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Top 10
International Marketing Mistakes...!
By Azaz Motiwala
The best reason for exporting a product or service is to
globalize your company and prosper in the millennium. It can
happen for you, but you will probably need to evolve a whole
new set of business attitudes and assumptions. If you want
to achieve success with your export sales efforts, then
check yourself on whether you are currently committing the
following ten mistakes to global sales failure:
1. "I have all kind of products to offer."
All I need to hear is what my customer wants." A businessman
interested in exporting auto parts to the Orient told me
that he had the resources to furnish literally any
automobile product that a customer wanted. I said, "That
type of thinking won't work." He was taken aback, but
persisted, "You don't get it. My company works with hundreds
of suppliers. If your customer wants bearings, we can get it
for you." I responded, "You don't get it. The customers
aren't supposed to lead us. We're supposed to lead the
customers!" This clearly came as a big surprise to him, and
maybe to you, too -- but this is the kind of thinking that
succeeds.
Focus and lead your customer like they have never been led
before. Have them beg for your bundle of clear-cut product
or service ideas. Take them to where they didn't even know
they could go in terms of satisfaction, increased sales and
profitability.
2. "My product price is really a very competitive."
Customers in Middleeast and other South African countries
pay attention to packaging first, quality next and price
last. Set your priorities accordingly. Create a package
design or service concept that speaks for itself, and
quality that leaves no room for competitive comparison. From
there it's only a matter of details to wrap up a sale.
3. "That looks like a good foreign lead. Let's respond to
it!"
I knew of a small company who occasionally received
international inquiries. They determined the importance of
the inquiries by the styling of their corporate letterhead.
Four-color shiny graphics received the utmost attention.
Plainly designed stationery was literally thrown out. You
can imagine the professional consequences of this
willingness to be impressed by snappy presentations at the
expense of substance. Little did they know that most large,
sophisticated and extremely busy companies typically
communicate on whatever piece of paper they have at the
moment and generally use no more than about ten words.
Ostentation is out -- making things happen is in.
4. "Let's try exporting our product/service to a bunch of
foreign markets."
Wrong! Pick a product/service and pick a market. Then stick
to it. You need to put on your mental blinders and ignore
distractions, channel your energies, and define the
territory in which you're going to play. It takes a lot of
discipline to resist the scattershot approach to doing
business and stay focused, but after awhile the discipline
becomes automatic. Focus, focus, focus. Persist, persist,
persist.
5. "I'm really interested in exporting my products but
I'm not going to make any changes in it."
You must tailor your product to meet the needs of the
customer. Forcing a customer to buy what you have available
with little or no willingness on your part to make
improvements is not just insensitive but downright hostile.
Marketing has come a long way since the days of Henry Ford,
who said, "The customer can have a car painted any color
that he wants, so long as it is black."
6. "Let's respond to the customer's interest and then
wait a couple of weeks to follow-up."
Put yourself in the customer's shoes. Would you want to be
treated that way? Service brings satisfaction and
satisfaction brings trial orders followed by repeat orders.
Anything less than immediate and consistent service only
wastes your time -- and that of your prospective customer!
7. "I know my product/service works well here in the
India, so I'm certain it will fly overseas."
Just because your product/service is needed here in the
India does not by any means indicate that it will be
well-received in a foreign country. You must always check
with either your prospective customer (let them review it at
no charge) or a local foreign consulate to see if they can
help you determine if your service makes sense for their
host country.
8. "I can't afford a trip to visit my customers. Besides,
I wouldn't know my way around."
You can't afford not to meet with prospective customers
because, without face-to-face contact, there will be no
business. Off course there is no need to travel overseas
countries until you get associated with at least one
importer/buyer in respective country. Once you get
associated with customer, ask if you may visit them and if
they would be so kind as to assist you on your first visit.
You will be surprised at how gracious people really are, and
how eagerly they welcome the opportunity to show you around
their native land! Customers matter -- I can't repeat it
often enough. The personal meeting is the best way to
demonstrate your professional commitment.
9. "We appointed an exclusive agent, yet didn't get any
sales."
When exporting a product, it is a smart practice to ask a
distributor what they anticipate selling in the first year.
Then, request that their first order be 20% of that
anticipated volume, prepaid, which allows them the
opportunity to have exclusivity. You should expect the
balance of projected sales to be ordered during the rest of
the year (preferably in quarterly periods), with each
subsequent order minimally the size of their first one. This
allows you to monitor and exercise good control over the
distributor's sales.
10. "When our domestic sales slide, that's when we should
work hard at getting foreign sales."
Going global is a commitment -- not something you work at
one day and forget about the next. It's an investment in
your company's future that deserves your consistent
attention regardless of how well you're doing domestically.
If you have patience and perseverance, then your chances of
success will be excellent.
If you're open to changing the way you think about global
marketing, you've already made a good beginning. Now you are
ready to achieve success in export markets.
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About Author
Azaz Motiwala is an
International Marketing Consultant and CMD of
IKON Marketing Consultants India a leading marketing
consultancy company assisting corporate companies and SMEs
with expert advices and solutions on various areas of
marketing.
http://www.ikonmarket.com
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