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Global Market Entry Strategies. Criteria for deciding market entry Operational reasons for setting up overseas manufacture Strategic reasons for investing in local operations Methods of overseas production Exporting options. Criteria for deciding market entry method.
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Global Market Entry Strategies • Criteria for deciding market entry • Operational reasons for setting up overseas manufacture • Strategic reasons for investing in local operations • Methods of overseas production • Exporting options
Criteria for deciding market entry method • The company objectives and expectations relating to the size and value of business • the size and financial resources of the organisation • its existing foreign involvement • the skill, abilities and attitudes of the company management towards international marketing
The nature and power of the competition within the market • the nature of existing and anticipated non-tariff barriers • the nature of the product itself, particularly in any areas of competitive advantage, such as trademark of patent protection Phillips, Doole and Lowe (1994)
Operational reasons for setting-up overseas manufacture • reduced costs of transportation • reduced barriers/ quota handicap e.g. Nissan • some governments demand investment with market entry e.g. China • Customers sometimes prefer local manufacture e.g. Heinz ‘British’? • Government contracts prefer firms contributing to the local economy
Improved local market information • local manufacture ensures greater commitment to international markets • Faster response and Just-in-time delivery Doole, Phillips and Lowe (1994)
Strategic reasons for investing in local operations • Gain new business • demonstrates strong commitment • persuades customers to change suppliers • provides better service and more reliability • Defend existing business • avoid market restrictions as sales increase, particularly in single market
Move with established customer • component suppliers follow customers to compete with local component suppliers • Save costs • labour, raw materials and transport • Avoid government restrictions to import certain goods Doole, Phillips and Lowe (1994)
Exporting • Indirect • export houses • Buying offices of foreign stores or governments • complementary exporting • Direct • sales to final user • overseas agencies • distributors and stockists • company branch offices abroad • Degree of involvement v control?
Methods of overseas production • Licensing • Companies with strong brand or know-how • e.g. Coca-Cola, Disney • Franchising • more of a ‘whole’ package • e.g.Body Shop, KFC • Contract manufacture • bulk items e.g. Nike • components
Joint ventures - • e.g. Burmah Castrol in S.Korea • Wholly owned overseas subsidiaries • Organic growth
Strategic Alliances • Types • technology swaps • R&D exchanges • distribution relationships • marketing relationships • manufacturer-supplier relationships • Cross-licensing • Driving forces • insufficient resources • place of innovation and market diffusion • High R&D costs • Concentration of firms in mature markets • Government co-operation • Self-protection • Market access
Joint ventures • Reasons for setting up • overcome foreign ownership restrictions • increase speed of entry • exploit new opportunities, complementary technologies and management skills • achieve worldwide presence at lower cost • Disadvantages • differences in partner aims and objectives • equal ownership and different options can slow decision making • dominance by one partner can lead to resentment in the other • Large time commitment for education, negotiation and agreement with partner