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Elements and Performance Criteria

  1. Collect market intelligence
  2. Review current business performance and capability
  3. Evaluate the specific market
  4. Document how business can meet current and emerging needs of the target market

Required Skills

Required skills

analytical skills to evaluate current business performance

culturally appropriate communication skills to relate to people from diverse backgrounds and people with diverse abilities

evaluation and assessment skills to gather and analyse international market and business requirements when creating market forecasts

forecasting skills

literacy skills to write reports with complex ideas and concepts

market analysis skills

technology skills to use a range of software to create forecasts

Required knowledge

cultural historical political economic and general knowledge of international events that may have an impact on international business activity

market analysis tools

identification and overview knowledge of key provisions of relevant legislation from all levels of government that affects business operations codes of practice and national standards such as

occupational health and safety

privacy

Trade Practices Act

World Trade Organisation determinations

software programs and electronic media available to conduct forecasting

sources of external and internal information on international markets

range of products or services marketed by business in international settings

Evidence Required

The Evidence Guide provides advice on assessment and must be read in conjunction with the performance criteria required skills and knowledge range statement and the Assessment Guidelines for the Training Package

Overview of assessment

Critical aspects for assessment and evidence required to demonstrate competency in this unit

Evidence of the following is essential

undertaking of analysis to forecast international market and business needs including

collection of market intelligence

review of current business performance and capability

evaluation of specific international markets

written report of how the business can meet current and emerging needs of targeted international markets

knowledge of market analysis tools

Context of and specific resources for assessment

Assessment must ensure

access to an actual workplace or simulated environment

access to office equipment and resources

access to relevant information sources

access to workplace documents

Method of assessment

A range of assessment methods should be used to assess practical skills and knowledge The following examples are appropriate for this unit

direct questioning combined with review of portfolios of evidence and third party workplace reports of onthejob performance by the candidate

review of performance data from all areas of the business

analysis of responses to case studies and scenarios

observation of techniques used to gather market intelligence

oral or written questioning to assess knowledge of sources of external and internal information on international markets

analysis of trends and developments having an impact on international business activity in terms of their potential impact on the business

assessment of forecast of emerging international market needs

Guidance information for assessment

Holistic assessment with other units relevant to the industry sector workplace and job role is recommended for example

international business units

other marketing units


Range Statement

The range statement relates to the unit of competency as a whole. It allows for different work environments and situations that may affect performance. Bold italicised wording, if used in the performance criteria, is detailed below. Essential operating conditions that may be present with training and assessment (depending on the work situation, needs of the candidate, accessibility of the item, and local industry and regional contexts) may also be included.

Sources may include:

business advisory services

commercial sources of market intelligence provided by specialists and consultants

databases

financial institutions

information from Austrade and state/territory government agencies, chambers of commerce

internet

new networking opportunities

official statistics

peers

professional/trade associations and publications

Evaluation may include:

comparative analysis

competitive analysis

life cycle models

product portfolio analysis

strengths-weaknesses-opportunities-threats (SWOT) analysis

value chain analysis

Marketing may include:

business-to-business marketing

direct marketing

e-business

ideas marketing

marketing of goods

public sector marketing

services marketing

telemarketing

Performance data may include:

accidents

complaints

coverage

faults

penetration

production time and cost

profitability

sales

share

warranties

Areas of the business may include:

finance

marketing

overseas representatives or branches of the organisation

personnel

production

Capabilities and resources may include:

situational factors such as:

24-hour operation

age and life of business equipment

capacity of equipment relative to current output

communications

competence of staff relative to business needs

human and financial resources

industrial relations climate

level of technology

location/position

transport distribution channels

intangibles such as:

brand

'feel good' factor

image

perceived quality or value

service

social acceptability

style

Trends and developments may include:

changes in technology

demographic trends

ecological/environmental trends

economic trends (local, regional, national, international)

government activities e.g. interest rates, deregulation

industrial trends

political events (wars, internal conflicts, forthcoming elections)

social and cultural factors

Comparative international market information may include:

benchmarking against Australian performance

best practice information

inter-firm comparison data

international benchmarking

Opportunities may include:

consideration of applications and costings for trademarks, patents and standards accreditation

cooperative ventures

extending, expanding or otherwise changing an existing business

franchising

joint ventures

new products or services for existing markets

new products or services for new international settings or within other regions of existing international settings

potential for greater penetration of existing markets with existing products or services

strategic alliances

Legal, ethical and environmental constraints may include:

Australian, international and local context of legal and ethical obligations

codes of practice

cultural expectations and influences

ethical principles

legislation

policies and guidelines

regulations

social responsibilities such as protection of children, environmental issues

societal expectations

Forecasting techniques may include:

bottom-up forecasting

Delphi techniques

model building

projection

scenario planning

surveys of intentions

top-down forecasting