Title: DECISION MAKING IN INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
1DECISION MAKING ININTERNATIONAL MARKETS
- Market Distance
- Segmentation
- Of countries
- Of consumers within countries
- Approaches
- Country screening
- Evaluation of market potential
2Market Distances
GEOGRAPHICAL DISTANCE
ECONOMIC DISTANCE
DOMESTIC FIRM
TARGET MARKET
POLITICAL DISTANCE
PSYCHIC DISTANCE
3Identifying International Markets
- Reactive approach
- Accidental entry through foreign orders not
anticipated - Economic pressure for sales increases
- Systematic approach
- Proactive
- Concentration of resources as needed
- Based on market scanning and research
4Country Segmentation
- Geographic
- Demographic
- Income
5Segmentation Within Countries
- Averages of countries are often not meaningful
- Implications of demographic factors will depend
on country contexte.g., family income of 20,000
would be very affluent in India - Will be able to pay for a lot of local service
and manufacturing - Able to hire others
- Example Segmentation of Indian consumer
families by income - Rich (benefit maximizers--4840/yr)
- Consumers (cost-benefit optimizers--1,030-4,839)
- Climbers (cash-limited benefit seekers--495-1029)
- Aspirants (360-494)
- Destitutes (0-359)
6More Within-Country Segmentation Examples
- China by age
- Generation I (45-59)
- Some received education
- Usually work or worked for State firms
- Generation II (30-44)
- Limited education opportunities
- Married, 1 little emperor
- Generation III (18-29)
- Better education
- Prospects for better, market economy
- Indian youthpsychographic
- Homebodiestraditional, low individuality
- Two-facedoutwardly traditional outwardly
modern - Wannabes--Materialistic mainstream
show-offs part of crowd - Rebelstraditional parents often first
generation professionals understood by friends,
not parents - Cool guyswork hard-play hard confident,
westernized
7Country Market Segmentation by Overall Market
Attractiveness
- Platform countriesfor gathering intelligence
and market info - Emerging marketscurrent minimal markets but
growing potential over time - Growth marketsalready experiencing high levels
of growth - Maturing marketswell entrenched competitors
often have sizable middle class - Established marketsmature, usually fewer growth
prospects high competition but quite affluent
8Selection of Foreign Markets
- Preliminary screening
- Market size
- Population
- Income
- Accessibilitybarriers
- Tariff
- Import
- Export
- Non-tariff
- Government participation
- Procedures
- Product requirements
- Profitability
- Cost of barriers
- Risks
- Exchange rate
- Political
- Legal
- Selection and targeting
- Trade analysis
- Analogyestimation based on performing of
leading country (e.g., using China to estimate
Vietnamese potential)
9International Market Analytical Tools
- Boston Consulting Group (Growth-Share) Matrix
- Market Attractiveness/Company Strength
- Primary markets
- Secondary markets
- Tertiary markets
10The Japanese Keiretsu
- Collection of firms with informal cross-ownership
of stock - Preference for buying within the keiretsu
- Benefits
- Assures demand for product
- Able to pool resources over the Product Life
Cycle (bank in center) - May keep inefficient firms in business too long
11Example of a Keiretsu
CHEMICAL
STEEL
ELECTRO- NICS
AGRI- CULTURE
AUTO
BANK
FOOD PRO- CESSING
HEAVY MACHI- NERY
REST- AURANT
TRANS- PORTA- TION
12Some Economic Concepts
- Permanent incomeexpected average over lifetime
- Retirement expectations
- Employment expectations
- Conspicuous consumption
13Approaches to International Market Segmentation
- Countries as segments (Macro-level
segmentation--country aggregate characteristics
are used to classify country--e.g., - demographics (age distribution, urbanization,
ethnic composition) - socioeconomic (level of development
- Segments within countries
- intramarket segmentation (unique segmentation
scheme for each country - intermarket segmentation some segments overlap
between countries
14INTRAMARKET VS. INTERMARKET SEGMENTATION
INTRAMARKET
INTERMARKET
- No overlap between countries
- Some, but not all,segments overlap between the
two countries - Comparable segments may differ in size between
countries
COUNTRY 1
COUNTRY 1
COUNTRY 2
COUNTRY 2
A
A
G
E
A
B
C
B
F
B
H
C
D
H
C
D
MKT 440 Lars Perner, Instrucror
Rev. 2/98
15Intermarket vs. Intramarket Differences, Part I
- (Compare to Analysis of Variance ANOVA in
statistics) - Average differences between countries but also
significant differences within countries - Segment structure may be similar, but segment
sizes are likely to differ - Relative vs. absolute differences--what is
upscale in a given country?
16Intermarket vs. Intramarket Differences, Part II
- Global brands can serve similar consumers across
borders --gt possible economies of scale - Product life cycle--segments in one country may
follow or lead those of other country
17Positioning Across MarketsNot an Easy Choice!
- However, consistent image may be desirable due to
- spillover of advertising and promotional efforts
(e.g., satellite TV, cross-country circulation of
periodicals, portrayal in film/media) - consumption by individuals who cross boundaries
- Uniform or differential positioning across
markets? - Optimal position for product across countries may
differ due to - Country-of-origin effects
- Competitive and cost structure within country
markets
18Marketing Mix Issues
- Need to address markets with
- Entrenched competitors
- High consumer expectations
- Discretionary income for new products
- Marketing mix decisions
- Product
- Price
- Distribution
- Promotion