1 Commodity Chains and Marketing Strategies: Nike and the Global Athletic Footwear Industry Miguel Korzeniewicz, Ch. 18, pp. 163-172 (Excerpted from Korzeniewicz,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
On Target Group Coaching
Advertisements

1 Commodity Chains and Marketing Strategies: Nike and the Global Athletic Footwear Industry Miguel Korzeniewicz, Ch. 18, pp (Excerpted from Korzeniewicz,
Overview Commercial Website Sarah Corporation SWOT Analysis Yvonne Competitors Industry Jerel Global Expansion & Challenges Recommendations.
The Environment and Corporate Culture
© 2005 Prentice Hall1-1 Chapter 1 Introduction to Global Marketing Power Point by Kristopher Blanchard North Central University.
Principles of Marketing Lecture-40. Summary of Lecture-39.
Sher-Wood Hockey Stick Global Sourcing
Q1. The Global Commodity Chain links the Core and Periphery, which explains why and how the consumption orientation of the affluent is related to the human.
Goal 1: Define marketing and the marketing process.
What is Marketing? Marketing Defined:
Today’s World Section 1. Today’s World Section 1 Preview Starting Points Map: World Per Capita GDP Main Idea / Reading Focus Economic Interdependence.
Strategic Planning and the Marketing Management Process
Learning Goals Define marketing and the marketing process.
Equilibrium in a Monopolistically Competitive Market
What is Strategy? (Part Two). Key Concepts Managerial Cognition Business Model Stakeholders The Balanced Scorecard.
1 Chapter 14 Marketing. 2 Learning Objectives Suggest how markets for international expansion can be selected, their demand assessed, and appropriate.
SPICE Themes The five AP World History themes serve as unifying threads through which students can examine broader themes throughout each period.  Themes.
The Art and Science of Marketing
Chapter 4 Marketing.
Marketing Management Chapter 1.
3.04 Entrepreneurship 1. Advertising spending: –Third largest expenditure –Growing favoritism toward online Most important online marketing tactics 69%
Los Angeles Transportation Club May 14, 2013 Scott Satterlee C.H. Robinson Senior Vice President.
Tuck School of Business
UNIT F MANAGEMENT OF DISTRIBUTION, PROMOTION, AND SELLING
Strategic Management and the Entrepreneur
Chapter 1Kotabe & Helsen's Global Marketing Management, Third Edition, Global Marketing Management Masaaki Kotabe & Kristiaan Helsen Third Edition.
Development 2.0. Measurements of Development HDI Life Expectancy Literacy Education Standard of living Employment Income Technology Raw Materials Gender.
1 CASA ASIA Economic Congress 2004 ‘The Recovery of the Japanese Economy and Its Influence in Asia’ November, 2004 Takashi FUKAYA.
1-1 Strategic Planning and the Marketing Management Process Chapter 1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights.
The Effects of Globalization. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, the world was divided over a number of political, cultural, and economic issues.
Goal 1: Define marketing and the marketing process.
Introduction to Global Marketing
Ashish Mishra, CEO Strategic Asia, European Office East Asia’s Creative Economy Opportunities and Policy Dimensions.
Marketing environment
Learning Goals Define marketing and the marketing process.
Marketing 420 MKT Contemporary Issues in Marketing.
1.  Market orientation as philosophy  Market segmentation  Targeting market  Positioning  Marketing mix 2.
8-1 Organizational Design and Strategy in a Changing Global Environment Copyright © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.
Competing In Foreign Markets: A Global Perspective on National Challenges By Dr Michael McDermott Northern Kentucky University.
SITUATION ANALYSIS Business Mission Statement Objectives Situation or S.W.O.T. Analysis.
Chapter 12 Global Supply Chain Management. Objectives After reading the chapter and reviewing the materials presented the students will be able to: Explain.
Business in Action 6e Bovée/Thill The Art and Science of Marketing Chapter 13.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1-1 Organizational Theory, Design, and Change Sixth Edition Gareth R. Jones Chapter.
A V O N the company for women Final Presentation December 6, 2010 Jen Callaghan J.R. Longino Rasa Navickaite Meghan Quinn Lia Torre.
Introduction What is Global Marketing?
What is Sport Marketing?
Section B Group 8 Oscar Bernaldez / Pablo Franzini / Masa Kijima Alessandro Piloni / Nikolaos Platis / Iris Tang.
Natasha Chou Spring 2013 Student Managed Investment Fund
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 1-1 Organizational Theory, Design, and Change Sixth Edition Gareth R. Jones Chapter.
© 2005 Prentice Hall 1-1 Chapter 1 Introduction to Global Marketing.
CHAPTER 14: MANAGING BRANDS OVER GEOGRAPHIC BOUNDARIES AND MARKET SEGMENTS L ecture
Sociology of Globalization Commodity Chains and Marketing Strategies: Nike and the Global Athletic Footwear Industry Miguel Korzeniewicz Ludmila Kšicová.
PRODUCT Product is anything that satisfies human wants.
Marketing : Chapter one Reviewing Objectives and Key Terms Dr. Mazen Rohmi.
1 MARKETING AND MARKETING MANAGEMENT Module 1. 2 Objectives Defining marketing and marketing management The scope of marketing Some fundamental marketing.
5 Themes of AP World History
Marketing: Managing Profitable Customer Relationships
MGT301 Principles of Marketing
Marketing Management Lecture 1 Introduction to Marketing Management
Strategy in a Changing Global Environment
Marketing: Managing Profitable Customer Relationships
5 Themes of AP World History
The value creation as a process
5 Themes of AP World History
FMA 601 Foreign Market Analysis
EU GATEWAY TO KOREA Facilitating long-lasting business collaborations
Chapter 14 Marketing.
Global Strategies and the Multinational Corporation
By: Nekera Bond & Brianna Jackson
Marketing: Managing Profitable Customer Relationships
Presentation transcript:

1 Commodity Chains and Marketing Strategies: Nike and the Global Athletic Footwear Industry Miguel Korzeniewicz, Ch. 18, pp (Excerpted from Korzeniewicz, “Commodity Chairs and Marketing Strategies…,” in Gereffi & Korzeniewicz, eds., Commodity Chains and Global Capitalism,1994)

2 Global Commodity Chains (GCC) GCC: the complex global network of economic links which ties together groups, organizations, and regions involved in the production and distribution of goods GCC analysis is a development of the world- system or global-system perspective (which, themselves grow out of dependency theory) (Gereffi & Korzeniewicz, eds., Commodity Chains and Global Capitalism, 1994)

3 GCC challenges idea that “development” in capitalism is contained within nation-states Development in context of capitalism is a global process GCC tracks the organizational, geographical, & cultural dimensions of world-wide chains for the manufacture & distribution of goods e.g.,clothing, automobiles, food, & drugs (Gereffi & Korzeniewicz, eds., Commodity Chains and Global Capitalism, 1994)

4 Focusing on the distribution segment of GCC Inadequate attention has been paid to the design, distribution and marketing nodes within a GCC Yet these are often the sources of innovation that allows firms to capture greater shares of wealth in a commodity chain

5 Athletic footwear market shows how GCCs are embedded in cultural trends Marketing & consumption patterns in “core” shape production patterns in peripheral and semi-peripheral countries The social organization of advertising, fashion, and consumption shapes the networks & nodes of GCCs

6 Trends in the US Athletic Shoe Market Continued phenomenal rates of growth Highly segmented by consumer age groups Teenagers the most important consumers Athletic shoes constructed and promoted among teens as important & visible symbol of social status and identity

7 Sports footwear market highly segmented by: Consumer age group Model/target sport Price Price rather than appearance & functionality is the key factor differentiating athletic shoes as status symbols

8 Nike Corporation has become the largest and most important sneaker company in the US In 2004, Nike’s share of market is 42% # 2: Adidas (27%) # 3: Reebok (12%)

9 The key to Nike’s rise? ability to capture a succession of nodes along GCC, increasing its expertise and control over critical areas: design distribution marketing advertising

10

11 The most fundamental industry innovation is the creation of a market constructing a convincing world of symbols, ideas, and values harnessing the desires of individuals to the consumption of athletic shoes (165)

12 Capitalism and Commodity Fetishism – Marx (1867) Fetishism, in ancient religions, meant the belief that inanimate objects such as icons, trees, clouds, etc., possess human properties Fetishism is the belief that natural objects have supernatural powers, or that something created by people has power over people In Marx's critique, commodity fetishism denotes the mystification of human relations said to arise out of the growth of capitalism, when social relationships between people are expressed as, mediated by and transformed into, objectified relationships between things (commodities and money) links the subjective aspects of economic value (exchange value) to its objective aspects (use value) subjective=brand (image) vs. objective=product (uses) In this formulation, Marx attempted to capture the essential nature of all ideological illusions of bourgeois society

13 Pd. 1: Gaining control over import & distribution nodes of GCC ( ) Nike sells tens of millions of sneakers in the US annually, yet all manufacturing operations are conducted overseas From the start Nike imports shoes from Japan Nike concentrates its design, distribution, and marketing activities in the US

14 Nike is the archetype of a global sourcing strategy: subcontracting Nike originated by importing shoes from Japan It has subcontracted nearly all of its production overseas ever since Nike’s VP for Asia-Pacific: “We don’t know the first thing about manufacturing.”

15 Pd. 2: Marketing as an upgrading strategy ( ) Nike enhances competitive position by extending control to marketing Nike redesigns subcontracting strategy to seize new opportunities in Southeast Asia First in South Korea & Taiwan Later, China, Thailand, and Indonesia

16 Pd. 3: Design, advertising, and return to the semiperiphery (post-1985) Another period of high growth based on innovations in product design and advertising “Air Nike” comes out Nike signs its most popular endorser, Michael Jordan Continued targeting new niche markets e.g., aerobics & athletic apparel Subcontracting strategy changes again returns to South Korea for more specialized, sophisticated, and experienced manufacturers

17 Conclusions Case study confirms a division of labor between core & peripheral/semi-peripheral countries Core specializing in services Periphery/semi-periphery specializing in manufacturing Korean and Chinese firms produce the actual shoe, as US-based Nike promotes the symbolic nature of the shoe–and appropriates the greater share of value from sales