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8: Preparing your export plan > Preparing an export
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The
export product
Introduction
Central to any corporate business plan are
the profit-making prospects of a company's various activities.
As profits cannot be achieved without a product or range
of products (or services) which satisfy the constantly changing
desires and needs of customers, an effective product strategy
is crucial to the success of an enterprise. The firm's product
strategy is also a fundamental component of the firm's overall
marketing mix. The promotion of an unacceptable product
could lead to initial purchases but will fail to achieve
the all-important repeat business.
Defining a product
Essential to the success of any product strategy
is an understanding of what, in marketing terms, constitutes
a product. A product can be defined as 'the total utility
or satisfaction that a buyer (the customer) receives as
a result of a lease or purchase'. Thus a product is not
merely viewed as a collection of materials but rather as
the means whereby a company turns its resources into satisfying
customer needs in order to achieve profits and growth.
According to Peter Drucker in Management:
Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices:
It is the customer who determines what a business
is. It is the customer alone whose willingness to
pay for a good or service converts economic resources
into wealth and things into goods. What a business
thinks it produces is not of first importance -
especially not to the future of the business and
to its success. What the customer thinks he is buying,
what he considers value, is decisive - it determines
what a business is, what it produces and whether
it will prosper. And what the customer buys and
considers value is never a product. It is always
utility, that is, what a product or service does
for him.
Product components
A product can be broken down into four specific
components:
- The tangible goods or services offered to the buyer
- The packaging, labelling, trademark, brand name and
all other aspects of a product's package
- The services that accompany the product, e.g. the instructions,
warranties, delivery, installation, repair and maintenance
and the availability of spare parts
- The benefit which the buyer expects to receive from
the purchase
Products - satisfying needs
The primary objective of marketing is to give
the customer whatever (s)he wants in a purchase. Theodore
Levitt, a well-known management author, remarked that what
customers want when they buy quarter-inch drills are quarter-inch
holes. In other words, the drill itself is only a means
to an end. The lesson here for the drill manufacturer is
that if the entrepreneur really believes the business is
the manufacture of drills rather than, say, the manufacture
of the means of making holes in materials, (s)he is in grave
danger of going out of business as soon as a better means
of making holes is invented.
EXAMPLE
Needs differ, therefore products must
differ
Customers' needs and the benefits they perceive
resulting from their purchases will often vary significantly
according to the level of economic development of the countries
in which they reside, as well as the social and cultural
environments in which they operate. The adaptation of such
benefits may be necessary if a product is to meet a particular
culture's needs and changes may have to be made to any one,
or all, of product's features. For example, the introduction
of personal care items to a culture that prefers that body
functions remain private can upset locally accepted values.
Product resistance because of cultural differences has been
evidenced in nearly very country in the world.
Insurance, for example, has been difficult
to introduce into Muslim countries because they believe
it to be associated with usury and gambling. Many people
avoid pork because of their beleifs, while the Japanese
tend to be averse to body jewellery. The French proved unexpectedly
hostile to frozen foods when they were first introduced.
Exporters could thus find themselves selling
very different products in foreign markets from those sold
domestically. Alternatively, the firm may not sell a product
at all and instead, could sell the rights to brands and
trademarks, know-how and patents on products or processes
(licensing), or could sell services such as skills in research,
design, production, marketing or general management.
Factors to consider in preparing a product
strategy for export markets
In preparing a product strategy of export
markets, there are a number of factors that you need to
consider. These include:
- Product modification - adaptation versus standardisation
of your product
- New product development
- Eliminating obsolete products
- Product design and quality
- The production process
- Packaging for exports
- Labelling for exports
- Product brands and trade marks
- Product servicing
Preparing a product strategy statement for your export
plan
These issues we discuss in detail in subsequent sections.
Once you have worked through these various issues, you should be able
to prepare a statement outling your export product strategy. This statement
should address the issues outlined above, namely; whether you will be
adapting your product for the export market; whether there are any mandatory
design or standards you need to adhere to; what product quality levels
you hope to achieve; whether you will need to redsign the product; whether
you need to adapt the production process within your factory; whether
you will promote a specific brand; whether will you register this brand;
whether you need to make use of special packing and/or labelling; and
what servicing you will provide your foreign customer.
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