1 / 20

Marketing Strategies, Functions, and Benefits of Forest Certification: A Cross-cultural Comparison

Marketing Strategies, Functions, and Benefits of Forest Certification: A Cross-cultural Comparison. Toshiaki Owari, Ph.D. (The University of Tokyo, Japan). Certified Forests and Products 2007 (Kraxner et al., 2007).

indra
Télécharger la présentation

Marketing Strategies, Functions, and Benefits of Forest Certification: A Cross-cultural Comparison

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Marketing Strategies, Functions, and Benefits of Forest Certification: A Cross-cultural Comparison Toshiaki Owari, Ph.D. (The University of Tokyo, Japan)

  2. Certified Forests and Products 2007(Kraxner et al., 2007) • The area of certified forests worldwide totalled 294 million hectares, or about 7.6% of the world’s forests. • The potential roundwood supply from the world’s certified forests is estimated at approximately 387 million m3. • The number of CoC certificates totalled 8,600, of which 63.4% were by FSC and 36.6% by PEFC. IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  3. The Market for Certified Forest Products • … may have a significant impact on business and policy-making (Kraxner et al. 2005) • … is not well understood due to the absence of official trade statistics (Rametsteiner et al. 2003) • Market actors and policy makers are hampered by lack of information (UNECE 2005) IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  4. Motivation • We examined the role of forest certification in the Finnish wood products suppliers (Owari et al., 2006). • In a country with different certification schemes in operation, there may be different perceptions within companies about forest certification. • Further research should examine the situation in a number of different countries to reveal similarities and differences among them. IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  5. Purpose • The purpose of this study was to compare the role of forest certification in marketing between Nordic Europe (Finland and Sweden) and Japan. IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  6. Status of Forest Certification (August 2007) FSC: Forest Stewardship Council PEFC: Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification schemes SGEC: Sustainable Green Ecosystem Council IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  7. How important is certification for companies? What benefits have they gained from certification? How do companies use certification in marketing? Study Framework • Marketing strategies • Products • Customers • Market area • Competitive advantage • Supplier benefits • Business performance • Customer relations • Public relations • Marketing functions • Communication • Pricing IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  8. Methods • A nationwide survey with standardized questionnaire scheme was used for each country. • Finland • Personal interviews with 25 wood products companies in Sep-Dec 2004 • All having PEFC CoC, mainly small and medium sized • Sweden • A self-administered electronic survey distributed to 149 companies in Dec 2004 (49 surveys undelivered) • 27 usable responses by Mar 2005 (adj. resp. rate 27%) • 70% having FSC CoC, 48% having PEFC CoC IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  9. Methods • Japan • A mail survey targeted 247 companies with FSC, PEFC, or SGEC CoC in Oct. 2005 • 132 usable responses (adj. resp. rate 54%) • 93% FSC CoC • 52% from paper products, 48% from wood products • Non-response bias was examined using the extrapolation method and not considered a problem. IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  10. Importance of Certification(Finland and Sweden) Not at all important Very important IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  11. Importance of Certification (Japan) Not at all important Very important IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  12. Channels Used for Communication (Finland and Sweden) Not used at all Used very often IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  13. Channels Used for Communication (Japan) Not used at all Used very often IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  14. Price Premiums(Finland and Sweden) IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  15. Price Premiums (Japan) IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  16. Benefits of Certification(Finland and Sweden) Very great benefit No benefit at all IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  17. Benefits of Certification (Japan) No benefit at all Very great benefit IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  18. Summary • Marketing strategies • Certification as a reactive measure (Nordic Europe, Japan-paper) • Certification as a proactive measure (Japan-wood) • Marketing functions • Communications did not actively use certification • A price premium was not possible for most companies • Marketing benefits • Certification improved customer/public relations • Certification did not improve financial performance IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  19. Discussion • Why did the Japanese wood products suppliers have a unique perception? • Small forestry and wood industry companies proactively introduced forest certification as a tool to differentiate themselves in the marketplace. • Is forest certification an effective marketing tool? • In contrast to the original premise, forest certification may compel suppliers, not consumers, to bear the cost of sustainable forest management. IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

  20. Acknowledgements • I thank Dr. Yoshihide Sawanobori and Mr. Tsutomu Ito for their assistance with data collection. • This study was conducted in part through the 2004-2005 Programme for the Promotion of Basic Measures in Forests and Forestry, sponsored by the Japan Forestry Agency. • This paper was partly supported by the Japan Forestry Agency, and the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (B), 18780108, 2007. IUFRO All Division 5 Conference, Taipei (Owari, T.)

More Related