Global
marketing is “marketing on a worldwide scale reconciling or taking commercial
advantage of global operational differences, similarities and opportunities in
order to meet global objectives".
Worldwide competition
One of the product categories in
which global competition has been easy to track . The increasing intensity of
competition in global markets is a challenge facing companies at all stages of
involvement in international markets. As markets open up, and become more
integrated, the pace of change accelerates, technology shrinks distances
between markets and reduces the scale advantages of large firms, new sources of
competition emerge, and competitive pressures mount at all levels of the
organization. Also, the threat of competition from companies in countries such
as India, China, Malaysia, and Brazil is on the rise, as their own domestic markets
are opening up to foreign competition, stimulating greater awareness of
international market opportunities and of the need to be internationally
competitive. Companies which previously focused on protected domestic markets
are entering into markets in other countries, creating new sources of
competition, often targeted to price-sensitive market segments. Not only is
competition intensifying for all firms regardless of their degree of global
market involvement, but the basis for competition is changing. Competition
continues to be market-based and ultimately relies on delivering superior value
to consumers. However, success in global markets depends on knowledge
accumulation and deployment. Today, more and more marketing companies
specialize in translating products from one country to another.
Domestic marketing
A marketing restricted to the
political boundaries of a country is called 'Domestic Marketing'. A company
marketing only within its national boundaries only has to consider domestic
competition. Even if that competition includes companies from foreign markets,
it still only has to focus on the competition that exists in its home market.
Products and services are developed for customers in the home market without
thought of how the product or service could be used in other markets. All
marketing decisions are made at headquarters.
The biggest obstacle these
marketers face is being blindsided by emerging global marketers. Because
domestic marketers do not generally focus on the changes in the global
marketplace, they may not be aware of a potential competitor who is a market
leader on three continents until they simultaneously open 20 stores in the
Northeastern U.S. These marketers can be considered ethnocentric as they are
most concerned with how they are perceived in their home country.
The domestic market is a large
market that every nation needs. These markets are all restricted to be under
control of certain boundaries in that company or country. This type of
marketing is the type of marketing that takes place in the headquarters. In
domestic markets it helps reduce the cost of competition. By reducing
competition the company has a better shot of being more successful in the long
run. Also if the company’s competition is not a big factor that will affect
their business, they have a good shot at making prices higher and people will
still purchase that product.
A firm operating in a domestic
market also gets the opportunity to operate in different areas and this gives
the company an opportunity to have bigger markets to advertise to. Even in
domestic markets, businesses are still trying to trade with each other to
promote their business to other businesses in the area. An advantage to
marketing domestically is that the firm may be entitled to tax benefits for
offering jobs to the nation and for giving people opportunities for work. A
firm that markets domestically helps countries by offering more jobs, bringing
in additional business to the market and stimulates trading within the market.
International marketing
International marketing is the
export, franchising, joint venture or full direct entry of an organization's
product or services into another country. This can be achieved by exporting a
company's product into another location, entry through a joint venture with
another firm in the target country, or foreign direct investment into the
target country. The development of the marketing mix for that country is then
required - international marketing. It can be as straightforward as using
existing marketing strategies, mix and tools for export on the one side, to a
highly complex relationship strategy including localization, local product
offerings, pricing, production and distribution with customized promotions,
offers, website, social media and leadership. Internationalization and
international marketing meets the needs of selected foreign countries where a
company's value can be exported and there is inter-firm and firm learning,
optimization and efficiency in economies of scale and scope. The firm does not
need to export or enter all world markets to be considered an international
marketer.
Global marketing
Global marketing is a firm's
ability to market to almost all countries on the planet. With extensive reach,
the need for a firm's product or services is established. The global firm
retains the capability, reach, knowledge, staff, skills, insights, and
expertise to deliver value to customers worldwide. The firm understands the
requirement to service customers locally with global standard solutions or
products, and localizes that product as required to maintain an optimal balance
of cost, efficiency, customization and localization in a control-customization
continuum to best meet local, national and global requirements to position
itself against or with competitors, partners, alliances, substitutes and defend
against new global and local market entrants per country, region or city. The
firm will price its products appropriately worldwide, nationally and locally,
and promote, deliver access and information to its customers in the most
cost-effective way. The firm also needs to understand, research, measure and
develop loyalty for its brand and global brand equity (stay on brand) for the
long term.
At this level, global marketing
and global branding are integrated. Branding involves a structured process of
analyzing "soft" assets and "hard" assets of a firm's
resources. The strategic analysis and development of a brand includes customer
analysis (trends, motivation, unmet needs, segmentation), competitive analysis (brand
image/brand identity, strengths, strategies, vulnerabilities), and
self-analysis (existing brand image, brand heritage, strengths/capabilities,
organizational values).
Further, Global brand identity
development is the process establishing brands of products, the firm, and
services locally and worldwide with consideration for scope, product
attributes, quality/value, uses, users and country of origin; organizational
attributes (local vs. global); personality attributes (genuine, energetic,
rugged, elegant) and brand customer relationships (friend, adviser, influencer,
trusted source); and importantly symbols, trademarks metaphors, imagery, mood,
photography and the company's brand heritage. In establishing a global brand,
the brand proposition (functional benefits, emotional benefits and
self-expressive benefits are identified, localized and streamlined to be
consistent with a local, national, international and global point of view. The
brand developed needs to be credible.
A global marketing and branding
implementation system distributes marketing assets (website, social media,
Google PPC, PDFs, sales collateral, press junkets, kits, product samples, news
releases, local mini-sites, flyers, posters, alliance and partner materials),
affiliate programs and materials, internal communications, newsletters,
investor materials, event promotions and trade shows to deliver an integrated,
comprehensive and focused communication, access and value to the customers,
that can be tracked to build loyalty, case studies and further establish the
company's global marketing and brand footprint.
Global marketing specialization
Global marketing is a field of
study in general business management to provide valuable products, solutions
and services to customers locally, nationally, internationally and worldwide.
Elements of the global marketing
Not only do standard marketing
approaches, strategies, tactics and processes apply, global marketing requires
an understanding of global finance, global operations and distribution, government
relations, global human capital management and resource allocation, distributed
technology development and management, global business logic, interfirm and
global competitiveness, exporting, joint ventures, foreign direct investments
and global risk management.
The standard “Four P’s” of
marketing: product, price, place, and promotion are all affected as a company
moves through the five evolutionary phases to become a global company.
Ultimately, at the global marketing level, a company trying to speak with one
voice is faced with many challenges when creating a worldwide marketing plan.
Unless a company holds the same position against its competition in all markets
(market leader, low cost, etc.) it is impossible to launch identical marketing
plans worldwide. Nisant Chakram(Marketing Management)
Product
A global company is one that can
create a single product and only have to tweak elements for different markets.
For example, Coca-Cola uses two formulas (one with sugar, one with corn syrup)
for all markets. The product packaging in every country incorporates the
contour bottle design and the dynamic ribbon in some way, shape, or form.
However, the bottle can also include the country’s native language and is the
same size as other beverage bottles or cans in that same country.
Luxury products, high-tech
products, and new innovations are the most common products in the global
marketplace.[5] They are easier to market in a standardized way than other
products because there are no traditional cultural values attached to their
meanings.
Price
Price will always vary from
market to market. Price is affected by many variables: cost of product
development (produced locally or imported), cost of ingredients, cost of
delivery (transportation, tariffs, etc.), and much more. Additionally, the
product’s position in relation to the competition influences the ultimate
profit margin. Whether this product is considered the high-end, expensive
choice, the economical, low-cost choice, or something in-between helps determine
the price point.
Place
How the product is distributed is
also a country-by-country decision influenced by how the competition is being
offered to the target market. Using Coca-Cola as an example again, not all
cultures use vending machines. In the United States, beverages are sold by the
pallet via warehouse stores. In India, this is not an option. Placement
decisions must also consider the product’s position in the market place. For
example, a high-end product would not want to be distributed via a “dollar
store” in the United States. Conversely, a product promoted as the low-cost
option in France would find limited success in a pricey boutique.
Promotion
After product research,
development and creation, promotion (specifically advertising) is generally the
largest line item in a global company’s marketing budget. At this stage of a
company’s development, integrated marketing is the goal. The global corporation
seeks to reduce costs, minimize redundancies in personnel and work, maximize
speed of implementation, and to speak with one voice. If the goal of a global
company is to send the same message worldwide, then delivering that message in
a relevant, engaging, and cost-effective way is the challenge.
Effective global advertising
techniques do exist. The key is testing advertising ideas using a marketing
research system proven to provide results that can be compared across
countries. The ability to identify which elements or moments of an ad are
contributing to that success is how economies of scale are maximized. Market
research measures such as Flow of Attention, Flow of Emotion and branding
moments provide insights into what is working in an ad in any country because
the measures are based on visual, not verbal, elements of the ad.