Small Business Dilemma: Developing a Multinational Sporting Goods Corporation
Last month, Jim Logan completed his undergraduate degree in finance and decided to pursue his dream of managing his own sporting goods business. Logan had worked in a sporting good shop while going to college, and he had noticed that many customers wanted to purchase a low-priced football. However, the sporting goods store where he worked, like many others, sold only top-of-the-line footballs. From his experience, Logan was aware that top-of-the-line footballs had a high markup and that a low-cost football could possibly penetrate the U.S market. He also knew how to produce footballs. His goal was to create a firm that would produce low-priced footballs and sell them on a wholesale basis to various sporting goods stores in the U.S. Unfortunately, many sporting goods stores began to sell low-priced footballs just before Logan was about to start his business. The firm that began to produce the low-cost footballs already provided many other products to sporting goods stores in the U.S and therefore had already established a business relationship with these stores. Logan did not believe that he could compete with this firm in the U.S market.
Rather than pursue a different business, Logan decided to implement his idea on a global basis. While football (as it is played in the U.S) has not been a traditional sport in foreign countries, it has become more popular in some foreign countries in recent years. Furthermore, the expansion of cable networks in foreign countries would allow for much more exposure to U.S football games in those countries in the future. To the extent that this would increase the popularity of football (U.S style) as a hobby in the foreign countries, it would result in a demand for footballs in foreign countries. Lagon asked many of his foreign friends from college days if they recalled seeing footballs sold in their home countries. Most of them said they rarely noticed footballs being sold in sporting goods stores but they expected the demand for footballs to increase in their home countries. Consequently, Lagon decided to start a business of producing low-priced footballs and exporting them to sporting goods distributors in foreign countries. Those distributors would then sell the footballs at the retail level. Logan planned to expand his product line over time once he identified other sports products that he might sell to foreign sporting goods stores. He decided to call his business “Sports Exports Company”. To avoid any rent and labor expenses, Lagon planned to produce the footballs in his garage and to perform the work himself. Thus, his main business expenses were the cost of the materials used to produce footballs and expenses associated with finding distributors in foreign countries who would attempt to sell the footballs to sporting goods stores.