A 5 WAYS TO ENTER
BUSINESS INTO INTERNATIONAL MARKET
It is essential, before entering a foreign market to clearly
identify the motivations behind your decision to explore entering the
international marketplace. Examine what your domestic marketing strategy has
been and how the domestic plan employed by your company on a local level needs
to be tailored to be positively received in the proposed international
territory.
Here are five tips to help prepare your business to enter the
international market:
1. Educate yourself on the customs
and business etiquette of the international market. When entering a foreign
market make sure you know the country’s history, the proper way to greet
someone, the ordinary times for lunch (or prayer in many African, Asian and
Middle-Eastern countries). Make sure you are communicating with them in the
expected way within their society example with the appropriate salutation.
2. Gather historical data on the
country’s currency value fluctuation and import/export timelines. This is crucial.
The deal you discuss today may not be executed in time to reap the full
potential of the opportunity. You could be
negotiating a deal that may cost 15 percent more in a few months when the
transaction is finalized. Worse yet, you may offer a promotion that costs you
significantly more a week into the offering. Lock in currency rates and
delivery dates in advance whenever possible. The less speculation, the better.
3. Become an expert on the
country’s laws governing business. Have local representation if possible, someone
who can help you navigate any unforeseen obstacles and explain all contract
provisions and terminology. Know and understand the laws and legalese of the
jurisdiction that governs your contract before it becomes legally binding.
4. Conduct focus groups to test the
waters in the prospective international market. Understanding each
country’s culture means you have to find ways to reach what would otherwise be
the same demographic but in a different location. A new approach may be needed
to make your product or service suitable to the needs and expectations of the
potential foreign market and its culture. Studying these countries, including
their professional and personal customs, will ensure that you conduct yourself
in a respectful way. This will also signal to the business leaders and
potential customers in the new market that you know their protocol and you’ve
take the time to adapt to it.
5. Find out what your competition
has done in the same territory. Has one of your competitors tried to enter this
market before? What obstacles did they face? How did they approach the new
market? And most importantly, what would you do differently?
When working on building
your brand’s international presence and market-share make sure that you’re
thinking globally and creating a comprehensive strategy. The extra level
of insight and understanding you bring to the table will signal to your target
market and potential clients that you’ve done your homework. Put yourself in
the shoes of your new market. The results will be an intuitive mindset and
behavior that will show the foreign marketplace that you know how to acclimate
yourself and your company to their culture.
By Mkula Dennis
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