19 The Global Marketplace

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You’ve now learned the fundamentals of how companies develop competitive marketing strategies to engage customers, create customer value, and build lasting customer relationships. In this chapter, we extend these fundamentals to global marketing. Although we’ve discussed global topics in each previous chapter—it’s difficult to find an area of marketing that doesn’t contain at least some international elements—here we’ll focus on special considerations that companies face when they market their brands globally. Advances in communication, transportation, and digital technologies have made the world a much smaller place. Today, almost every firm, large or small, faces international marketing issues. In this chapter, we will examine six major decisions marketers make in going global.

To start our exploration of global marketing, let’s look at Scandinavian furniture and housewares retailer IKEA. IKEA operates successfully in 51 countries, engaging consumers across vastly different means, languages, and cultures. IKEA follows a highly standardized international operating model designed to create good-quality, functional furniture at low prices that everyday people can afford. However, IKEA has learned that, when it comes to global markets, one size rarely fits all.

Photo shows a huge outdoor signage of IKEA outside a building. The signage carries the name in English and Japanese.

No matter where in the world you shop at IKEA, you’ll find the huge and familiar blue-and-yellow stores and large selections of Scandinavian-design furnishings at affordable prices. At the same time, IKEA carefully adapts its merchandise and marketing to the unique needs of customers in specific global markets.

LIU JIN/Stringer/Getty Images

Objectives Outline

  1. Objective 19-1 Discuss how the international trade system and the economic, political-legal, and cultural environments affect a company’s international marketing decisions.

  2. Objective 19-2 Describe three key approaches to entering international markets.

  3. Objective 19-3 Explain how companies adapt their marketing strategies and mixes for international markets.

  4. Objective 19-4 Identify the three major forms of international marketing organization.

IN THE PAST, U.S. COMPANIES paid little attention to international trade. If they could pick up some extra sales via exports, that was fine. But the big market was at home, and it teemed with opportunities. The home market was also much safer. Managers did not need to learn other languages, deal with strange and changing currencies, face political and legal uncertainties, or adapt their products to different customer needs and expectations. Today, however, the situation is much different. Organizations of all kinds, from Coca-Cola and Nike to Google, Facebook, and even the NBA, have gone global.

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