Module 4 Market Entry and Development Strategies
Module 4 Market Entry and Development Strategies
• The strategy of producing products or services in one country (often the producer’s home
country), and selling and distributing them to customers located in other countries.
• Pros
- Increases sales volume, market share, profit margins
- Increases economies of scale
- Diversifies customer base
- Stablizes fluctuations in sales associated with economic cycles or seasonality of demand
- Minimizes the cost of foreign market entry, tests new market before engaging in other
market entry strategies
- Minimizes risk and maximizes flexibility compared to other strategies
- Leverages the capabilities of foreign distributors and other business partners located abroad
1. Exporting
• Online intermediaries
• An online intermediary enables buyers and sellers to conduct
ecommerce.
• Amazone, eBay, Alibaba’s Tmall
• Social networking sites: Google, Facebook (most popular in South-
East Asia), Baidu, Tencent’s WeChat and Weibo
• US and China were top two market in term of Global Retail
Ecommerce Index
1. Exporting and The role of foreign distributors
• Online intermediaries
1. Exporting and The role of foreign distributors
• Online intermediaries
1. Exporting and The role of foreign distributors
Merger: a new legal entity that results from the combination of two
firms to form a new, ‘merged’ firm
Acquisition: a purchase or transfer of control of one company
M&As are quickest ways to enter foreign markets and particularly
popular with Chinese companies
3. International M&As
3. International M&As
3. International M&As
3. International M&As
4. Wholly owned greenfield
Minimum Control available to the focal firm over foreign operations Maximum
Resource commitment
Limited Substantial
Maximum Flexibility
Minimum
Source: Cavusgil, S.T., Knight, G. and Riesenberger, J., 2017. International Business: The New Realities, Global Edition. London: Pearson
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