← Unit 3: Business diversification
Topic 2: Entering global markets
Market entry strategies for global diversification - exporting (direct and indirect), licensing, franchising, joint venture, foreign direct investment (greenfield and acquisition) - and the risk-return profile of each
A focused answer to the QCE Business Unit 3 dot point on global market entry. Exporting (direct/indirect), licensing, franchising, joint venture, foreign direct investment (greenfield and acquisition), the risk-return profile of each, and worked Australian examples from BHP, Cochlear, Atlassian and Bunnings.
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What this dot point is asking
QCAA wants you to know the major market entry strategies for global diversification, the risk-return profile of each, and how to recommend an entry mode for a specific scenario. Both IA2 (business report) and the EA extended response commonly test market-entry strategy choice.
The answer
The market entry spectrum
Market entry strategies vary along a spectrum from low-commitment (low risk, low control, low return) to high-commitment (high risk, high control, high return).
Low commitment <----------------------------------> High commitment
Indirect Export | Direct Export | Licensing | Franchising | Joint Venture | FDI (acquisition) | FDI (greenfield)
A business typically moves along the spectrum as it learns the market and as growth justifies deeper investment.
Exporting
Selling goods or services produced in Australia to overseas customers.
- Indirect exporting
- Sell through an Australian-based export trading company that handles overseas marketing and distribution. Lowest cost and risk; lowest control and learning.
- Direct exporting
- Sell directly to overseas customers, often through an overseas-based distributor or agent. Higher cost than indirect; more market knowledge and brand control.
- Example
- Australian wine producers commonly use direct exporting to Asian markets - the Australian winery contracts with a Singapore- or Hong Kong-based distributor who imports, holds, markets and sells to retail and on-trade customers.
Licensing
The Australian business (licensor) grants an overseas business (licensee) the right to use its IP (technology, brand, patent, design) in exchange for licence fees and royalties.
Low capital commitment; medium-high control through licensing terms; modest return per market but scalable across many markets.
Example. Many Australian biomedical research outputs are commercialised internationally through licensing - a licensing agreement between an Australian university and an overseas pharmaceutical company is a common path. The CSIRO has historically used licensing to commercialise inventions.
Franchising
The Australian franchisor grants an overseas franchisee the right to operate a business under the franchisor's brand and system, with initial fee plus royalties.
Faster market expansion than company-owned; lower capital from the franchisor; risk of operational and brand control.
Example. Domino's Pizza Enterprises (Australian-listed, originally franchised in from the US, now exports the model to Asia and Europe). Boost Juice (founded in Melbourne) franchises through Retail Zoo to multiple international markets.
Joint venture
The Australian business partners with an overseas business to form a new jointly-owned entity that serves the overseas market. Each partner typically contributes capital, capability, or market access.
Moderate capital commitment; shared risk and control; brings local market knowledge through the partner; partner relationship is a key risk.
Example. BHP and Mitsubishi Corporation jointly own BMA (BHP Mitsubishi Alliance), Australia's largest coal producer, with significant operations in central Queensland. The JV structure combines BHP's mining capability with Mitsubishi's market access to Japan and other Asian buyers.
Foreign direct investment
The Australian business establishes or acquires a wholly-owned subsidiary in the overseas market.
- Greenfield FDI
- Building a new operation from scratch. Highest control, slowest, requires deep capital. Used when the business has unique capabilities or IP and needs full control.
- Acquisition FDI
- Buying an existing overseas business. Faster than greenfield, brings existing operations and staff, integration risk.
- Examples
- Greenfield. BHP's investment in the Spence copper mine in Chile. Cochlear's manufacturing facilities in the US for closer customer proximity.
- Acquisition. Westfield Group's pre-2018 acquisitions of US shopping malls. Macquarie's continuous acquisition of infrastructure assets globally (energy, transport, telecoms).
Risk-return profile
| Strategy | Capital required | Control | Risk | Return per market | Learning |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indirect export | Very low | Very low | Very low | Low | Very low |
| Direct export | Low | Low-mod | Low | Moderate | Moderate |
| Licensing | Very low | Mod | Low | Low-mod | Low |
| Franchising | Low | Mod | Mod | Moderate | Moderate |
| Joint venture | Mod-high | Shared | Moderate | High (shared) | High |
| FDI greenfield | Very high | Full | High | Highest | Highest |
| FDI acquisition | Very high | Full | High | High | High |
Choice criteria
The right strategy depends on:
- Market size and growth. Larger and faster-growing markets justify deeper commitment.
- Capability transferability. If the Australian business's competitive advantage is IP-based (Cochlear, Atlassian), FDI or licensing fits; if relationship-based, JV or franchising may suit.
- Market knowledge. Less-known markets favour low-commitment entry first, with stepping-up as knowledge builds.
- Regulatory restrictions. Some markets restrict foreign ownership (China, India in certain sectors), making JV the only practical FDI mode.
- Time horizon. Fast revenue need favours exporting; long-term presence justifies FDI.
- Capital availability. Capital-constrained businesses favour franchising and licensing; capital-rich businesses can fund FDI.
Worked Australian examples
- Atlassian
- Built initial international revenue through online direct export (no physical presence, customers self-served online). Followed with FDI greenfield - offices in San Francisco, Amsterdam, Bengaluru, Manila for sales, engineering and customer-success teams. The phased approach matched investment to revenue growth.
- Cochlear
- Combination strategy. Direct export through regional sales offices; FDI greenfield (manufacturing in the US) for the world's largest cochlear-implant market; partnerships with surgeons and hospitals globally.
- Bunnings
- Attempted FDI by acquisition with the Homebase UK acquisition (2016) which failed and was sold at a substantial loss in 2018. The failed entry illustrates the FDI-acquisition risk - acquired businesses may not respond to the home-market playbook.
- Boost Juice
- Used franchising for international expansion through parent company Retail Zoo, building international presence with limited Boost capital but with the consistency risks inherent in franchising.
Past exam questions, worked
Real questions from past QCAA papers on this dot point, with our answer explainer.
2024 QCAA6 marksCompare three market entry strategies an Australian business could use to enter a new overseas market. Recommend one for a Brisbane-based food brand entering Singapore.Show worked answer →
A 6-mark answer needs three strategies, the comparison, and a justified recommendation.
- 1. Indirect exporting
- The business sells through an Australian export intermediary (an export trading company) that handles the overseas marketing and distribution. Lowest cost and risk; lowest control and learning.
- 2. Direct exporting
- The business sells directly to overseas customers, often through a Singapore-based distributor or agent. Higher cost than indirect; more market knowledge and brand control.
- 3. Joint venture (JV)
- The business partners with a Singapore-based business to form a new entity that serves the Singapore market. Each partner contributes capital, capability or market access. Mid-level cost and commitment; brings local market knowledge and partner relationships.
- Comparison
Risk: indirect export (lowest) - direct export (low-moderate) - JV (moderate-high, partner relationship risk plus capital).
Return: indirect export (lowest) - direct export (higher margin retained) - JV (potentially highest if successful, shared with partner).
Speed: indirect export (fastest) - direct export (moderate) - JV (slowest to set up).
Control: indirect export (lowest) - direct export (moderate) - JV (shared).
Learning: indirect export (lowest) - direct export (moderate) - JV (highest, particularly on the Singapore market).
Recommendation for the Brisbane food brand. Direct exporting in year 1-2 (test market, build distributor relationship, learn) followed by a JV in year 3+ if growth justifies deeper investment. Phased approach manages risk while building toward committed presence. Avoid FDI until proven; indirect exporting forgoes too much margin given Singapore's accessibility.
Markers reward (1) three distinct strategies, (2) the comparison across risk, return, control, learning, (3) a justified recommendation linked to the scenario.
2023 QCAA5 marksExplain franchising as a market entry strategy. Discuss the risks and benefits using an Australian example.Show worked answer →
A 5-mark answer needs the definition, risks and benefits, and a worked example.
Franchising. A franchisor grants a franchisee the right to operate a business under the franchisor's brand, system and intellectual property, in exchange for an initial franchise fee and ongoing royalties. The franchisee typically owns the local operation but operates under the franchisor's rules.
Benefits to the franchisor.
- Rapid market expansion with limited capital - the franchisee provides the capital for the local operation.
- Local market knowledge and operational presence through franchisees who know their market.
- Recurring royalty revenue with relatively low ongoing cost.
- Faster scaling than company-owned expansion.
Risks to the franchisor.
- Loss of operational control over local execution; poor franchisees can damage brand.
- Franchisee disputes and litigation; the Australian Franchising Code of Conduct creates obligations and disclosure requirements.
- Difficulty maintaining quality and consistency at scale.
Australian example. Domino's Pizza Enterprises (ASX-listed in Australia) uses franchising as its dominant market-entry model in Australia, NZ, France, Germany, Japan and the Benelux. Most stores are franchisee-operated, with Domino's providing brand, technology, marketing and supply chain. The model has supported rapid international expansion but has also been controversial - franchisee disputes over royalty levels and underpayment of franchisee staff have led to ACCC enforcement and franchisee-led class actions in recent years.
Markers reward (1) clear definition of franchising, (2) at least two benefits and two risks, (3) a worked Australian example showing both sides.
Related dot points
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A focused answer to the QCE Business Unit 3 dot point on competitive markets and Porter's five forces. Market structures, the five forces with Australian applications, and how competitive intensity drives the diversification decision, with worked examples from Australian supermarkets, banks and miners.
- Financial ratio analysis to inform diversification decisions - profitability ratios (gross profit, net profit, return on equity), liquidity ratios (current, quick), efficiency ratios (asset turnover, accounts receivable turnover) and gearing ratios (debt to equity); interpretation of ratios in context
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