The international push toward economic, financial, commercial, and communications integration is referred to as "going global." Globalization may be traced all the way back to the Roman Empire. Thomas L. Friedman popularized the term in his book The World Is Flat, in which he stated that globalized commerce, outsourcing, and supply-chaining were speeding up and that their impact on business organizations and practices would continue to rise in the twenty-first century.
Going global is a huge undertaking for small and young firms that could disrupt current operations. As a result, it is critical for CEOs and corporate executives to fully comprehend its implications and assess whether the benefits outweigh the risks. Stakeholders from across the company will be asked to take on greater duties in order to continue with day-to-day operations while also working on the global project.
The process of taking a small firm global is complex and dynamic. Gaining a thorough awareness of the target markets, the competition, current local market trends, and the prerequisites for launching and growing a business is critical.
1. Conduct due diligence on a "Deep Dive" basis.
Before expanding worldwide, you must first determine the full extent of your company's influence.
- Prepare a market segmentation research to see if your product will sell in your neighborhood.
- Prepare a product gap analysis comparing imported and domestic items. Is there a requirement that a local company cannot meet?
- Conduct a SWOT analysis of the competitors. Your goods will almost certainly be more expensive than similar products available locally. Will your product sell in the market?
- Consider market size and opportunity. What is the size of the market, and how long will it take you to reach your sales goals?
2. Create a business plan and a strategy.
Due to economic, cultural, governmental, and market conditions, each market has its own quirks. It's critical to create a localized strategy and business plan that supports local success while maintaining aligned with the company's overarching goals and objectives.
- Define your short, medium, and long-term goals. Set attainable targets to track progress and assess the cost-benefit ratio.
- Define your objectives, goals, and success criteria.
- Completion of the business strategy and structure is required. Choose whether to start a new firm, a branch or a sales office.
- Create a yearly budget from the top down.
- Create a tactical project plan with deadlines.
3. Form a beachhead team.
Many multinational corporations attempt to launch with executives from the parent firm or to quickly assemble a local team from the ground up. This takes time, is risky, and slows the time to market. While the company employs the right senior management team, using proven senior interim leaders allows the company to strike the ground running, swiftly validate assumptions, and accelerate important readiness projects.
- Recruit senior interim executives with extensive topic knowledge, or outsource interim leadership to executive leadership organizations.
- Establish a financial infrastructure—outsource this to local service providers if possible.
- Begin the process of hiring a permanent leadership team.
4. Product Reliability
Take the necessary steps to market-ready your offerings based on the product gap analysis to create high-impact product differentiation.
- Examine government and industry-specific regulations to guarantee compliance and, if necessary, certifications.
- Determine whether the product needs any localization. Pay great attention to how your product's name is translated into the local tongue.
- Start a patent and trademark search—some countries have a reputation for "copying" brilliant concepts.
- Begin testing and quality assurance reviews in accordance with local norms.
Source : Forbes