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Use of Assets Challenges Global Business

The document discusses various challenges and opportunities related to global business, including currency exchange rates, taxation systems, and cultural differences. It also covers strategies for global marketing such as standardization versus adaptation and integration forces like technology, culture, and market needs that drive global marketing. International strategic management is discussed, including different types of strategies like competitive advantage, cost advantage, and market dominance. Benefits of strategic planning include coordinating operations and managing political and competitive risks, though costs can include potential micromanagement of subsidiaries. A home replication strategy utilizes core competencies developed domestically as the main competitive advantage internationally.

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Aby Mathew
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views

Use of Assets Challenges Global Business

The document discusses various challenges and opportunities related to global business, including currency exchange rates, taxation systems, and cultural differences. It also covers strategies for global marketing such as standardization versus adaptation and integration forces like technology, culture, and market needs that drive global marketing. International strategic management is discussed, including different types of strategies like competitive advantage, cost advantage, and market dominance. Benefits of strategic planning include coordinating operations and managing political and competitive risks, though costs can include potential micromanagement of subsidiaries. A home replication strategy utilizes core competencies developed domestically as the main competitive advantage internationally.

Uploaded by

Aby Mathew
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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challenges Use of assets

 Currency Global business


 Interest rates  Licensing of intellectual property
 Taxation systems  Royalty
 Government regulations  Patents
 Language  Trademarks
 Culture  Technology
 Uncertainties  Export of intangibles
• FDI-ADVANTAGES
LICENSING -ADVANTAGES • Locals partner knows the domestic
• Less risk business environments better
• No investment needed • Easy management
• Assured returns • Easy access to local market
• Less uncertainty –local licensee • Good image for both
• Less fear of govt. controls • Can abide by local rules and regulations
• Good for host country • RISK
• Local partner’s interference
LICENSING- DIS ADVANTAGES
• Quality cannot be assured • Difficulty to ensure quality
• Nurturing a competitor abroad • Supremacy of local partner
• Reduced opportunity to enter and • Repatriation limitations
establish business
• Technology sharing
• Technology theft
Global Marketing Adaptation
• Identifying goods and services that  Differences in technical standards
customers outside the home country want  Consumer and personal use product
 Variations in consumer needs
• Provide these at the right time and place
 Variations in conditions of use
Marketing for different type of Consumer and  Variations in abilities to buy
Product  Independent national subsidiaries
• Consumer marketing -Supplying  Cultural impact
consumers generally with branded  Government influence
products  Export Pricing policies
• Industrial marketing -Supplying  a) Cost-Plus Pricing: adds international costs
differentiated ingredients to processors and a mark-up to the domestic manufacturing
and manufacturers cost. 
 b) Dynamic Incremental Pricing: only variable
• Commodity marketing -Supplying costs and a portion of the overhead load
undifferentiated raw materials (incremental costs) should be recuperated.
Standardization • Exporting-related incremental costs
High cost of adaptation (manufacturing costs, shipping expenses,
insurance, and overseas promotional costs).
• Industrial products
GLOBAL MARKETING
• Convergence and similar tastes in divergent • Denotes the use of advertising and marketing on
• markets a global basis.
• Predominant use in urban environments • Marketing is at the threshold of a new and
• Marketing to predominantly similar exciting era: e-business, e-commerce and e-
marketing
countries
• Business has two basic functions: marketing and
• Centralised management and operations innovation (Drucker)
• Country-of-origin effect • New era of competition, demanding customers
• Economies of scale • More stakeholders (customers, employees,
media).
GLOBAL MARKETING-INTEGRATION
FORCES
Driving Forces Challenges
Technology • Markets can present higher profit opportunities than present
Culture markets.
• Markets can offer size but not profits.
Market Needs
• Company needs a larger customer base for economies of scale.
Costs
• Present customers are needing service and products as they go
Free Markets international.
Economic Integration DUMPING
Peace • WTO: Sale of an imported product at ‘less than fair value’ and
Strategic Intent causes ‘material injury to a domestic industry’.
Management Vision, • US: An unfair trade practice that results in injury, destruction, or
Strategy and Action the prevention of the establishment of an American industry.
Restraining Forces • US considers dumping when price is >5% below home market
price or,
Culture
• Price is below cost of production
Market Differences
Costs • 4P’S
National Controls • Place (distribution)
• Transportation to international freight carrier
Nationalism
Freight,
Peace vs. War/ Stability Insurance,
Management Myopia Documentation,
Organization History Customs clearance,
Domestic Focus Local transportation,
Logistic management “in the market”,
Currency risk
Product – usually controlled by the exporter, initially the least
impacted element of the marketing mix

• “localization” often required


• approvals and certificates
•  packaging & labeling
•  measures, etc
 
 Promotion – success at home leads to interest from
potential importers, licensors, joint venture partners
International strategic management Types of Strategy 
• Competitive Advantage – something which gives the
A comprehensive and ongoing management organisation some advantage over its rivals
planning process aimed at formulating and • Cost advantage – A strategy to seek out and secure a cost
implementing strategies that enable a firm to advantage  
compete effectively internationally. of some kind - lower average costs, lower labour costs, etc.
  Strategic goals • Market Dominance- Achieved through:
• Strategic goals are the major objectives the – Internal growth
firm wants to accomplish through pursuing a – Acquisitions – mergers and takeovers
particular course of action. • New product development: to keep ahead of rivals and set
• they should be measurable, the pace
• feasible, • Contraction/Expansion – focus on what you are good at
• time-limited, (core competencies) or seek to expand into a range of
• Five-Forces (developed by Michael Porter) markets?
• forces that shape and influence the industry • Price Leadership – through dominating the industry –
or market the organisation operates in. others follow your price lead
• Global – seeking to expand  global operations
1.Strength of Barriers to Entry - how easy is
it  for new rivals to enter the industry? • Reengineering – thinking outside the box – looking at news
ways of doing things to leverage the organisation’s
2.Extent of rivalry between firms – how performance
competitive is the existing market?
• Downsizing – selling off unwanted parts of the business –
3.Supplier power – the greater the power, similar  to contraction
the less control the organisation has on • Delayering – flattening the management structure,
the supply of its inputs. removing bureaucracy, speed up decision making
4.Buyer power – how much power do • Restructuring – complete re-think  
customers  in the industry have? of the way the business is organised
5.Threat from substitutes – what alternative
products  and services are there and
what is the extent  of the threat they
Home Replication Strategy
Perceived Benefits of Strategic Planning 
– Coordinate and monitor operations
• a firm utilizes the core competency or firm- – Streamline product lines and supply chains
specific advantage it developed at home as its – Manage political, currency, and competitive risks
main competitive weapon in the foreign markets – Potential costs
Micromanagement of subsidiary operations
that it enters. – Misallocation of time and staff resources
• it takes what it does exceptionally well in its – Over-planning and lower profitability
home market and attempts to duplicate it in
foreign markets.
• Multidomestic strategy :
• Main aim is maximum local responsiveness • Global Integration
• Products and services homogeneous in terms of type and quality
• Customize product offering, market strategy • Customers have common taste preferences
including production, and R&D according to • National Responsiveness
national conditions • Segmented regional markets
• Generally unable to realize value from • Need to respond to differing national standards and regulations
experience curve effects and location economies • Adaptation of tools and techniques to manage local workforces
• Possess high cost structure
• Transnational strategy  • Pyramid” Strategies 
•  To meet competition firms aim to reduce costs, Engage in significant international activity a short time after being
transfer core competencies while paying established
attention to pressures for local responsiveness • Successful firms leverage a distinctive mix of orientations and
• Global learning strategies
– Valuable skills can develop in any of the • Global technological competence
firm’s world wide operations • Unique-products development
– Transfer of knowledge from foreign • Quality focus
subsidiary to home country, to other • Leveraging of foreign distributor competences
foreign subsidiaries • Targeting emerging market
• Transnational strategy difficult task due to • Marketing requires smaller-scale strategies
contradictory demands placed on the • Building relationships with local governments, small entrepreneurs,
organization and nonprofits
• Less dependence on central governments and large local
companies
Pyramid” Strategies 

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