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Marketing Organisation, Strategic Planning, Organisation and Control

Marketing Organisation, Strategic Planning, Organisation and Control. Pesewa Presentations. Why do we need to organise international marketing activities?. The way in which an organisation is structured helps determine: how effectively and efficiency it exploits opportunities;

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Marketing Organisation, Strategic Planning, Organisation and Control

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  1. Marketing Organisation, Strategic Planning, Organisation and Control Pesewa Presentations

  2. Why do we need to organise international marketing activities? • The way in which an organisation is structured helps determine: • how effectively and efficiency it exploits opportunities; • its capacity for responding to problems and challenges. • No one best way. • Issues: • definition of organizational units; • centralization vs. decentralization; • assignment of reporting and control system.

  3. Centralisation vs decentralisation • Factors influencing centralisation vs decentralisation: • management philosophy and style. • Centralisation: • efficiency, consistency, avoidance of duplication. • the challenge of rapid technological change may best be met by centralised R&D. • Decentralisation: • local responsiveness and adaptation.

  4. Organisational Structure • Organizational Design • Stages used when expanding overseas • Export department • The creation of an export department structure is usually the first step in the functional organization toward entry into foreign markets • Usual initial form for export marketing. • Allows the building up of international expertise. • International division • As the export revenue share increases and there are several countries in the strategic portfolio, the firm changes to an international division structure • Provides single, coordinated management of international business across product lines and countries. • Problem: lack of built-in key product/technology competencies.

  5. Organisational Structure • Geographical/regional structure • As overseas sales expand and the management of the countries takes more time and resources, the firm usually subdivides the international division into country groups or trade regions • Area presidents have responsibility for profit and performance. • Useful for companies with wide geographical spread and relatively narrow product lines: food, beverage, automobile, pharmaceutical industries. • Emphasises importance of regional characteristics. • Within regions, product managers have internal staff support. • Problems: difficulty in spreading of new products; duplication of staff; coordination of planning; coordination of R&D.

  6. Organisational Structure • Organisational Design • Stages of expansion (cont’d) • Global product divisions • Regional and local managers’ authority is subordinated to that of the global division chief, who approves and directs • Used by companies with several dissimilar product lines. • Meets special requirements of products and supporting technologies. • Most appropriate where standardised marketing mix is more important than individualisation for local needs. • Problems: duplication of staff and activities; lack of international coordination between product lines. • Product line coordinators may ease problems.

  7. Organisational Structure • Matrix organisations • Organisations in which both country and product receive equal emphasis. • Mixed approach combines two or more competencies on a worldwide basis: geographic knowledge; product knowledge; functional competence; or knowledge of customer or industry. • Staff members have two or more bosses; work as members of more than one competency group. • Advantages: emphasises more than one competency (e.g., provide market and product knowledge). • Disadvantages: unclear decision-making structure; slower decision making; built-in tendency for conflict.

  8. People and Organisational Culture • Local Acceptance • Global marketing strategy often requires a great deal of work on the part of local managers • Local conditions are frequently different from other places • Corporate Culture • Methods that people and organizational culture use to enhance effective communication • Build a strong corporate culture internationally • Build a common technical or professional culture • Build strong financial and planning systems

  9. People and Organisational Culture • The Expatriate manager • Typical leadership roles of the expatriate manager • Role 1 – Customer representative • The expatriate manager must serve as a high-level contact with existing customers, prospects and suppliers in the local market • Role 2 – Local champion • The expatriate manager must be a champion for the local office at headquarters • Role 3 – Network coordinator • The expatriate management must provide linkages with the firm’s other offices in the worldwide network of the firm

  10. Conflict Resolution • Conflict Resolution Practices • Let country managers retain local brands and marketing budgets • Solicit country managers’ input for new-product development • Give country managers lead roles in global teams • Provide international transfers for country managers • Involve the country manager in the formulation of the global marketing strategy

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