Corona Beer Modelo Corona Beer: Case Study

PAGES
4
WORDS
1241
Cite

Corona is considered a Lager and is in the most crowded area of the market, making differentiation difficult. Grupo Modelo's decision to concentrate on its channel alliances and partnerships is critical for their long-term growth in such a consolidating and challenging market. In a sense Grupo Modelo has chosen to seek out a services-based strategy to gain a competitive advantage by creating such strong alliances in its channels. This is an excellent decision on their part as it is clear the market is consolidating and losing differentiation by product. Figure 2: 2009 Global Beer Products Segmentation

Product/Services

2009 Global Market Share

Dark beer

12.0%

Lager (standard)

73.0%

Low and non-alcohol

5.0%

Premium lager

8.0%

Stout

2.0%

Sources: (Mayers, 2007) Analysis of SEC Filings by Grupo Modelo (2009 -- 2010)

Defining Market Development Priorities Globally

Grupo Modelo's abilities at channel alliances and partnership creation and mutually shared profitability are evident from the many examples in the case study. The decision of which nation to expand into needs to take into account their existing strengths in channel development and channel management in English-speaking nations. While China appears to have exceptional growth potential, the language and cultural barriers could be quite significant. The recommendation therefore is Australia first, China second. Australia's distribution channels for beer are comparable to North America and the language barrier is significantly less than expanding into China. In addition the cultural and political differences between Mexico and China are so significant that the expansion into that nation is going to take an inordinately high level of patience and investment. Due to these factors it is recommended that Grupo Modelo expand into Australia first. The 2009 global share of sales by region is shown in Figure 3.

Figure 3: 2009 Global Region Market Shares

Region

2009 Global Market Share

Europe

39.4

North America

22.2

North Asia

20.4

South America

10.0

South East Asia

3.0

Africa & Middle East

2.0

Oceania

...

For Grupo Modelo the best possible strategy is to continually invest in channel alliances and partnerships, seeking to further differentiate and strengthen the trust they have earned over years of working with these channel partners. Trust is very costly to earn and keep, and for InBev, their approach to en masse distribution has cost them credibility. For Grupo Modelo the best possible strategy is to lock InBev out of their channels and gain channel loyalty to further distance themselves from their largest competitor. Figure 4, 2009 Global Competitor Market Shares shows the dominance of InBev.
Figure 4: 2009 Global Competitor's Market Shares

Competitor

2009-2010 Global Market Share

Anheuser-Busch InBev

18.0% (2010)

SABMiller plc

15.4% (2010)

Heineken N.V.

9.2% (2009)

Carlsberg a/S

6.1% (2010)

Asahi Breweries, Ltd.

3.0% (2009)

Other

48.3% (2009)

Sources: (Mayers, 2007) Analysis of SEC Filings by Grupo Modelo (2009 -- 2010)

Diversification

Today the company is diversified into sports teams and is attempting to create vertical integration throughout their supply chains. What the company needs to do in the future is focus on creating more efficiency in collaborative planning and forecasting with its channel partners and consider how diversifications can strength channel alliances first. The diversifications for branding alone will have long-term impacts, yet the company must focus on how to diversify to strengthen its channel alliances first. This could be in the form of additional product lines that are designed primarily to give channel partners more of an opportunity to earn gross margins, thereby making them more profitable -- and loyal -- over time.

Reference

Michael Mayers. (1 August). Global market review of premium beer - forecasts to 2013: 2007 edition: The leading international brewers. Just - Drinks: Global market review of premium beer - forecasts to 2013:,9-31.

Sources Used in Documents:

Sources: (Mayers, 2007) Analysis of SEC Filings by Grupo Modelo (2009 -- 2010)

Diversification

Today the company is diversified into sports teams and is attempting to create vertical integration throughout their supply chains. What the company needs to do in the future is focus on creating more efficiency in collaborative planning and forecasting with its channel partners and consider how diversifications can strength channel alliances first. The diversifications for branding alone will have long-term impacts, yet the company must focus on how to diversify to strengthen its channel alliances first. This could be in the form of additional product lines that are designed primarily to give channel partners more of an opportunity to earn gross margins, thereby making them more profitable -- and loyal -- over time.

Reference

Michael Mayers. (1 August). Global market review of premium beer - forecasts to 2013: 2007 edition: The leading international brewers. Just - Drinks: Global market review of premium beer - forecasts to 2013:,9-31.


Cite this Document:

"Corona Beer Modelo Corona Beer " (2010, May 19) Retrieved April 24, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/corona-beer-modelo-corona-beer-3157

"Corona Beer Modelo Corona Beer " 19 May 2010. Web.24 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/corona-beer-modelo-corona-beer-3157>

"Corona Beer Modelo Corona Beer ", 19 May 2010, Accessed.24 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/corona-beer-modelo-corona-beer-3157

Related Documents

Corona There are a number of trends in the global beer industry. One is consolidation, where firms are using mergers and acquisitions to enter new markets and to achieve economies of scale. For a brewer like Modelo, consolidation means that the company becomes smaller relative to the industry's top firms. Modelo has does not compete (at least with Corona) on a cost-leadership strategy, so this trend does not matter much for

Corona Modelo needs to chart a course for the company's future. The longstanding objective is to move Modelo into the top five of brewers in the world. As of 2005, Modelo remained outside of the top six. The company has 52 of the domestic market and is the best-selling imported beer in the United States, 50% ahead of next-best seller Heineken. The most significant underlying problem with respect to global market

However, there are also smaller importers for specialty brews such as Paulaner operating in Malaysia as well. While a smaller company will have more limited distribution, it will distribute specifically to the same types of establishments favored by Corona's target market, and German brews are generally not competing directly with Corona. AB InBev owns 50% of Modelo at this point. There is the possibility that the company may decide to

Carlsberg also have the largest stable of brands in the country, and nationwide blanket distribution. Lastly, Corona has experience in dealing with Carlsberg, with whom it has distribution agreements Russia, Central Asia, Turkey and a number of other countries around the world. Corona faces intense competition from InBev (now a-B InBev after its merger with Anheuser-Busch). InBev has a different model for international expansion, comprised of purchasing breweries all over

Corona Beer (Modelo) Identify and discuss the trends in the global beer markets. Driven by the rapid consolidation of breweries and channel-based selling organizations the global beer markets continue to experience flat or slow growth. With the cost of entry into this industry high from a capital investment standpoint, accentuated by high interest rates, the overall industry growth rates continue to be flat with differentiation at the product level contributing little to

Constellation Brands is an alcoholic beverage company, traded under the symbol STZ on the New York Stock Exchange. The company had revenues of just over $6 billion in the 2014 fiscal year and a net income of $839 million (MSN Moneycentral, 2015). While revenues were up significantly over the prior year, profits were down by more than 50%. Until recently, Constellation was an importer/marketer of alcoholic beverages, but the company