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NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY J.L. KELLOGG SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT Revised February 5, 2006 INT MKT 467 International Marketing Spring 2006 Professor Phil Corse Office Hours: 1 Hour prior to class and by appointment [email protected] [email protected] Mondays Evanston Campus President and CEO Connectables, LLC (China Sourcing and Trading company) Senior Vice President, Marketing Consulting Services Herbst LaZar Bell (New Product Research, Design and Development) 312 454 8784 x398 office 847 778 7107 mobile 847 295 7509 home 1 Course Description This course on Global Marketing is based on a combination of lectures/discussions, cases, videos, outside speakers, country marketing reports and a final marketing project in a foreign country. It draws upon real world experience … mostly mine (but also yours). My background? I have 12 years of corporate experience and the last 15 years I have been conducting marketing consulting engagements globally and sourcing products from China for resale in the US and Europe. I am a classical trained marketer, serial entrepreneur and new product focused marketing consultant. The main perspective … but not the only one … that you the student will have, is as the Chief Marketing Officer of a US based corporation that is interested in entering new global markets and/or expanding its business in existing global markets. Other themes and perspectives are: The important trend of emerging Asian countries”… especially China … striving” to increase their US sales and trying to establish/build their own brands, buy US companies/brands and “manage” their currency The recognition that China can’t just be the “world’s factory” but must sell and market its own products to its emerging middle class … and build/expand its relatively few and unknown brands in developed countries and particularly in the Middle Kingdom!” My philosophy that marketing starts and ends with the consumer or end user … that products must be developed, channels configured and markets created or penetrated based on consumer experiences and environments The “interesting” and intensifying political turmoil within Europe and expanding EU countries … towards each other and especially towards the United States … and the effect on US brands. The identification and benchmarking of “best international marketing practices”, success stories and failure examples of global companies. The global opportunity of selling to the 4 billion “poor people” (of the 6 billion people on the planet) by designing and developing low cost products and services that are affordable for this target market. The reality that governments of foreign countries in cross border trade can be a significant barrier to entry, a partner, a customer or a competitor … and are in fact a “sixth” force in the 5 forces model … distributors can be a seventh force! You will be asked individually and as a member of a team to provide both oral discussions and written analysis that will enable you to analyze the business environment and focus on global marketing problems and opportunities. Please bring into class or send me timely and relevant global marketing articles and information to be discussed and shared wit the class. As a team, you will ultimately develop a marketing strategy and plan for a global enterprise in a team selected country and for a team selected product or service. You will provide an “order of magnitude” profit and loss forecast based on the opportunity assessment your team formulates. The keys to this P & L are the revenue justification, the assumptions about selling prices and profits for all channel members and the optimal mix of “push/pull” marketing strategy components. One class addresses “Big Emerging Markets” … with special focus on China. The 2 major themes are (1) how do you source from China? And (2) how do you sell to China? This class is based on personal experience and case histories. This course integrates and addresses the significant impact of cultural, economic, political, infrastructure and population variables in global marketing management. Students will explore marketing issues and marketing implications in a cross-cultural perspective. Your market, competitor and cultural investigation will address appropriate opportunity and risk assessment, market entry strategies, and importantly, the implementation of the marketing plan. This course will balance academic rigor and theoretical framework with the real world and the application with provided global marketing tools and business practices … with the emphasis on the implementation of global marketing plans and programs. I am highly interactive … real world … and I will expect and encourage stimulating (I hope!) in class discussions with challenging and engaging points of view. My strong emphasis is on application … what works in the comfort and convenience of a classroom … or a spreadsheet … many times will not work in the real world … together we will sort that. Please note that the course slightly “overweights” China and Asia and “market entry” strategy. 2 Text 2 The required text is The Mirage of Global Markets by David Arnold, Prentice Hall, 2004. This newer book focuses on International Marketing Management. The central theme is that markets are becoming more localized… “intensely local” … and the book stresses how international marketing is very different than conventional marketing by focusing on local markets that are becoming more and more fragmented. Optional book: World out of Balance by Paul Louisiana, McGraw-Hill, 2005. This new book addresses global risks to obtain competitive advantage and is highly recommended but not required. Another book, The World is Flat by Thomas Friedman, is recommended especially for his “Ten Forces” discussion in the first part of the book. 3 Learning Outcomes Upon completion of International Marketing, you will be able to: 3.1 Recognize cultural differences in various global regions and their effect on the conduct of international business and is able to analyze these cultural differences in terms of opportunities and inherent risk in conducting marketing activities. 3.2 Understand the benefits in engaging in international trade in relationship to political economic factors such as free trade or regional agreements … and learn how to target regions/countries based on their membership in a free trade agreement. 3.3 Understand how to compete in international markets and the need for organizational structures designed to manage global companies 3.4 Become more of a global citizen, and learn the economic and marketing aspects of globalization. 3.5 Develop strategies and plans for market entry and implementation for a company in a foreign country and be able to quantify that opportunity … and justify the revenue … in pro forma P & L statements. 3.6 Gain exposure and perspective to the challenge of managing international marketing operations in a domestic US corporation. 4 Grading Shown below are your major deliverables and the weighting of each: Individual Individual Participation 1 Case “Memo” “Best Global Marketing Practices” 15% 15% 15% Team based Country Market Report Presentation* Marketing Strategy Brief for Final Project (1 page memo) Final Project: Marketing Plan Presentation 15% 5% 35% * Includes individual peer evaluations by each team member … these are critical and are the only way for me to assess a student’s team performance and participation outside of class. 3 Total 100% Notes: Since there are 2 assigned team presentations, it is not necessary for all team members to present each time. Ideally if the team consists of 4-5 members, 2-3 will present each time and the others will handle Q & A. and the next time, 2-3 different team members will present. Each student will turn in 1 case only --- that will be preassigned. 5 Best Global Marketing Practices Each of you will be assigned a company that is marketing its products/services to 2 or more regions of the world (excluding the home country). You need to list the specific practices that distinguish them from other companies. These “best” practices must focus on the 4Ps, culture, segmentation, product/service development, marketing alliances, distribution configurations, market entry, market expansion or other areas of marketing and sales interest. Your “memo” should first describe the company and its products in a paragraph and then list 7-8 or more approaches, techniques, methods, practices around the themes mentioned above. You will receive 2 points for every good practice and 1 point for every average practice … to a maximum of 15 points for this assignment. This memo should be a maximum of 1 page in a font of 11 or larger with regular margins. You will be asked in class to informally “present” your findings and insights. I will randomly choose 3-4 students every class to share their analysis. You will hand in a hard copy of the memo. Participation The class format will be approximately 50% informal lecture and discussion, 40% casework, and 10% student team presentations. Class participation is very important to me as I have a highly interactive approach … that of a facilitator and coach… so your ideas and input are more than welcomed, they are expected!!! The slides in the case packet are from a variety of sources: Kotler, Cateora, Keegan and me. I will be posting additional presentations, “tools” and teaching materials on Blackboard. I will not present every slide in the case packet. If there is not enough “air time” or you have additional thoughts later, you are encouraged to email me your insights and builds or catch me after class or in my office. I do plan to cold call on a regular basis. You will be expected to prepare for and contribute to each class. This is a very important part of the course. Rather than restating the obvious, you will be expected to provide informed and insightful comments and contributions to the subject case or material being addressed that evening. Kellogg class etiquette discourages the use of computers in class. If you intend to use your computer in class, I will assume and expect that it will only be used for note taking. Violations of this, either observed or reported, will negatively affect your participation grade. The Kellogg Honor Code, which I assume you are familiar with, is in effect for this class. If you do not have a copy, please let me know. Your participation grade will be reduced by 2 points if you miss a class and by 5 points if you miss 2 classes. If you miss 2 classes it will be almost impossible to receive an “A”, regardless of the reason. Please let me know beforehand if you expect to miss a class and the reason why. You must complete a “makeup” assignment if you miss 2 classes. "Contrarian" points of view are strongly encouraged! I welcome the opportunity to explore different points of view! Class Format Our class time will be divided as follows: First hour: Lecture and discussion orGuest Speaker 4 Next half hour to 45 minutes: best global marketing practices, success stories, failure examples, case histories, videos and current trade press and newspaper articles Break Next 45 minutes: Assigned case discussion and connections Next 20 minutes: Team presentations of Country Market Reports and class discussion of additional “builds”, connections and insights for that country. Last 10 minutes: Takeaways and key learnings 6 Country Market Reports (CMRs) In order to ensure that each student is current with global business events and to learn more about specific countries, you will be asked to use the international press (using the internet and other sources) to investigate the assigned country. Each team will present no more than 10 slides in 15 minutes and then lead a class discussion on the marketing key learnings for that country. You will not simply report facts and figures … rather you will offer marketing advice in the form of marketing insights. For example, take Japan ---- the distribution system in that country is very complex with many levels. One “takeaway” for a global marketer is that there must be sufficient margin and programs to motivate the many layers of channel members who may have competing objectives and interests. Another one for Hong Kong is that direct mail is not effective because the Chinese do not respond to direct mail offers. I will provide more examples of the deliverables in class before the first team presentation. Each Country Market Report presentation should be organized to identify and address global issues that have a short or long-term effect on specific industries. Your marketing insights, key learnings and connections must be organized around many of the following global marketing and sales themes/principles: Marketing communications … global branding and promotion Culture … language, religion, values etc. Pricing … getting paid Distribution channels/market access Alliances, partnerships and joint ventures Products and services … global product development and innovation Segmentation, targeting and positioning Market entry/market expansion User/market research Marketing and sales management, organization and structure Global account management Marketing strategy The presentation is valued at 15 points (including Q & A). You will receive 2 points (to a max of 15) for every major insight/reasons why that is a solid takeaway … there must be at least 4 different marketing principles or topics addressed, e.g., pricing, culture, distribution and market entry. No credit will be given for facts … only for the connections you make! In other words, you need to provide useful, actionable sales and marketing advice as if we were going to enter or expand the market in the country of your choice. Your presentation should end in an example of a success story of a company who is doing well in that country and an example of a company who failed --- please provide the reasons for success or failure. The only hand in will be your 10 slides and any exhibits you might develop. Please provide a hard and a soft copy, which I will post on Blackboard. You may later use the selected country for your final project … or not, it’s your call. 5 7 Case Memos Each student will be assigned one case (out of the cases listed). I will assign the cases and questions during the first class. The deliverable is a memo due at the beginning of the class in hard copy only. The memo is limited to 1 page in a font of 11 or larger with standard margins (no limit on number of exhibits). Please list each of the questions/issues followed by your answers. This memo may have an unlimited number of exhibits, charts, graphs, web pages etc. The objective here is to analyze complex situations and develop a crisp action-oriented memo that recommends a solution or direction that can be implemented … in a 1-page memo. Expanded bullet points are preferred to text intensive documents. Cases are in the case packet. 8 Final Project: Marketing Plan Presentation Purpose This group project is intended to develop skills and provide a real- world experience in market assessment, selection, entry strategy and the development and implementation of your own marketing program. Because the scope of such an endeavor is far beyond the time and resources of any one student, it is by necessity, a group project. Select a company that currently markets products internationally or would like to do so. Examine the portfolio of products within the firm and select a product or product line to launch in another country. Through some rational means, such as Country Analysis, determine the target country. For a multinational firm with diverse global operations, you may select a country where the firm is well established as long as your product of choice is not yet marketed there. For example, suppose Campbell's CHUNKY SOUP is a major international line for the Campbell's Soup Company but has not yet been introduced in the Asia-Pacific rim except Japan. Your plan should include a brief assessment of candidate countries considered with some rational justification for selection of the target country. This is precisely what you would do if you worked for Campbell's. A sharp contrast to the soup example would be to select a firm who has just begun marketing internationally. The task of establishing an export opportunity could provide a wealth of experience related to the nuts and bolts of simply getting things done in a small business environment. There is no best topic, product, company or industry. Your choice should reflect the interests of the team. It is also perfectly appropriate to select the product and company of a team member. No restrictions are imposed regarding the use of company resources available to you in pursuit of your topic. (E.g., interviews with key employees, company records, reports, published information, etc.) Of course you are bound by company policy on the use of such information. It is strongly recommended that you avoid a new product or a new service. It is much better to select a company that has an established product line that needs to be sold in additional countries. Activities and Timing 8.1 The first order of business is to form into teams of 4-5 students. A slightly longer break will be provided the first night to meld teams. 8.2 Experience suggests it is easier to first select a company, then the product. The country selection will be the result of your analysis of several candidate countries. Sometimes this process is reversed when a group has a particular interest in a country. The justification steps are still required. 6 8.3 Include in your plan a description of the firm's international operations and its corporate culture. Several elements of a company organizational assessment may be useful here if you are using your company. 8.4 Prepare a product/service fact sheet as a guideline for investigating and gathering information. 8.5 Your methodology should include development of both primary and secondary data about the company, product and country. Personal interviews, telephone/electronic interviews and any other form of direct contact are encouraged. Several databases may be available through Northwestern or one of your companies. 8.6 Develop your Marketing Plan using any elements of various outlines included in this course, the text or any other sources. There is no one ideal format. Consider an outline format easily transferable to transparencies or slides. 8.8 Plan presentations will be on the last class day. Each team (depending on the number of teams) will make a 20minute summary presentation with no more than 12 slides and 10-15 minutes will be allotted for Q & A. You are required to turn in both a copy of your presentation and a CD … (no other write-up is required) and any backup or supplementary information you consider essential (there is no limit on the number of exhibits). A bibliography or equivalent document outlining your sources of information is not required. 8.8 Timing … it is essential to establish a pace and delegate assignments and investigations on a timely basis. The following is a guideline to coordinate your activities: Week 2 Investigate Company, product, country Week 3 Reconfirm with country analysis and a cultural audit Week 4 Develop preliminary marketing strategy Week 5 Format plan Week 6 Continue research and finalize strategy Week 7 Revenue justification/P&Ls prepared Week 8 Complete plan and prepare presentation (I’ll show examples of past presentations and let you look at them in class) Week 9 Hand in hard copy of Marketing Strategy Brief* and discuss in class Week 10 Show time! 9 Grading for Marketing Strategy Brief and Final Project The project is 40% (40 points) of your grade. Each team member receives the same grade unless notably different levels of contribution are reported or observed. E.g., a “low” peer evaluation will result in a lower grade … for this project. A marketing plan rating sheet is provided in the case packet to further review presentation evaluation criteria. The breakdown of the 40 points is as follows: *Marketing Strategy Brief: 5 points … a 1 page memo that first documents the product or market opportunity assessment and secondly that provides the marketing strategy summary to include: the 4Ps, how you are segmenting, targeting and positioning to end users (with special emphasis on culture, use model and buying habits and practices) and any cross border issues or problems … e.g., tariffs, duties, government quotas or other barriers to entry. Grading values are 2 points for the opportunity assessment (the “why” of the product or market opportunity) and 3 points for the marketing strategy. A team representative will informally and briefly present this Marketing Strategy Brief at Class #9 to obtain “builds” and “marketing advice” from the other teams and from me. After I read your brief, I will email each team my additional feedback. This process will enable your team to take your Final Project to a higher level. 7 Content … marketing strategy, country analysis, cultural audit, marketing sizing, opportunity assessment, market entry or expansion etc: 20 points (includes 5 points for Marketing Strategy Brief due Class # 9). Financials, volume projections and justification: 5 points Presentation … energy, passion, communication and persuasiveness: 10 points Q&A, rebuttal, and ability to make additional points: 5 points … it’s your responsibility to facilitate discussion and make additional comments. The grading emphasis and ‘trade-offs” will be on the recommended marketing strategy, rationale and the action plans to implement the strategy in the “real world”. 10 Deliverables Shown below is a timeline of your assignments and deliverables for this class. Please note that the Kellogg schedule requires that the first class be held on Friday, April 1. However, rather than meet on a second Friday night, as suggested by the scheduling office (who don’t have to follow these schedules) to make up for no class on Memorial Day, Class # 10 will be held on Monday, June 6, the first night of finals week, which you would attend if there were a final exam. If this presents a problem for any of you, please let me know the first day of class or before. I want to avoid meeting on a second Friday night if at all possible! Case questions and other more detailed assignment information will be covered in class. There will be 1-2 informal brief group meetings during class in which we can confirm Final Project direction together. Some articles in the case packet will not be discussed in class and I will not cover all the slides provided. “Blackboard” will be used on a regular basis to post documents such as teaching notes, presentations (yours and mine) and other documents. 8 “Game Plan” SESSION Spring 2006 INT MKT 467 DATE TOPIC ASSIGNMENT Mondays 1 March 27 Global Opportunity Assessment “We’ve got the Whole World!” 2 April 3 Market Sizing/Timing Market Access vs. Market Potential Economic Freedom Index Culture and cultural audits for products and markets Global Market Entry vs. Market Expansion Entry vs. Expansion tradeoffs Market Development Global Regions Global Market Research 3 April 10 Global Product Development 4 April 17 Innovation Product Research New Product Case Histories Stage Gate Process Design Global Distributor Selection and Management & Channel Pricing Channels to country-markets Channels in country Market entry importance 5 April 24 International Pricing How to Pay … Get Paid! Letters of Credit/Wire Transfers Penetration Strategy Global Account Management Read GM* Chapters1, 2 & 8 Read “Distance Still Matters” Form teams/exchange contact information/sync up schedules for the Final Project: Marketing Plan Presentation Honeywell Bull Video Student survey Read GM Chapter 3 Read “Entry Strategies for International Markets”, “Selling to the Poor” and Global Market Planning Model and Region and Country Selection Teaching Notes (TNs) Case: “Go Global - or No?” (No hand-in) but be ready for role play exercise Hand in hard copy of Best Global Marketing Practices (1 page memo) Read “Competing with Giants” Team Presentations: India Country Market Report (CMR) India CMR (hand in hard and soft copies) Read GM Chapter 5 Read “Make Your Dealers Your Partners”, “Seven Rules of International Distribution” and Global Marketing Insights (TN) Case: Loctite, hand-in by only those assigned (1 page hard copy) China CMR Read GM Chapter 6 Read Global Channel Product Pricing Framework and Developing Global Marketing Pro Forma P& Ls (TNs) Case: MontGras, hand-in memo Brazil CMR 9 6 Global Marketing Communication May 1 Branding and Branding Trends China and Asia Brands Non traditional Marcomm Read GM Chapter 4 Read “The Top 100 Brands” Case: P&G SK-II (hand-in) Japan CMR Read “Brand Killers’,” The Return of the Global Brand and “The Quest for Global Dominance” (Executive Book Summary) Master Card Case (hand-in) GermanyCMR Growing Consumerism in Asia 7 Download of April 29 Allen Center Program By country similarities and differences Emerging middle classes Demographic changes New targets: poor, rural, old, young Global Marketing Strategy May 8 Global Brand Harmonization Local differentiated brands Entry vs. Expansion Event Marketing P&Ls Revenue justification (“top down” vs. “bottoms up” Review of past final project plans presentations and team meetings SESSION DATE 8 May 15 TOPIC Emerging Markets 9 May 22 Global Marketing Management 10 June 5 Make up class for Sourcing from China Selling to China Unique Business Models Growth strategies International Sales Global opportunities Branding Issues Final Project Due Global Marketing Plans Presentations by Student Teams ASSIGNMENT Read The Great Transition Read Turning Gadflies into Allies Grupo Elektra (hand-in) Review Final Project instructions and understand Feedback Form for assessment criteria Mexico CMR Read, “What is a Global Manager?” Read “In Search of Global Leaders” Read “The Forgotten Strategy” Read GM Chapter 7 Henkel Case (hand-in) Team Hand-in: Marketing Strategy Brief Final Project & in class discussion of each team’s strategy Hard copy and CD hand-in: Slides with speakers’ notes and any exhibits. No limit on number of exhibits. 10 Memoria l Day holiday Course Summary (TN) *GM The Mirage of Global Markets, David Arnold, 2004, Pren Hall Note: I will not usually cover the text material directly nor will I present every slide or discuss in depth every article in the case packet. It is your responsibility to review all materials and to ask questions and promote discussion around themes that are of particular interest to you. Additional articles, teaching notes and copies of presentations will be used to supplement and sometimes replace materials in the case packet. 11