Chapter 12 Entering Foreign Markets
Chapter 12 Entering Foreign Markets
Chapter 12 Entering Foreign Markets
Chapter 12
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Introduction
Question: How can firms enter foreign markets? Firms can enter foreign markets through exporting licensing or franchising to host country firms a joint venture with a host country firm a wholly owned subsidiary in the host country to serve that market The advantages and disadvantages of each entry mode is determined by transport costs and trade barriers political and economic risks firm strategy
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What are the disadvantages of General Electrics new strategy of using joint ventures to enter foreign markets?
Couldt reach an agreement with potential British partner had to settle for minority stakes in some ventures
Timing of Entry
After a firm identifies which market to enter, it must determine the timing of entry Entry is early when an international business enters a foreign market before other foreign firms Entry is late when a firm enters after other international businesses have already established themselves in the market
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Timing of Entry
Firms entering a market early can gain first mover advantages including
the ability to pre-empt rivals and capture demand by establishing a strong brand name the ability to build up sales volume in that country and ride down the experience curve ahead of rivals and gain a cost advantage over later entrants the ability to create switching costs that tie customers into their products or services making it difficult for later entrants to win business
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Timing of Entry
First mover disadvantages are the disadvantages associated with entering a foreign market before other international businesses These may result in pioneering costs (costs that an early entrant has to bear that a later entrant can avoid) such as the costs of business failure if the firm, due to its ignorance of the foreign environment, makes some major mistakes (e.x., McDonalds in India) the costs of promoting and establishing a product offering, including the cost of educating the customers
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Summary
There are no right decisions with foreign market entry, just decisions that are associated with different levels of risk and reward Firms in developing countries can learn from the experiences of firms in developed countries
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Entry Modes
Question: What is the best way to enter a foreign market? Firms can enter foreign market through 1. Exporting 2. Turnkey projects 3. Licensing 4. Franchising 5. Joint ventures 6. Wholly owned subsidiaries Each mode has advantages and disadvantages
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Exporting
1. Exporting is often the first method firms use to enter foreign market Exporting is attractive because it is relatively low cost firms may achieve experience curve economies Exporting is not attractive when lower-cost manufacturing locations exist transport costs are high tariff barriers are high foreign agents fail to in the exporters best interest
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Turnkey Projects
2. Turnkey projects involve a contractor that agrees to handle every detail of the project for a foreign client, including the training of operating personnel At completion of the contract, the foreign client is handed the "key" to a plant that is ready for full operation e.x., nuclear power plant
Turnkey Projects
Turnkey projects are attractive because They allow firms to earn great economic returns from the know-how required to assemble and run a technologically complex process They are less risky in countries where the political and economic environment is such that a longer-term investment might expose the firm to unacceptable political and/or economic risk Turnkey projects are not attractive when The firm's process technology is a source of competitive advantage E.x., the Taipei MRT
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Licensing
3. Licensing is an arrangement whereby a licensor grants
Licensing
Licensing is unattractive when the firm doesnt have the tight control over manufacturing, marketing, and strategy necessary to realize experience curve and location economies the firms ability to coordinate strategic moves across countries by using profits earned in one country to support competitive attacks in another is compromised There is the potential for loss of proprietary (or intangible) technology or property To reduce this risk, firms can use crosslicensing agreements or link the agreement with the decision to form a joint venture
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the rights to intangible property to another entity (the licensee) for a specified time period, and in return, the licensor receives a royalty fee from the licensee Intangible property includes patents, inventions, formulas, processes, designs, copyrights, and trademarks Licensing is attractive when The firm does not have to bear the development costs and risks associated with opening a foreign market (insufficient capital & unwillingness) The firm avoids barriers to investment (ownership control) It allows a firm with intangible property that might have business applications, but which doesnt want to develop those applications itself, to capitalize on market opportunities
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Franchising
4. Franchising is a form of licensing in which the franchisor sells intangible property to the franchisee, and requires the franchisee agree to abide by strict rules as to how it does business Franchising is attractive because firms avoid many costs and risks of opening up a foreign market Franchising is unattractive because It may inhibit the firm's ability to take profits out of one country to support competitive attacks in another the geographic distance of the firm from its foreign franchisees can make poor quality difficult for the franchisor to detect
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Joint Ventures
5. Joint ventures involve the establishment of a firm that is jointly owned by two or more otherwise independent firms Joint ventures are attractive because a firm can benefit from a local partner's knowledge of the host country's competitive conditions, culture, language, political systems, and business systems the costs and risks of opening a foreign market are shared with the partner they can help firms avoid the risk of nationalization or other adverse government interference
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Joint Ventures
Joint ventures can be unattractive because the firm risks giving control of its technology to its partner the firm may not have the tight control over subsidiaries that it might need to realize experience curve or location economies shared ownership can lead to conflicts and battles for control if goals and objectives differ or change over time (51/49) JOINT VENTURES: Why, What, and How
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Greenfield or Acquisition?
Question: Should a firm establish a wholly owned subsidiary in a country by building a subsidiary from the ground up (greenfield strategy), or by acquiring an established enterprise in the target market (acquisition strategy)? The number of cross border acquisitions are increasing Over the last decade, 50-80 percent of all FDI inflows have been mergers and acquisitions
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Entry Decision: Where to go When to enter How to enter (on what scale) Entry Modes: Exporting Licensing/Franchising Joint venture Wholly owned subsidiaries
Selecting an Entry Mode: Technological / Management know-how Cost reduction pressure Greenfield Venture or Acquisition: Ad. Of Greenfield Cultural issue Set of operating routines Disa- of Greenfield Slow and risky (expected revenue) Competitors may be quicker by acquisition
Greenfield Venture or Acquisition: Ad. Of Acquisition Quick and enable firms preempt their competitors Less risky than greenfield Disa- of Acquisition Overpay Corporate culture integration (synergy) Need careful pre-acquisition screening
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