage should be sustainable over
extended period of time - BMW Combination of superior production skills
and marketing competencies
10The Three Key Elements of Marketing - Focus
- Goal a concentration of attention and resources
- Requirement to create customer value at a
competitive advantage - A viable way for small and medium sized companies
to achieve dominant position in world market
11Scope and Boundaries of Global Marketing
- Marketing discipline is universal but markets and
customers are quite different - Three domains of knowledge relevant to
international managers - Cross-Cultural Knowledge
- Country/ Regional Knowledge
- Cross-Border Transactions Knowledge
- Need for Global Localization Adjustment of
global marketing strategies to local requirements
12Importance of Global Marketing
- Activities in the international arena are of
eminent importance to companies in achieving
maximum growth potential - E.g. 94 of world market potential for German
companies is outside of Germany - Trend A large number of industries will be
dominated by a handful of global companies
13Management Orientation and Global Marketing (1)
- Different Management Orientations in the Global
Arena EPRG Framework
Polycentric
Ethnocentric
Regiocentric
Geocentric
14Management Orientation and Global Marketing (2)
- Ethnocentric Orientation
- Home country is superior compared to the rest of
the world. - Company personnel see only similarities in market
- Characteristic for domestic and international
companies - Marketing opportunities outside the home market
are pursued by extending various elements of the
marketing mix or ignored some time - One of the internal threats to a company
15Management Orientation and Global Marketing (3)
- Polycentric Orientation
- Characteristic for multinational companies
- Opposite of ethnocentrism
- Each company in which a company does business is
unique - Sees differences in foreign countries
- Marketing mix is adapted by autonomous country
managers
16Management Orientation and Global Marketing (4)
- Regiocentric or Geocentric Orientation
- Characteristic for global and transnational
companies - Managers view regions unique and seek to develop
an integrated regional strategy - Geocentric world as a potential market strive
to develop integrated world market strategies - Marketing opportunities are pursued by both,
extension and adaptation strategies in global
markets
17Factors Supporting or Inhibiting Global
Integration (1)
- Driving Forces
- Technology
- Regional Economic Agreements
- Market Needs and Wants
- Transportation and Communication Improvements
- Product Development Costs
- Quality
- World Economic Trends
- Leverage
18Factors Supporting or Inhibiting Global
Integration (2)
- Restraining Forces
- Management Myopia
- Ethnocentric Organization Culture
- National Controls
- Cost
- War
- Market differences