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Strategies for Entering Foreign Markets

The document outlines key concepts related to entering foreign markets, including the liability of foreignness, location-specific advantages, and the timing of market entry. It discusses various modes of entry, such as equity and nonequity modes, and highlights the importance of understanding cultural and institutional distances. Additionally, it addresses the implications of globalization and the impact of e-commerce on market entry strategies.

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AmanDeep Singh
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
114 views22 pages

Strategies for Entering Foreign Markets

The document outlines key concepts related to entering foreign markets, including the liability of foreignness, location-specific advantages, and the timing of market entry. It discusses various modes of entry, such as equity and nonequity modes, and highlights the importance of understanding cultural and institutional distances. Additionally, it addresses the implications of globalization and the impact of e-commerce on market entry strategies.

Uploaded by

AmanDeep Singh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Entering Foreign Markets

LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this , you should be able to:
1. Understand how institutions and resources affect liability of
foreignness
2. Match the quest for location-specific advantages with strategic goals
(where to enter)
3. Compare and contrast first- and late-mover advantages (when to
enter)
4. Follow the comprehensive model of foreign market entries (how to
enter)
5. Participate in three leading debates on foreign market entries
6. Draw implications for action

LIABILITY OF FOREIGNNESS
the inherent disadvantage foreign firms
experience in host countries because of their
nonnative status
differences in formal and informal institutions
governing the rules of the game in different
countries
local firms are already well versed in these
rules, but foreign firms have to learn the rules
quickly
foreign firms are often still discriminated
against, sometimes formally and other times
informally

WHERE TO ENTER?
location-specific advantages - favorable

locations in certain countries may give firms operating


there an advantage

agglomeration - beyond geographic advantages,

location-specific advantages also arise from the clustering


of economic activities in certain locations

natural resource seeking - resources are tied to


particular foreign locations

WHERE TO ENTER?
innovation seeking - firms target countries and

regions renowned for generating world-class innovations

market seeking - firms go after countries that offer


strong demand for their products and services

efficiency seeking - firms single out the most


efficient locations featuring a combination of scale
economies and low-cost factors

Cultural/Institutional Distances
and Foreign Entry Locations
cultural distance - difference between two cultures
along some identifiable dimensions (such as
individualism)

institutional distance - extent of similarity or


dissimilarity between the regulatory, normative, and
cognitive institutions of two countries

stage models - school of thought that believes that


firms will enter culturally similar countries during their
first stage of internationalization and that they may gain
more confidence to enter culturally distant countries in
later stages

WHEN TO ENTER?
first-mover advantages - advantages that
first entrants into a market obtain and that later movers
do not enjoy

first-movers - may also encounter significant

disadvantages, which in turn become late-mover


advantages

HOW TO ENTER?
scale of entry

large-scale entries:

demonstrate strategic commitment to certain markets,


assuring local customers and suppliers for the long haul
deters potential entrants
hard-to-reverse strategic commitments limit strategic
flexibility elsewhere and incur huge losses if these largescale bets turn out wrong

small-scale entries:

less costly
focus on organizational learning by getting firms feet
wetlearning by doinglimiting the downside risk

First Step
Equity vs Nonequity Modes
nonequity mode - exports and contractual
agreements that tend to reflect relatively smaller
commitments to overseas markets

equity mode - JVs and wholly owned subsidiaries


indicative of relatively larger, harder to reverse
commitments

Second Step
on Making Actual Selections
direct export - most basic mode of entry capitalizes
on economies of scale in production concentrated in the
home country and affords better control over distribution

indirect export - exporting through domestically


based export intermediaries

licensing/franchising - agreement in which the

licensor/franchisor sells the rights to intellectual property


such as patents and know-how to the licensee/franchisee
for a royalty fee

Second Step
on Making Actual Selections
turnkey project - projects in which clients pay

contractors to design and construct new facilities and


train personnel

build-operate-transfer (BOT) agreement nonequity mode of entry used to build a longer term
presence

R&D contract - outsourcing agreements in R&D


between firms

Second Step
on Making Actual Selections
co-marketing - efforts among a number of firms to
jointly market their products and services

joint venture - corporate entity formed and jointly


owned by two or more parent companies

wholly owned subsidiary - entity that is


controlled through the ownership of shares in the
subsidiary by the parent entity

Second Step
on Making Actual Selections
green-field operation - wholly owned subsidiary
created by building new factories and offices from scratch

acquisition - wholly owned subsidiary created


through direct foreign investment

Liability versus Asset of Foreignness


Being foreign can be an asset (that is, a
competitive advantage).
However, whether foreignness is indeed an
asset or a liability remains tricky.

Global versus Regional Geographic


Diversification
Despite the widely held belief (and frequently
voiced criticism from antiglobalization
activists) that MNEs are expanding globally,
surprisingly, even among the largest Fortune
Global 500 MNEs, few are truly global.
Should most MNEs further globalize?

Cyberspace versus Conventional


Entries
The arrival of the Internet has sparked a new
debate: Whose rules of the game should ecommerce follow?

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