Thendy

INTERNATIONAL MARKETING

92% of the world's consumers live outside the U.S.  Thus, international marketing is very important.  When selling to foreign markets, one must realize that there are major differences between other countries & the U.S.  Aside from political and legal differences, there are economic, technological, social (family, religion, education, health ...) & cultural differences.

Each 1 billion in trade deficit yields a loss of 25,000 jobs. [See text for how international trade is measured and protectionism vs. free trade.]
    Gray Goods - Goods imported from unauthorized dealer; problem = no manufacturer's warranty.
    Dumping = Sale of export goods at less than "normal" value (less than cost or less than home-country price).

Strategic Adaptations Of The Marketing Mix
    1    Keep The Product & Promotion The Same Worldwide (Global Marketing)
        - e.g., world brands such as Coca Cola and Marlboro.
        - Theodore Levitt is the guru of the "globalization" or "global marketing" approach.
        - Promotion mix elements such as advertising present the biggest problem to standardizing a marketing strategy across all borders because promotion is based on a communication process, which can differ from country to country - even if the languages are the same (e.g., the U.S. & the U.K.).
    2    Adapt Only The Promotion - e.g., in most of the world, bicycles are promoted as transportation; in U.S. as leisure.
    3    Adapt Only The Product - e.g., Canadians prefer a more ...
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