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FMA 601 Foreign Market Analysis
Module 5: Product Decision and Pricing
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Local, National, International and Global Products
Local products are offered in a portion of a national market National products are offered in a single national Market International products are offered in multinational, regional markets Global products are offered in the global market. They are international and multi-regional
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The Global Product Launch
Introducing the product into countries in three or more regions within a narrow timeframe. Successful launches require: Involvement of country managers Pre-launch attention to localization Increased education and support of the sales channel Benefits of a global launch Showcases the product Removes old models at once Captures new product’s higher margins
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Example of a Product-Market Portfolio
40 40 B B B S J S F F GB GB D D 10 10 Market Growth C US US C 10 1 10 1 Relative Market Share Relative Market Share Company A Company B (B=Brazil, C=Canada, D=Germany, F=France, GB=Great Britain, J=Japan, S=Spain, US=United States)
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Market Expansion Strategies
Narrow focus: concentrated markets/concentrated countries Country focus: diverse markets/concentrated countries Country diversification: concentrated markets/diverse countries Global diversification: diverse markets/diverse countries
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Global Brands A symbol about which customer have beliefs and perceptions Same name or same meaning in another language Similar image and position Guided by same strategic principles Marketing mix may vary from country to country
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Product Positioning Attribute or Benefit Quality/Price Use/User
High-Tech Positioning High-Touch Positioning
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Global Product Positioning: Strategic Alternatives
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Creating a Product-Market Profile
Who buys our product? Who does not buy our product? What need does our product serve? What problem does our product solve? What are customers currently buying? What price are they paying? When is our product purchased? Where is our product purchased? Why is our product purchased?
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Visiting the Potential Market
Essential after assessment and selection of potential market(s) Goals: to confirm (or contradict) assumptions regarding market potential to gather additional (primary) data to develop a marketing plan in co-operation with the local agent or distributor
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Global Product Development
The heart of the global marketing process that focuses on building adaptability into products to achieve worldwide appeal. The product development process The main goal is to build adaptability into products and product lines for worldwide appeal. Step 1: Idea generation Step 2: Screening Step 3: Product/process development Step 4: Scale up Step 5: Commercialization
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Basic Pricing Concepts
Cost The experience curve Competition Demand
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The Setting of Export Prices
EXTERNAL Market-related factors Nature of demand/target audience characteristics Government regulations (e.g., duties) Exchange rate stability Industry-related factors Competition intensity Nature of competition ASSESSMENT OF PRICING ENVIRONMENTS INTERNAL Marketing Mix Product (e.g., old/new; standardized/differentiated Distribution system (e.g., length) Promotion needs (e.g., sales efforts) Company characteristics Extent of internationalization Countries exported to Management attitudes Importance of exports Overall price position of firm Pricing Policy Selection Pricing Strategy Determination Setting of Specific Price
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Penetration Pricing Uses price as a competitive weapon to gain market position Means that the product may be sold at a loss for a certain time to gain market share Companies new to exporting cannot absorb such losses
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Gray Market Goods Trademarked products that are exported form one country to another where they are sold by unauthorized persons or organizations Bring a product produced in one country into another in competition with authorized importers – parallel importing
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Dumping A company exports a product at a price lower than the price it normally charges in its own home market Dumping is an important global pricing issue, because it is sometimes regarded as unfair competition
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Price – Service – Value Value Service Good Restaurant B Restaurant A
Restaurant C Restaurant D Poor Slow Fast Service
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