Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- International marketing
- Books in the series
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Contents
- foreward
- introduction
- preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 internationalization: a necessity not a luxury, but does corporate behaviour reflect it?
- The concept of advantage
- Where is the nation state?
- Analysing national competitiveness
- Governments and national comparative advantage
- The hierarchy of free trade and integration
- The new trading regions of the world
- From economic advantage to marketing advantage
- How companies’go international’
- Porter’s prescription for competitiveness
- The dilemma of the multinational – a force for good or evil?
- International marketing mythology
- International marketing reality
- Issues surrounding management control
- Network explanations for internationalization
- Random walk approach
- Exporting marketing and international marketing
- Export behaviour reviewed
- Psychological commitment and resource allocation
- Incremental internationalization
- Organization for internationalization
- Life cycle for international trade: beyond its sell-by date?
- Dunning’s eclectic approach and later revision
- International marketing and the Internet
- Revision questions
- References
- Web sites
- 2 Environmental market scanning: the SLEPT and C factors
- The social environment (S)
- The cultural dimension
- Defining the meaning of culture
- Assessing the cultural environment
- Rokeach value survey
- Semiotics and the science of meaning of signs
- The legal environment (L)
- The economic environment (E)
- Defining the market
- From General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) to World Trade Organization (WTO)
- The World Trade Organization
- Tariff barriers
- Non-tariff barriers (NTBs)
- The political environment (P)
- Government procurement and corporate ‘buy-national’ policies
- Dumping
- Does anyone still practise unregulated ‘free trade’
- The Triad of Europe, North America and Japan
- Technological dimensions (?)
- The company looks at international markets
- International risk perception
- Political and economic risk appreciation
- Business Environment Risk Intelligence (BERI)
- The country environmental temperature gradient
- Target market-selection decisions
- International market segmentation
- Primary sources of information
- Secondary sources of information
- Data interpretation problems
- Revision questions
- Key reading on foreign market research
- References
- Websites
- 3 Exporting-not just for the small business
- Why export?
- Exporting by the risk averse
- Defining the small business
- Problems for small exporters
- Perceptions of non-exporting small firms
- Identifying the exporter
- Factors in the exporting success of small firms
- Using networks
- The exporting consortium alternative
- Forming an exporting consortium
- Attracting more small firms into exporting
- Improving the trading environment
- Simplifying trading operations
- Revision questions
- References
- Web sites
- 4 Market entry modes: strategic considerations of direct vs. indirect involvement
- Company resources and objectives
- Selecting a market entry mode
- The keyboard analogy
- Direct exporting activities
- Agents
- Distributors
- Similarities between agents and distributors
- Management contracts
- Franchising
- Licensing
- Screwdriver assembly operations
- Direct investment activities
- Wholly owned subsidiaries
- Merger/acquisition
- Joint venture
- Tripartite ventures
- Foreign market servicing strategies
- Monitoring market entry modes
- Relationship management and interaction theory
- International studies related to interaction theory
- A strategic portfolio of market entry modes
- Conclusions
- Revision questions
- References
- Web sites
- 5 International product policy considerations
- What may sell abroad
- Communication issues – language and media
- Modification versus standardization – the issues
- Product modification
- Product standardization
- Product standardization and World Product Mandates
- Branding
- Selecting a brand name
- Types of branding
- Packaging
- Intellectull property
- Industrial property rights
- Compulsory licences and the abuse of patent rights: the Canadian case
- Brand names and trademark protection
- Brand piracy (product counterfeiting)
- Five corporate strategies to handle counterfeiting
- Distribution of counterfeit goods
- Parallel or grey exporting
- After-sales expectations and service
- Appendix: Dilmah and the history of Ceylon tea
- Revision questions
- References
- Web sites
- 6 Pricing, credit and terms of doing business
- Domestic and international price setting
- Consumer sensitivity to pricing
- A multi-stage approach to pricing
- International price standardization
- Parallel or grey exporting
- Export market overheads
- Export quotation terms
- Foreign currency invoicing and financing
- Methods of payment
- Payment in advance
- Open account
- Bills of exchange
- Letter of credit
- Leasing
- Bonding
- Discounting and factoring
- Forfaiting
- Countertrade (CT)
- Bilateral trading clearing account
- Bartering
- Switch trading or triangular trade
- Escrow account trading
- Evidence accounts
- Compensation trading
- Buyback
- Parallel trading (or counterpurchase)
- Industrial offset trading
- Swap trading
- Transfer pricing
- Conspiracy to fix prices
- Cartels
- Revision questions
- References
- Web sites
- 7 Strategic international logistical and distribution decisions
- Natural channels of distribution
- Distribution channels in the Information Age
- Virtual value chain vs. physical value chain
- Logistics
- Movement of goods across frontiers
- Marketing logistics
- Trade procedures and documentation
- INCOTERMS 1990
- Distribution efficiency and the national environment
- Changing customer perceptions
- Marketing intermediaries
- Identifying marketing intermediaries
- Parallel or grey exporting
- Freeports
- The freeport advantage
- Distribution in the PLC stages
- Revision questions
- References
- Websites
- 8 Promotion within the foreign market
- The many facets of promotion
- Personal selling
- Exhibitions and trade fairs
- Public relations/publicity
- Sales promotion
- Above and below the line
- Advertising
- Pull and push strategies
- The communications process
- Advertising-the global situation
- Campaign transferability
- Multinational advertising agencies
- Advertising agency usage criteria
- Multinational client/agency relationships
- The organizational structure adopted by agencies and clients in global campaigns
- Links with the ‘lead’ agency
- Links with the official agency head offices
- The agency-client link
- Links within the client’s organization
- Reasons behind the ‘mirroring’ effect
- Media availability
- Pan-European research: readership data
- Advertising standardization versus local adaptation
- Newspapers
- Periodicals
- The cinema
- Television
- Radio
- Posters
- Leaflets
- Point-of-sale materials .
- Direct mail
- Trade fairs and exhibitions
- Substantiating advertising claims
- Product restrictions
- Balancing information and emotional appeal
- Use of language
- Vulnerable groups
- Legal action
- Penalties
- Develop self-discipline
- Revision questions
- References
- Websites
- 9 International marketing planning: reviewing, appraising and implementing
- The international marketing plan
- The limits of standardization
- Market concentration or market spreading?
- Planning and Third World markets
- Responses to irregular payments (did someone say bribery or corruption?)
- Organizational development to meet market trends
- Type A-the direct type
- Type B – the geographical type
- Type C – the product type
- Type D-the matrix type
- Type E-the project type
- Type F – the mixed structure
- Williamsons six-way classification scheme for company organization
- Divisionalization
- Hierarchy in the organizational framework
- Bounded rationality
- Opportunism
- Uncertainty
- Small numbers
- Information impactedness
- Atmosphere
- Alternative organizational patterns
- Relevant control systems
- The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) product portfolio matrix
- PIMS database
- Revision questions
- References
- Web sites
- 10 Marketing in Europe
- Background
- Historical background
- Economic size and potential of the Community
- Marketing by population concentration: the ‘Golden Triangle’
- Regional variation within the Community
- European Union social policy
- European Union regional policy
- Decision-making bodies
- A market without frontiers
- Harmonization measures for internal trade
- Harmonization: the common commercial policy
- Single Administrative Document
- TARIC customs tariff
- Patents, trademarks and standards
- Competition policy within the EU
- Common Agricultural Policy (CAP)
- The Euro currency
- Financial and technical co-operation
- Stabilization of export earnings
- Industrial and agricultural co-operation
- Institutions
- Japan and the EU
- US and the EU
- Postscript
- European Economic Area (EEA)
- Marketing in Central and Eastern Europe
- Background to the political and economic changes
- Structural economic change
- Doing business in Central and Eastern Europe
- Postscript
- Revision questions
- References
- Web sites
- 11 Marketing in the Pacific Rim
- APEC and the economic potential of the region
- China
- Currency
- Guanxi
- Chinese communism and the fall of Soviet communism
- Economic background to the world’s largest market
- Trading with a decentralizing planned economy
- Market information
- Intellectual property protection
- The Chinese market
- Special Economic Zones (SEZ)
- Economic and Technical Development Zones (ETDZ)
- Chinese foreign investment
- Investing in a joint-venture project
- Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprises (WFOE)
- Joint-venture dissolution
- The future
- Japan
- Japan in the world economy
- Reasons for the Japanese moving into foreign markets
- Economic and social background
- Shinto
- Buddhism
- Christianity and new religions
- Coming to terms with Japanese growth
- The Sogo Shosa: Japanese international trading companies
- Imports into Japan
- Tariffs
- Duty assessment
- Internal taxes
- Import documentation
- Transit and bond
- Distribution in Japan
- Japanese expectations of suppliers
- The Japanese consumer
- Product testing for imports
- Market prospects for exports to Japan
- Advertising in Japan
- Innovation and product development
- Trademarks and industrial property rights
- Licensing
- Foreign investment in Japan
- Foreign direct investment
- Joint ventures
- Strategic business alliances: a better alternative to protectionism
- The potential for industrial co-operation
- Pressures on the Japanese financial system
- The services sector
- Revision questions
- References
- Websites
- Index




