to Poorna's Pages at the Glendale Community College

Updated on 05/05/2015

BusAd 177: Introduction to International Marketing

Home   My Book  My Physical Geology Pages  My Oceanography-115 class    My Environmental Geology Pages  

My BusAd classes:

BusAd-101 (General Business),  BusAd-170 (International Business),  BusAd-175 (International Trade), BusAd-177 (Introduction to International Marketing, BusAd-178 (International Finance) 

Global Marketing [Book]

Chapter 9:

Global Market Entry Strategies:

with your questions

  Licensing, Investment, and Strategic Alliances
 
bullet

Overview

bullet

Lecture Outline

 
bullet

Discussion Questions

bullet

Test Your Knowledge

 
bullet

Overview

  • Companies that wish to move beyond exporting and importing can avail themselves of a wide range of alternative market entry strategies. Each alternative has distinct advantages and disadvantages associated with it; the alternatives can be ranked on a continuum representing increasing levels of investment, commitment, and risk. Licensing can generate revenue flow with little new investment; it can be a good choice for a company that possesses advanced technology, a strong brand image, or valuable intellectual property. Contract manufacturing and franchising are two specialized forms of licensing that are widely used in global marketing.

  • A higher level of involvement outside the home country may involve foreign direct investment. This can take many forms. Joint ventures offer two or more companies the opportunity to share risk and combine value chain strengths. Companies considering joint ventures must plan carefully and communicate with partners to avoid “divorce.” Foreign direct investment can also be used to establish company operations outside the home country through greenfield investment, acquisition of an minority or majority equity stake in a foreign business, or taking full ownership of an existing business entity through merger or outright acquisition. 

Chapter Overviews, Outlines and Sample Questions

  1. Introduction to Global Marketing

  2. The Global Economic Environment

  3. Regional Market Characteristics and Preferential Trade Agreements

  4. Social and Cultural Environments

  5. The Political, Legal, and Regulatory Environments

  6. Global Information Systems and Market Research

  7. Segmentation, Targeting, and Positioning

  8. Importing, Exporting, and Sourcing

  9. Global Market Entry Strategies: Licensing, Investment, and Strategic Alliances

  10. Brand and Product Decisions In Global Marketing

  11. Pricing Decisions

  12. Global Marketing Channels and Physical Distribution

  13. Global Marketing Communications Decisions I: Advertising and Public Relations

  14. Global Marketing Communications Decisions II: Sales Promotion, Personal Selling, Special Forms of Marketing Communication

  15. Digital Revolution

  16. Strategic Elements of Competitive Advantage

  17. Leadership, Organization, and Corporate Social Responsibility

  • Cooperative alliances known as strategic alliances, strategic international alliances, and global strategic partnerships (GSPs) represent an important market entry strategy in the twenty-first century. GSPs are ambitious, reciprocal, cross-border alliances that may involve business partners in a number of different country markets. GSPs are particularly well suited to emerging markets in Central and Eastern Europe, Asia, and Latin America. Western businesspeople should also be aware of two special forms of cooperation found in Asia, namely Japan’s keiretsu and South Korea’s chaebol.
     
  • To assist managers in thinking through the various alternatives, market expansion strategies can be represented in matrix form: country and market concentration, country concentration and market diversification, country diversification and market concentration, and country and market diversification. The preferred expansion strategy will be a reflection of a company’s stage of development (i.e. whether it is international, multinational, global, or transnational). The Stage 5 transnational combines the strengths of these three stages into an integrated network to leverage worldwide learning.

 

bullet

Lecture Outline

 

bullet

Discussion Questions

  1. What are the advantages and disadvantages or using licensing as a market entry tool? Give examples of companies from different countries that use licensing as a global marketing strategy.

    Click here for hint.

  1. The president of XYZ Manufacturing Company of Buffalo, New York, comes to you with a license offer from a company in Osaka. In return for sharing the company's patents and know-how, the Japanese company will pay a license fee of 5 percent of the ex-factory price of all products sold based on the U.S. company’s license. The president wants your advice. What would you tell him?

    Click here for hint.

  1. What is foreign direct investment (FDI)? What forms can FDI take?

    Click here for hint.

  1. What is meant by the phrase global strategic partnership? In what ways does this form of market entry strategy differ from more traditional forms such as joint ventures?

    Click here for hint.
     

  2. What are keiretsu? How does this form of industrial structure affect companies that compete with Japan or that are trying to enter the Japanese market?

    Click here for hint.
     

  3. Which strategic options for market entry or expansion would a small company be likely to pursue? A large company?

    Click here for hint.