SlideShare a Scribd company logo
10 Key Steps To Expanding Your Business
Globally

 Share to email
 Share to facebook
 Share to twitter
 Share to linkedin
 Share to google
AllBusiness We provide expert advice on starting, financing, marketing and managing your
business. Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
Michael Evans , Contributor
By Dennis Day and Michael Evans
"Going global” is defined as the worldwide movement toward economic, financial, trade, and
communications integration. The concept of globalization can be traced back as far as the Roman
Empire. More recently, the concept was popularized by Thomas L. Friedman in his book The World
Is Flat, in which he argued that the pace of globalized trade, outsourcing, and supply-chaining was
speeding up and that its impact on business organizations and business practices would continue
to grow in the 21st century.
For small and emerging businesses, going global is a significant undertaking that could disrupt
existing business activities. Thus, it is for crucial for CEOs and business leaders to understand its full
impact and determine if the rewards outweigh the risks. Stakeholders across the organization will
be called on to carry more responsibilities to continue to execute on day-to-day activities in
addition to the global initiative.
Taking a small business global is an complex and dynamic process. Gaining a deep understanding
of the targeted markets, the competition, current local market trends, and the requirements to
successfully launch and drive growth lays an important foundation.
© bussiclick - Fotolia.com
1. Perform a “Deep Dive” Due Diligence
Before going global, it is critical to understand what the full impact on your business will be.
 Prepare a market segmentation analysis to determine if your product will sell in the local
market.
 Prepare a product gap analysis against local products. Is there a demand that is not
satisfied by a local company?
 Perform a SWOT analysis against competition. Your product will likely be higher priced
than local products. Will the market buy your product?
 Consider market opportunity/sizing. How big is the market and how long will it take you to
capture your targeted sales?
2. Develop a Strategy and Business Plan
Each market has its own nuances due to economic, cultural, governmental, and market conditions.
It is important to develop a localized strategy and business plan that drives local success while
remaining integrated with the overall corporate strategy and objectives.
 Define short-, medium-, and long-term strategy. Set reasonable goals to measure progress
and cost/benefits.
 Define goals, objectives, and success metrics.
 Complete the business model and structure. Decide if you set up a separate company, a
branch, or a sales office.
 Develop a top-down annual budget.
 Develop a tactical project plan with commit dates.
3. Establish a Beachhead Team
Many global companies try to launch with executives from the parent company or rapidly build a
local team from scratch. This is time consuming, risky, and slows time to market. Using proven
senior interim executives allows the company to hit the ground running, quickly validate
assumptions, and drive key readiness initiatives while the company hires the right senior
management team.
 Bring on senior interim executives with deep domain expertise or outsource interim
leadership to executive leadership organizations.
 Establish the financial infrastructure—consider outsourcing this to local service providers.
 Begin the recruiting process for the permanent leadership team.
4. Product Readiness
Based on the product gap analysis, take the necessary steps to market-ready your offerings to
achieve high-impact product differentiation.
 Review government- and industry-specific regulations to ensure that compliance and
certifications are obtained if needed.
 Determine if any localization of the product is needed. Pay close attention to the
translation of the name of your product in the local language.
 Initiate a patent and trademark review—some countries are known for “copying” good
ideas.
 Initiate testing and quality assurance review based on local standards.
 Consider a local logistics and distribution network. Who will sell your product and how will
it get to them?
5. Organizational Readiness
Cultural differences, whether it is language, regulations, or customs, requires a firm to be flexible in
the policies and procedures implemented in an international operation to ensure employees are
engaged and executing on the company’s plans. The “one size fits all” mindset can have short-term
benefits but will have negative long-term effects.
 Evaluate the organization structure needed to successfully execute your strategy.
 Develop policies, procedures, and handbooks that comply with local requirements while
maintaining balance with overall company policies.
 Develop competitive benefits programs to attract qualified local employees.
 Develop competitive compensation packages based on local standards and customs.
 Develop a local information technology infrastructure that is compatible with your
domestic infrastructure.
 Manage payroll and human resource functions—again, a process that lends itself to
outsourcing.
More AllBusiness:
99 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs
The Biggest Mistake I Made in My Business – And What I Learned From It
10 Invaluable Tools for Running a Small Business
The Top 25 Home-Based Business Ideas
6. Establish a Go-to-Market Strategy
The effective selling and marketing of your products or services requires a comprehensive,
cohesive strategy that addresses sales strategy, sales delivery, branding/value proposition,
marketing strategy, marketing programs, and pricing, which together create clear market
differentiators that propel market acceptance and revenue growth.
 Determine your optimum sales model: direct, indirect, OEM, distributor, hybrid?
 Determine your sales methodology: solution, feature, consultative, price?
 Determine if a new brand will be created or whether you will use the parent brand.
 Develop a comprehensive marketing plan and KPIs.
 Evaluate your pricing model—consumers in less developed countries are very price
conscious and your product may not fit the local economic environment.
7. Legal Readiness
Some countries are known for being highly litigious, so it is critical that strong legal processes are
put in place to minimize unnecessary commercial risks. Also, government agencies have strict
requirements that necessitates legal documentation be in place prior to operating within the
country. Being proactive does require money upfront, but this more than offsets downstream risks
and liabilities.
 Create localized commercial agreements.
 Review industry-specific regulations to ensure compliance and certifications are obtained if
needed.
 Perform general corporate services such as dispute resolution, immigration, customs, and
shipping.
 Maintain corporate records and governance—again, an outsourced function might work
well.
8. Tax and Finance Readiness
The proper tax and finance infrastructures need to be set up early on to ensure that you are
receiving timely reporting and that your foreign entity is adhering to local corporate policies and
procedures.
 Consider outsourcing accounting, payroll, and tax.
 Establish local banking relationships.
 Develop a risk management plan.
 Develop a transfer pricing study.
 Develop a cash repatriation plan.
 Prepare and report sales and VAT taxes.
9. Prepare Your Final Budget Preparation
Results from the above steps should provide sufficient data for stakeholders of the foreign
company to develop a final budget that is aggressive yet attainable, and one that will be owned by
your local team.
 Develop a 3-year budget and a 12-month business plan with detailed key performance
indicators, and update every 6 months.
 Perform quarterly operating reviews.
 Establish a real-time (or at least weekly) budget to actual reporting with variance analysis.
10. Establish Close Relationships with Local Businesses
Gain a strong competitive advantage by creating a supporting ecosystem of complimentary
products and services, which can come via third-party relationships. These relationships can
support the scaling of the organization while minimizing the financial risk.
 Negotiate alliance/partner/distributorship programs.
 Develop an ecosystem strategy and business model.
 Build an internal alliance team to manage and foster relationships.
Expanding your business overseas is not for the fainthearted, but for most businesses it will be
inevitable as global markets offer greater opportunities for growth. By paying attention to details
and outsourcing administrative functions, the difficult job of “going global” can produce great
results.
Dennis Day is the Head of Strategic Alliances at TMF Group.
Read all of Michael Evans’ articles on AllBusiness.com.
Related Articles on AllBusiness:
28 Mistakes Entrepreneurs Make When Pitching to Investors
25 Frequently Asked Questions on Starting a Business
9 Key Ways to Prepare for an M&A Transaction
65 Questions Venture Capitalists Will Ask Startups
For local business information on 15 million businesses, visit InBusiness.com.

 Share to email
 Share to facebook
 Share to twitter
 Share to linkedin
 Share to google
 Print
 Website Feedback
 News Tip
 Report Corrections
 Reprints & Permissions
6 Secrets Of Great Resumes, Backed By Psychology
Play Video
Pause
Unmute
0:00
/
1:11
Loaded: 0%
0:00
Progress: 0%
Stream TypeLIVE
-1:11
Share
PlaybackRate
1x
Chapters
 CHAPTERS
Descriptions
 descriptions off, selected
Captions
 captions settings, opens captions settings dialog
 captions off, selected
Audio Track
Fullscreen
Beginning of dialogwindow. Escape will cancel and close the window.
TextColor White Transparency Opaque BackgroundColor Black Transparency
Opaque WindowColor Black Transparency Transparent
Font Size 100% Text Edge Style None Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif
Reset restore all settingsto the default valuesDone
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialogwindow.
Close Modal Dialog
Thisis a modal window. Thismodal can be closed by pressing the Escape key or activatingthe close button.
Cl ose M odal Di al og
T hi s i s a m odal wi ndow. T his m odal can be cl osed by pressi ng the Escape key or acti vati ng the c l ose button.
Play
Mute
0:00
/
0:00
Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
Stream TypeLIVE
0:00
PlaybackRate
1x
Fullscreen
Your Reading List
10 Key Steps To Expanding Y ourBusiness Globally
<img height="1" width="1" alt="" style="display:none"
src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=1494993704116832&amp;ev=PixelInitialized">

More Related Content

10 key steps to expanding your business globally

  • 1. 10 Key Steps To Expanding Your Business Globally   Share to email  Share to facebook  Share to twitter  Share to linkedin  Share to google AllBusiness We provide expert advice on starting, financing, marketing and managing your business. Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own. Michael Evans , Contributor By Dennis Day and Michael Evans "Going global” is defined as the worldwide movement toward economic, financial, trade, and communications integration. The concept of globalization can be traced back as far as the Roman Empire. More recently, the concept was popularized by Thomas L. Friedman in his book The World Is Flat, in which he argued that the pace of globalized trade, outsourcing, and supply-chaining was speeding up and that its impact on business organizations and business practices would continue to grow in the 21st century. For small and emerging businesses, going global is a significant undertaking that could disrupt existing business activities. Thus, it is for crucial for CEOs and business leaders to understand its full impact and determine if the rewards outweigh the risks. Stakeholders across the organization will be called on to carry more responsibilities to continue to execute on day-to-day activities in addition to the global initiative.
  • 2. Taking a small business global is an complex and dynamic process. Gaining a deep understanding of the targeted markets, the competition, current local market trends, and the requirements to successfully launch and drive growth lays an important foundation. © bussiclick - Fotolia.com 1. Perform a “Deep Dive” Due Diligence Before going global, it is critical to understand what the full impact on your business will be.
  • 3.  Prepare a market segmentation analysis to determine if your product will sell in the local market.  Prepare a product gap analysis against local products. Is there a demand that is not satisfied by a local company?  Perform a SWOT analysis against competition. Your product will likely be higher priced than local products. Will the market buy your product?  Consider market opportunity/sizing. How big is the market and how long will it take you to capture your targeted sales? 2. Develop a Strategy and Business Plan Each market has its own nuances due to economic, cultural, governmental, and market conditions. It is important to develop a localized strategy and business plan that drives local success while remaining integrated with the overall corporate strategy and objectives.  Define short-, medium-, and long-term strategy. Set reasonable goals to measure progress and cost/benefits.  Define goals, objectives, and success metrics.  Complete the business model and structure. Decide if you set up a separate company, a branch, or a sales office.  Develop a top-down annual budget.  Develop a tactical project plan with commit dates. 3. Establish a Beachhead Team Many global companies try to launch with executives from the parent company or rapidly build a local team from scratch. This is time consuming, risky, and slows time to market. Using proven senior interim executives allows the company to hit the ground running, quickly validate assumptions, and drive key readiness initiatives while the company hires the right senior management team.  Bring on senior interim executives with deep domain expertise or outsource interim leadership to executive leadership organizations.  Establish the financial infrastructure—consider outsourcing this to local service providers.  Begin the recruiting process for the permanent leadership team. 4. Product Readiness Based on the product gap analysis, take the necessary steps to market-ready your offerings to achieve high-impact product differentiation.  Review government- and industry-specific regulations to ensure that compliance and certifications are obtained if needed.  Determine if any localization of the product is needed. Pay close attention to the translation of the name of your product in the local language.
  • 4.  Initiate a patent and trademark review—some countries are known for “copying” good ideas.  Initiate testing and quality assurance review based on local standards.  Consider a local logistics and distribution network. Who will sell your product and how will it get to them? 5. Organizational Readiness Cultural differences, whether it is language, regulations, or customs, requires a firm to be flexible in the policies and procedures implemented in an international operation to ensure employees are engaged and executing on the company’s plans. The “one size fits all” mindset can have short-term benefits but will have negative long-term effects.  Evaluate the organization structure needed to successfully execute your strategy.  Develop policies, procedures, and handbooks that comply with local requirements while maintaining balance with overall company policies.  Develop competitive benefits programs to attract qualified local employees.  Develop competitive compensation packages based on local standards and customs.  Develop a local information technology infrastructure that is compatible with your domestic infrastructure.  Manage payroll and human resource functions—again, a process that lends itself to outsourcing. More AllBusiness: 99 Inspirational Quotes for Entrepreneurs The Biggest Mistake I Made in My Business – And What I Learned From It 10 Invaluable Tools for Running a Small Business The Top 25 Home-Based Business Ideas 6. Establish a Go-to-Market Strategy The effective selling and marketing of your products or services requires a comprehensive, cohesive strategy that addresses sales strategy, sales delivery, branding/value proposition, marketing strategy, marketing programs, and pricing, which together create clear market differentiators that propel market acceptance and revenue growth.  Determine your optimum sales model: direct, indirect, OEM, distributor, hybrid?  Determine your sales methodology: solution, feature, consultative, price?  Determine if a new brand will be created or whether you will use the parent brand.  Develop a comprehensive marketing plan and KPIs.
  • 5.  Evaluate your pricing model—consumers in less developed countries are very price conscious and your product may not fit the local economic environment. 7. Legal Readiness Some countries are known for being highly litigious, so it is critical that strong legal processes are put in place to minimize unnecessary commercial risks. Also, government agencies have strict requirements that necessitates legal documentation be in place prior to operating within the country. Being proactive does require money upfront, but this more than offsets downstream risks and liabilities.  Create localized commercial agreements.  Review industry-specific regulations to ensure compliance and certifications are obtained if needed.  Perform general corporate services such as dispute resolution, immigration, customs, and shipping.  Maintain corporate records and governance—again, an outsourced function might work well. 8. Tax and Finance Readiness The proper tax and finance infrastructures need to be set up early on to ensure that you are receiving timely reporting and that your foreign entity is adhering to local corporate policies and procedures.  Consider outsourcing accounting, payroll, and tax.  Establish local banking relationships.  Develop a risk management plan.  Develop a transfer pricing study.  Develop a cash repatriation plan.  Prepare and report sales and VAT taxes. 9. Prepare Your Final Budget Preparation Results from the above steps should provide sufficient data for stakeholders of the foreign company to develop a final budget that is aggressive yet attainable, and one that will be owned by your local team.  Develop a 3-year budget and a 12-month business plan with detailed key performance indicators, and update every 6 months.  Perform quarterly operating reviews.  Establish a real-time (or at least weekly) budget to actual reporting with variance analysis. 10. Establish Close Relationships with Local Businesses
  • 6. Gain a strong competitive advantage by creating a supporting ecosystem of complimentary products and services, which can come via third-party relationships. These relationships can support the scaling of the organization while minimizing the financial risk.  Negotiate alliance/partner/distributorship programs.  Develop an ecosystem strategy and business model.  Build an internal alliance team to manage and foster relationships. Expanding your business overseas is not for the fainthearted, but for most businesses it will be inevitable as global markets offer greater opportunities for growth. By paying attention to details and outsourcing administrative functions, the difficult job of “going global” can produce great results. Dennis Day is the Head of Strategic Alliances at TMF Group. Read all of Michael Evans’ articles on AllBusiness.com. Related Articles on AllBusiness: 28 Mistakes Entrepreneurs Make When Pitching to Investors 25 Frequently Asked Questions on Starting a Business 9 Key Ways to Prepare for an M&A Transaction 65 Questions Venture Capitalists Will Ask Startups For local business information on 15 million businesses, visit InBusiness.com.   Share to email  Share to facebook  Share to twitter  Share to linkedin  Share to google  Print  Website Feedback  News Tip  Report Corrections  Reprints & Permissions 6 Secrets Of Great Resumes, Backed By Psychology Play Video Pause Unmute 0:00 /
  • 7. 1:11 Loaded: 0% 0:00 Progress: 0% Stream TypeLIVE -1:11 Share PlaybackRate 1x Chapters  CHAPTERS Descriptions  descriptions off, selected Captions  captions settings, opens captions settings dialog  captions off, selected Audio Track Fullscreen Beginning of dialogwindow. Escape will cancel and close the window. TextColor White Transparency Opaque BackgroundColor Black Transparency Opaque WindowColor Black Transparency Transparent Font Size 100% Text Edge Style None Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Reset restore all settingsto the default valuesDone Close Modal Dialog End of dialogwindow. Close Modal Dialog Thisis a modal window. Thismodal can be closed by pressing the Escape key or activatingthe close button. Cl ose M odal Di al og T hi s i s a m odal wi ndow. T his m odal can be cl osed by pressi ng the Escape key or acti vati ng the c l ose button. Play Mute 0:00 / 0:00 Loaded: 0% Progress: 0% Stream TypeLIVE 0:00 PlaybackRate 1x Fullscreen Your Reading List
  • 8. 10 Key Steps To Expanding Y ourBusiness Globally <img height="1" width="1" alt="" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=1494993704116832&amp;ev=PixelInitialized">