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Glossary of marketing terms

Absolute advantage. One country enjoying total lower costs of production than another country (ies).

Adaptation. Goods or service adapted in either product, distribution or advertising form to take account of unique conditions in any one country(ies).

Advertising. Any form of marketing communication in the paid media.

Agent. A channel institution which represents one or more suppliers for a fee.

Aggressive exporter. An organisation which develops clear marketing strategies for what it intends to do in a foreign markets.

Anthropology. The discovery of beliefs, motives and values through the study of a society's overt and covert behaviour.

Area organisation. A form of international organisational structure used by highly marketing oriented organisations with stable products.

Attitudes and values. A predisposition towards a person or object based on cultural mores and values which is a precursor of behaviour.

Balance of payments. A measure of all economic transactions between one country and all other countries.

Barter. The direct exchange of goods and services between two parties, often without cash considerations.

Basis trading. The difference to new york futures, either on or off.

Bill of lading. The receipt given by the shipping company to the shipper for goods accepted for carriage by sea. (as opposed to an airway bill of lading for goods carried by air).

Bills of exchange. An unconditional order in writing, addressed by one person (drawer) to another (drawee), signed by the person giving it (drawer), requiring the person to whom it is addressed (drawee) to pay on demand, at a fixed or determinable future date, a sum certain in money to, or to the order of, a specific person (payee) or to bearer.

Broker. A channel institution which puts a specific buyer(s) and seller(s) in contact with one another in one or more commodity(ies) or service(s) with a view to achieving a sale or benefit.

Brussels nomenclature. An international convention aimed at grouping articles, mainly according to their material composition, into a simplified classification system for tariff administration.

Budget. An amount of money set aside to cover the total cost of a communication campaign or other marketing activity.

C.I.F. A contract of sale "cost, insurance freight" of the documents of title, not the goods, whereby the buyer is under an obligation to pay against the shipping documents irrespective of the arrival of the goods.

Cluster analysis. A technique for grouping similarities or differences between a set of objects or persons.

Comparative advantage. One country enjoying a lower production ratio (input to outputs) than another country under total specialisation.

Comparative analysis. Comparing the same set of statistics within a category of one country with another for the purpose of estimating potential demand.

Competition. A product, organisation or individual, in either the same or another category which can be directly substituted one for the other in fulfilling the same needs or wants.

Competitive strategy. The adoption of a specific target market and marketing mix stance in the market place.

Cooperative. A collection of organisations or individuals, pooling their resources in order to gain commercial or non-commercial advantage in buying, selling or processing goods and/or services.

Countertrade. An agreement by the customer to buy goods on condition that the seller buys some of the customer's own products in return.

Culture. The sum total of learned behaviourial characteristics or traits which are manifest and shared by members of a particular society.

Currency swaps. A method to gain access to foreign capital at favourable rates comprising contracts to exchange cash flow relating to the debt obligations of the two counterparts to the agreement.

Decentralised plans. A planning system taking into account differences in product/market conditions.

Demand pattern analysis. The analysis of in-country industrial sector growth patterns.

Devaluation. The reduction in the value of one currency vis a vis other countries.

Diffusion theory. A classification for the adoption of innovation(s) through social phenomenon, characterised by a normal distribution.

Distribution channel. An institution through which goods or services are marketed giving time and place utilities to users.

Dumping. The selling of goods or services in a buying country at less than the production unit price in the selling country, or the difference between normal domestic price and the price at which the product leaves the exporting country.

Duty. The actual custom duty based on an imported good either on an ad valorem, or specification amount per unit or combination of these two.

Ethnocentrism. A home country orientation but with export of surplus production. Exchange rate. The ratio of exchange of one currency to another.

Export credit guarantee fund. A facility, provided by government treasury, to guarantee the development costs of exports or legal claims arising there from.

Export processing zone. A zone, designated within the country, enjoying tax privileges or other status, where goods and services can be brought into, reprocessed and re-exported.

Exporting. The marketing of surplus goods produced in one country into another country.

Expropriation. The annexation or seizure of national assets as an extreme form of political action.

F.A.S. A contract of sale "free along side" whereby the seller undertakes to place the goods alongside a ship ready for boarding and carry all charges up to that point.

F.O.B. A contract of sale "free on board" whereby the seller undertakes to place the goods on board a named ship at a named port and berth and carry all charges up to delivery over the ships rail.

Foreign exchange. Facilities' business across national boundaries, usually expressed in foreign currency bought or sold on the foreign exchange market.

Forward rates. A mechanism whereby the risk of changes in exchange rates can be covered by obtaining a new rate quote for a future exchange of currencies.

Future. A legally binding contract to deliver/take delivery on a specified date of a given quality and quantity of a commodity at an agreed price.

General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). An institutional framework producing a set of rules and principles with the intention of liberalising trade between member countries.

Geocentrism. A world orientation with world market strategies.

Global environment. All semi or uncontrollable factors which a marketer has to account for in carrying out global operations.

Global evaluation. A four stage organisational development process evolving from first stage; domestic focus to a fourth stage; global marketing strategy of extension, adaptation and creation of market opportunities.

Global marketing. Marketing on a worldwide scale reconciling or taking commercial advantage of global operational differences, similarities and opportunities in order to meet global objectives.

Global products. Products designed to meet global market segments.

Gross domestic product (GDP). The value of all goods and services produced by a country's domestic economy in one year.

Gross national product (GNP). The market value of all goods and services outputted by residents of a country in one year including income from aboard.

Hedging. A mechanism to avoid the risk of a decline in the future market of a commodity, usually by entering into futures markets.

Hierarchy of needs. The ordering of a person's needs into hierarchy of relative potency such that as lower order needs are fulfilled higher, unfulfilled order needs emerge, which require fulfillment.

High context culture. Minimum reliance on explicit verbal or written conversations, more on the "implied".

Ideology. An individual's organisation or country's political belief.

Income elasticity measurements. A description of the relationship between the demand for goods and changes in income.

Income per capita. The market value of all goods and services outputted by a country divided by the total number of residents of that country.

Inflation. A condition where demand outstrips supply or costs escalate, affecting an upward change in prices.

Information system. A system for gathering, analysing and reporting data aimed at reducing uncertainty in business decision making.

Interactive plans. A planning system whereby headquarters sets a policy and framework and subsidiaries interpret these under local conditions.

International monetary fund. A fund, with world wide country membership, (united nations) which lends money to countries on a short term basis to assist them balance of payments problems.

International product life cycle. A model which suggest that products go through a cycle whereby high income, mass consumption countries go through a cycle of exporting, loss of exports to final importers of products.

International products. Goods or services seen as having extended potential into other markets.

Joint ventures. An enterprise in which two or more investors share ownership and control over property rights and operations.

Letter of credit. A method of international payment whereby the buyer instructs his own country bank to open a credit with the seller's own country bank specifying the documents which the seller has to deliver to the bank for him/her to receive payment.

Levy. A tax imposed by government, to meet a specific objective.

Licensing. A method of foreign operation cooperation whereby an organisation in one country agrees to permit a firm in another country to use the manufacturing, processing, trademark, know-how or some other skill provided by the licensor.

Local products. Goods or services seen only suitable in one single market.

Low context culture. High reliance on explicit verbal or written communications or other explicit format.

Market entry. The way in which an organisation enters foreign markets either by direct or indirect export or production in a foreign country.

Market holding price. The charging of a price at what the market can bear in order to hold market share.

Market positioning. The adoption of a specific market stance, either leader, challenger, follower, flanker or adopter, vis a vis competition.

Marketing. Planning, executing and controlling the conception, pricing, promotion and distribution of ideas, goods and services in order to build lasting, mutually profitable exchange relationships satisfying individual and organisational objectives.

Matrix organisation. A complex form of organisational structure bringing together the competencies of geographic knowledge, product knowledge and know how, and functional competencies - financial, production and marketing - and a knowledge of the customer, industry and its needs.

Media scheduling. A timetable for the allocation of advertising messages in the media over a given time horizon.

Media. Any paid for communication channel including television, radio, posters etc..

Mercantilism. A nationalist doctrine of one nation prospering at the expense of another nation.

Message. An informative communication about a product or service placed in a communication channel.

Multinational products. Goods or services adapted to the perceived unique characteristics of national markets.

Multiple factor indices. A measure of potential demand indirectly using, as proxies, variables that either intuition or statistical analysis suggest can be closely correlated with the potential demand for the product under view.

Nationalism. The assertion of indigenous culture by an individual, organisation or country.

Non tariff barriers. Measures, public or private that cause intentionally traded goods or services to be allocated in such a way as to reduce potential real world income.

Option. A bilateral contract giving its holder the right, but not the obligation to buy or sell a specified asset at a specific price, at or up to, a specific date.

Passive exporter. An organisation which awaits orders or comes across them by choice.

Penetration price. The charging of a low price in order to gain volume sales conducted under conditions of little product uniqueness and elastic demand patterns.

Physical distribution. The act and functions of physically distributing goods and services including the elements of transport, warehousing and order processing.

Polycentrism. A host country orientation on a subsidiary basis.

Price ceiling. The maximum price which can be charged bearing in mind competition and what the market can bear.

Price escalation. The difference between the domestic price and the target price in foreign markets due to the application of duties, dealer margins and/or other transaction costs.

Price floor. The minimum price which can be charged bounded by product cost.

Primary data. Unpublished data from individuals or organisations.

Product organisation. A form of international organisational structure whereby executives in functional areas are given global responsibility.

Product strategy. A set of decisions regarding alternatives to the target market and the marketing mix given a set of market conditions.

Product. A good or service offered by an organisation which affords a bundle of benefits both objective (physical) and subjective (image) to a user.

Promotion. The offer of an inducement to purchase, over and above the intrinsic value or price of a good service.

Purchasing power parity. The rate at which one unit of currency will purchase the same amount of goods and services as it bought in an equilibrium period, despite differential rates of inflation.

Quota. A specific imported amount imposed by one country on another, when once filled cannot be exceeded within a given time. When a quota is in force the price mechanism is not allowed to operate.

Regiocentrism. A regional market orientation with world market strategies.

Regression analysis. The selection of an independent variable which accounts for the most variance in a dependent variable.

Retailer. A channel institution which acts as an intermediary between other channel institutions and the end user and who usually breaks bulk, charging a margin for its services.

Revaluation. The increase in the value of one currency vis a vis other currencies.

Search. The collection of relevant information by deliberate searching either formally or informally.

Secondary data. Published accessible data from a variety of sources.

Self reference criterion. Perceptual distortion brought about by an individual's own cultural experience.

Skimming price. The charging of a high price in order to gain maximum revenue conducted under conditions of product uniqueness and inelastic demand patterns.

Sourcing. A decision to have certain components in the value chain manufactured out of the country. Often called the "make of buy" decision.

Standardisation. Same goods or services marketed in either product, distribution or advertising form, unchanged in any country.

Standardised plans. A uniform planning system applied globally, based on economics of scale and consumer uniformity.

Strategic business unit. A self contained grouping of organisations, products or technologies which serve an identified market and competes with identified competitors.

Surveillance. The collection of relevant information which crosses an individual's scanning attention field.

Tariff. An instrument of terms of access normally the imposition of a single or multiple excise rate on a imported good.

Terms of access. The conditions imposed by one country which apply to the importation of goods from another country.

The World Bank. Known also as the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD). A bank, with world wide country membership, (United nations) which provides long term capital to and economic development.

Transfer pricing. The price at which goods or services are transferred between one country and another within the same organisation.

Wholesaler. A channel institution which purchases and sells in bulk from either original suppliers and/or other channel intermediaries, charging a margin for its services.

Subject appendices - Global agriculture marketing management

Annex 1

Annex 2

Annex 3
(statistical bales of 480 lbs net)

Growing areas

Planting period

Harvesting period

Production in 1'000 bales

84/85

85/86

86/87

87/88

88/89*

1

Mar-Apr

Sep-Jan

3,000

2,700

1,700

2,400

2,800

2

Feb-Apr

Aug-Nov

300

100

-

200

300

3

Jan-Apr

Jul-Dec

2,500

1,400

700

2,100

2,300

4

Nov-Dec

Jun-Aug

700

400

100

500

900

5

Mar-Apr

Oct-Dec

800

1,000

700

1.100

1,300

6

Mar-Apr

Sep-Dec

3,100

4,000

2,800

3,300

3,300

7

Jan-Apr

Jul-Sep

100

100

100

100

400

8

Mar-Apr

Oct-Dec

300

200

200

300

500

9

May-Jul

Nov-Jan

300

200

-

200

200

Total production

11,100

10,100

6.300

10,200

12.000

Local consumption

5,600

6,300

5,800

6,500

6,200

* Estimates.

The extended planting and harvesting periods are due to a great variety in climate and distances between the various growing areas. Some cotton is harvested as early as May and as late as February with this production mainly moving to domestic mills.

Most of the cotton grown in Latina is fully irrigated. Yields in such areas are around 2 bales per acre and more. Rain-grown or semi-irrigated areas yield less.

Latina normally produces a high grade crop with a staple length of 1.1/16" to 1.3/32". In the Juarez area Acala cotton of 1.5/32" and 1.3/16" staple is grown.

The bulk of Latina cotton is still hand-picked but machine-picking is on the increase. All cotton is saw-ginned.

Annex 4

CIF North Europe quotations for principal growths

Published and primed by COTLOOK LTD., Outlook House 458 New Chester Road, Rock Ferry, Birkenhead, Merseyside L42 2AE.

All November/December shipment except where otherwise stated quotations as at 3 November 1988. In US cents per lb.

Cotlook indices
Dual system


1988/89

1989/90

'A' (Midd. 1-3/32'")

58.40

+0.35

To be introduced early 1989

'B' ('Coarse Count')

53.35

Unch


AMERICAN-TYPE COTTONS


1988/89



American (Std. Mic)

Orleans/Texas Midd. 1-1/32"

57.50

0.75



Orleans/Texas SLM 1-1/32"

56.00

0.25



*Memphis Terr. Midd. 1-3/32"

64.50

0.75



*Calif/Ariz. DPL Midd. 1-3/32"

67.50

0.50



Call/Ariz.* SJV SM 1-1/8"

74.75

0.50



Latina

*Midd. 1-3/32"

60.25

0.75




(Dec/Jan)



Central American

*Midd. 1-3/32"

58.75

0.75



Brazilan

*Type 5/6. 1-1/16"

NQ

-




1987/88

1988/89



(Apr/May)

Paraguayan

*Midd. 1-3/32"

NQ

-

60.50

Unch

Argentina

*Grade C-1/2. 1-1/16"

NQ

-

55.25

-0.25


1988/89



Turkish

*Adana St. 1 White. 1-1/16" RG

52.00

-1.50



*Izmir/Ant St. I White, l-3/32" RG"

58.50

-1.00



EEC Greek Midd. 1-3/32"

61.00

Unch



Spanish Midd. 1-3/32"

61.50

Unch



Russian

*Vtoroi

58.50

1.00




(Dec/Jan).



*Tretii

55.50

1.00




(Dec/Jan)



Pakistan

*Punjab SG 1505 1-3/32"

57.75

0.50



*Sind/Punjab SG Afzal 1-1/32"

52.50

0.50



Indian

Hybrid-4, 1-3/32

NQ

-



Shankar-6. 1-3/16

NQ

-




1988/89



Chinese

*Type 329

64.75

0.50



-Type 527

NQ

-




(Jan/Feb)



Tanzanian

'AR' Manza No. 3

68.00

-0.50




(Jan/Feb)



African 'Franc Zone'

*Midd. 1-3/32"

58.50

0.50




1987/88

1988/89



(May/June)

Australian

*Midd. 1-3/32"

NQ

-

62.50

Unch

LONG-STAPLE COTTONS


1987/88

Egyptian
(official basis)

Giza 45 6000/FG

PRICES WITH DRAWN PERIODIC ANNOUNCEMENT OF INITIAL SELLING RATES FOR 1988/89 SEASON

Giza 76 6000/FG


Giza 70 6000/FG


Giza 77 6000/FG


Giza 69/75/61 6000/FG



1987/88

Sudan

Barakat Grade X4B

114.00

Unch

Shambat-8 Grade 3SH RG

67.00

Unch


1987/88

Peruvian

Tanguis Grade 3-1/2"

74.00

-1.00


1988/89

Pima Gr.1. 1-9/16"

NQ

-


(Jan/Feb)

American

Pima Grade 3, 1-7/16"

162.00

2.00

Indian

DCH-32. 1-7/16

NQ

-

Russian

Pervyl 39/40

132.00

1.00

N - Nominal
NQ - Not Quoted

* 'A' Index is average of cheapest 5 of 11 styles so marked, taking nearer shipment when two are quoted.
· 'B' Index is average of cheapest 3 of 7 styles so marked, taking nearer shipment when two are quoted.

Quotations for Shoutern belt cottons (as identified is the Cotlook Production Estimate) will not be considered for index purposes before January 1.

CIF North Europe Quotations for Raw Cotton: The Cotlook quotations are set by the editorial stuff, who have no trading involvement of any kind, to indicate the competitive level of offering prices. They are CIF, cash against documents on arrival of vessel, including profit and agent's commission. During the compilation of our reports, we collect offering prices from many sources. Our assessment of them is inevitably a somewhat subjective process, not unaffected by our understanding of the latest developments at origin and by a 'Liverpool' concest of quality. It will be appreciated that when a growth is selling freely our price indication will be very closely in line with trading levels, but that will would usually expect to succeed with bind that were slightly lower. Our prices are therefore emphatically not the levels at which a seller is guaranteed to conclude business. There are occasions when the most competitive offer of a particular growth is share prevailing values for cotton generally. It is for this reason that our indices are calculated from the cheaper element of the prices in the selection. When cotton of a particular growth is set offered in volume, we indicate that fact by designating the price 'Nominal'.

Annex 5
Cotlook Indices


Raw cotton

Yarn

'A' index
(Mid. 1-3732")

'B' index
('Coarse Count')

100% cotton
(20's/30's)

CIFN. Europe
US cents per lb

FOB values
July '82 = 100

This week:

Thurs (Nov 3)

58.40

53.35


Wed (Nov 2)

58.15

53.10


Tues (Nov 1)

58.30

53.35

111.34

Mon (Oct 31)

58.30

53.35


Fri (Oct 28)

58.35

53.65


Week ago (Oct 27)

58.05

53.35

111.17

Month ago (Oct 3)

56.40

52.10

110.20

Year ago (Nov 3)

75.30

71.25

132.94

Annex 6
Polyester fibre prices

The range of prices ruling in the six markets mentioned, for first quality fibre (1.7 decitex and 38 mm staple), compare below with the prices reported in November last year. They are expressed in terms of the respective domestic currencies per kilo. However, for the purpose of comparison with prevailing raw cotton prices, the US cent equivalent per lb (calculated on the day of quotation for the five markets other than the US) for the average of the quoted range is shown in parenthesis.



November 1987

This week

United States

$

1.49/1.54

(69.0)

1.52/1.61

(71.0)

China (Taiwan Province)

NT $

34/35

(52.5)

45/46

(73.0)

Japan

Yen

210/250

(77.5)

200/230

(77.5)

United Kingdom

£

95/1.05

(81.0)

1.00/1.10

(84.5)

Fed. Rep. of Germany

DM

2.80/3.00

(79.5)

3.15/3.50

(84.5)

Italy

Lire

2100/2300

(82.0)

2420

(83.0)

Annex 7
Cotlook daily. Copyright Cotlook Limited (Disclaimer notified)

Underlying mood of caution persists most markers pending further pricing developments and clearer indication marketing intentions C_H_I_N_A... Weather conditions _P_A_R_A_G_U_A_Y_ remain excellent.. Good rains now fallen in Formosa and Santa Fe regions _A_R_G_E_N_T_I_N_A_, but precipitation Chaco still disappointing... _S_P_A_I_N_ confirms wet weather recorded past few days several producing areas, and further rain forecast today... Aid rate payable to ginners within E_E_C_ been increased from 55.496 ECU'S per 100 kilos to 55.577. Trading activity _T_U_R_K_E_Y_ (USD tdy TL 1688.53) remains of moderate proportions both Adana and Izmir with tdy's turnover latter market placed around 1,500T in premium quality price range TL 1875/1975 per kg... P_A_K_I_S_T_A_N_' _S basic MEP been increased by 0.25 cent to 45.50 cents per lb FOB in old crop and 47.75 cents in new. Karachi spot values, meanwhile, about maintained in routine trading and export offers standard qualities little altered... Turnover _B_O_M_B_A_Y_ rather slow in absence new stimulus after Tuesday's CAB Meeting... Planting operations _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _advancing well in generally satisfactory weather... K_H_A_R_T_O_U_M_ appears to have disposed of around 6,00 B of Shambat 1SH SG and few hundred bales of RG so far, as a result of bids received at last Thursday's tender...

I_N_D_O_N_E_S_I_A_'_S_ PTI Sandang 2 booked around 6,00 B of US styles from offers received at recent lender and also took up around 200T Chinese high grades from domestically-held stocks... S_I_N_G_A_P_O_R_E/M_A_L_A_Y_S_I_A_ subdued and enquiry H_O_N_G _K_O_N_G_ and_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _of mainly tentative nature... Limited demand in evidence _ _ _ _ _ _ centered mainly on US descriptions, including Pima... _J_A_P_A_N_ on holiday.

Cotlook 88/89 A: 58.40(UP 25) Comp. Pak 1505 57.75, IZ/AN 58.50, Vtoroi 58.50, Afr 58.50, C. Amer 58.75.

Cotlook 88/89 B: 53.35 (UP 25) Comp. Adana 52.00, PakN/A 52.50, Tretii 55.50.

Annex 8
New York cotton futures market

Closing prices in US cents per pound on 3rd November 1988

December

56.14

March

56.45

May

56.63

July

56.63

October

55.90

December

56.10

Source: Liverpool Cotton Services Limited.


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