Building on the global industry comparative
analysis you did in Project 3, develop a business plan for your organization to
operate in a new country. Analyze the new country first as a site for certain
value-chain activities, and second as a market for your organization's
products. Note that the term products will
refer to products, services, or a combination of the two.
Your business plan should include a
marketing strategy and an entry strategy. Also take into consideration the
requirements of accounting and finance. Develop market share estimates and
revenue projections using historical data from your organization in the United
States and your own research into market size, pricing, and unit sales for the
industry in the selected country. Estimate the investment required for
relocating one or more activities of your organization's value chain from the
United States to the selected country. Also estimate the time needed for your
organization to break even. Provide the assumptions behind your projections and
assessments of both short-term and long-term risks.
You will have three weeks to develop the
business plan for Gustavo. Be sure to give yourself adequate time for each of
the 10 steps of this project.
When you submit your project, your work will
be evaluated using the competencies listed below. You can use the list below to
self-check your work before submission.
Equipped with the
knowledge and skills gained from previous projects in this course and from
preceding courses in the MBA program, you are now ready to put your
international strategy all together in a business plan. Review the types
ofinternational
strategies and their components
as you begin this work. Develop an entry strategy for Gustavo of
about 6–7 pages in length. The strategy you develop should incorporate the
components described here and in Step 3.
As you begin to develop an entry strategy,
first perform the following assessments:
·
Analyze your site as both a market for your
products and as a site for certain value-chain activities.
·
Short-list and profile potential partner
company candidates.
·
Determine what company you will select for
partnership or alliance. Evaluate the benefits this partnership would bring to
your organization's market position or profits.
·
Detail the pros and cons of three
market-entry modes. Which entry mode would you recommend and why? How does your
chosen mode fit your organization's goals and objectives? For help in answering
these questions, reviewModes of Entry.
Estimate the financial investment required
for the selected entry strategy.
When you have begun your entry strategy and
chosen a local alliance partner, continue to the next step, where you will
determine your organization's degree of fit with the selected country.
The next step in developing your entry
strategy is to determine your organization's degree of fit with the selected
country. Answer the following questions in your entry strategy:
- How would you make thestrategic alliance work?
Regulations and laws governing different types of business entities vary
considerably from one country to another. What kind of legal business
entity do you recommend for your organization in the country of operation?
What will be the impact of certain country laws on this type of business
entity?
- What are the operational roles and activities of the
partners? Design an organizational chart for operations in the country.
Explain why you have chosen this organizational structure.
- What will be the likely impact of the country's
culture and geography on your organization, the value-chain activities
that are being relocated to the country, and the growth in sales of your
organization's products in the country? ReviewGlobalizing
the Management Model for depth of understanding.
You may submit your entry strategy (Steps
2–3) in the box below for feedback. In the next step, you will begin your
marketing strategy.
Use the following filename protocol: lastname_firstname_Project4_EntryStrategy
Before you submit your assignment, review
the competencies below, which your instructor will use to evaluate your work. A
good practice would be to use each competency as a self-check to confirm you
have incorporated all of them in your work.
Now that you have developed an entry
strategy and determined your organization's degree of fit within the selected
country, you willcreate a marketing plan.
In addition to relocating certain
activities in the value chain to the selected country, Gustavo wants to
evaluate the country for its suitability as a market for your organization's
products. ReviewTarget Markets for help with this evaluation.
Develop a 6–7 page marketing strategy for
the industry in which your organization belongs. Your marketing strategy should
incorporate the components described here and in Steps 5–6 below.
The first step in developing your marketing
strategy is to identify and assess the following components:
- your organization's main competitors in the country
- the actual and potential size of the market
- market and segment growth
- market and segment profitability
- underlying costs and cost structure
- distribution systems channels
When you have addressed these components in
your marketing strategy, continue to the next step, where you will assess the
characteristics of your organization's potential customers in the selected
country.
As you continue developing your marketing
strategy, the next step is to make recommendations to Gustavo on particular
aspects of your organization's marketing strategy that would be tailored to the
country's market for your organization. Specifically, address the following
components:
- marketing mix in the country
- promotional practices
- pricing
- branding strategies
When you have assessed the characteristics
of your organization's potential customers in the selected country, continue to
the next step, where you will assess your organization's use of web networks
and social media for e-marketing.
In the final step of developing your
marketing strategy, you will assess your organization's use of web networks and
social media for e-marketing, given the unique ways in which computers,
smartphones, the Internet, and social media are used among the country's
consumers. As you undertake this assessment, read more aboutmanagement, strategies, tools, and
practices in e-marketing. To complete this step, address the following components:
·
Prepare market share estimates for your
product or service in the country and revenue forecasts for the near term (6–12
months) and longer term (2–4 years).
·
Provide proper justification for your
projections, such as prior industry performance in terms of unit sales, market
size, and profit margins in the country.
You may submit your marketing strategy
(Steps 4–6) in the box below for feedback. In the next step, you will work on
financial value and strategy implementation.
As you may recall from your meeting with
Gustavo, he wants your estimate of the timeframe needed to break even and
implement your strategy. As you continue developing your business plan for
entering the new country, assess any financial and accounting challenges by
answering the following questions:
·
Examine the financial statements of
competitors in the country. Are there any differences in terms of language,
currency, or the type of statements (income statement, balance sheet, financial
statement format, extent of footnote disclosures, and the underlying GAAP
[generally accepted accounting principles]) between your organization's reports
in the United States and the reports required by law in the country?
ReviewNational Adoption of International
Accounting Standards: An Institutional Perspective.
·
What are the challenges your organization
may face in the country because of its accounting standards?
·
What is the required investment for
relocating your organization's value-chain activities to the country for years
1, 2, and 3? What are the projected savings, if any, for the same time periods?
Provide justification for your estimates.
·
What are your estimates of revenue
projections for your company in the country for years 1, 2, and 3?
After you have assessed the financial and
accounting challenges associated with entering the new country, continue to the
next step, where you will address strategy implementation and control measures.
The next step of developing your business
plan is to address strategy implementation and control measures by discussing
the following components:
·
Specify the major factors to be tracked for
strategy effectiveness using the four perspectives of thebalanced scorecard: learning and growth perspective, business process
perspective, customer perspective, and financial perspective.
·
Specify how your organization will monitor
and report issues with joint-venture partners, subsidiaries, suppliers, and
distributors in the country.
When you have addressed strategy
implementation and control measures, continue to the next step, where you will
make recommendations about your organization's governance and accountability
standards.
As you continue developing your business
plan, next make recommendations about your organization's governance and
accountability standards by answering the following questions:
·
How do your organization'sgovernance and accountability and code of conduct or ethics address risks such as
bribery and corruption? Search for Transparency International's Corruption
Perceptions Index online and make recommendations for changes to the code, if
needed, for operations in the selected country.
·
Do your organization'scorporate social responsibility (CSR) policies address local community interests,
stakeholders' concerns, and supplier relationships? Make recommendations for
CSR changes to the program, if needed.
Your final report should include your
discussion from Steps 7–9 above, an overview of your findings from Week 1 and
Week 2, and anexecutive summary guide.
Steps
|
Content
|
Submit?
|
Graded?
|
Page
limit
|
Week 1 (Week 8 of the course)
Steps 1–3
|
Entry strategy
|
Optional
|
No
|
6–7 pages
|
Week 2 (Week 9 of the course)
Steps 4–6
|
Marketing strategy
|
Optional
|
No
|
6–7 pages
|
Week 3 (Week 10 of the course)
Steps 7-9
|
Financial value and strategy
implementation
|
No
|
No
|
n/a
|
Final report (Week 10 of the
course) Steps 1–10
|
Business plan for entering new
country
|
Required
|
Yes
|
14–15 pages
|
Your final report should follow these
guidelines:
- 14–15 pages, excluding the title page, table of
contents, and reference page
- in-text citations and references should abide by APA
format
- 12-point Times New Roman font
- one-inch margins
- double spaced
Your final report should include the
following components:
- Title page
- states the client company, country, the client's
product or service, type of legal structure, and the selected alliance
partner
- date and your name
- Table of contents
- page numbers for each major section
- Executive summary
- summarizes the results of your analysis and how you
arrived at the recommendation
- belongs on a separate page from the introduction to
the paper
- Start your executive summary as follows: “Business
Plan for [selected client company] to enter [selected country] $(size of
market in US Dollars) market for [product/service] through a [type of
legal structure] with [selected alliance partner].”
- Introduction (first page of paper body)
- states the purpose of the paper
- explains what the paper will do
- introduces the industry, country, and company's
name
- Analyzing organization's resources and capabilities
- choice of a local alliance partner and entry
strategy
- organization's degree of fit with the country
- Understanding your organization's industry
- market analysis
- characteristics of potential customers in the
country
- use of web networks and social media for
e-marketing
- Analyzing country's external environment
- finance and accounting
- strategy implementation
- governance and accountability
- Conclusion
- one- or two-page summary of the recommendations and
rationale
- Reference
- Appendices