Corporations lack understanding of communication technologies to take them global

LISA/SDL survey reveals 50% of execs pay little attention to globalization technology and budgets

SDL Maidenhead , UK
06 September 2007

New research has highlighted that the growth of global businesses is hindered because decision makers have little knowledge of the core technology and budgets to help them communicate.

New research has highlighted that the growth of global businesses is hindered because decision makers have little knowledge of the core technology and budgets to help them communicate.

While all respondents saw globalization processes changing within the next year, 47% of all respondents surveyed do not even know the amount of their total globalization budget. 

Key technologies such as content management and terminology management are seen as important for effective brand management and international product launches, but are being sidelined on a global scale.

The study was conducted by the Localisation Industry Standards Association (LISA) and Global Information Management (GIM) specialist SDL. It aimed to identify trends in global marketing and ascertain how these trends are addressed by terminology management.

While highlighting a clear acceptance of the importance of terminology management in driving brand consistency and enhancing customer loyalty, the respondents demonstrated a lack of process or commitment to its effective implementation across a corporation:

• Over half of all respondents (56%) stated that the greatest benefit for effective management of terminology would be to consistently manage the global brand

• A third of all respondents (32%) stated that the key focus on terminology management is to deliver the right global content to the right people at the right time

• Less than half the companies surveyed (46%) have a dedicated terminology manager – and for the majority of those that do, the position exists only at a junior level

Commenting on the results, Michael Anobile, chairman of LISA, said, “The picture is that corporations are not investing in the infrastructure and processes required to effectively communicate with global audiences. Far too often we see companies approaching this in a piecemeal fashion.  Terminology is not being managed on any systematic basis, but rather it is treated as a part of the localization process and dealt with on an ad hoc basis.”

Chris Boorman, chief marketing officer of SDL, said: “This survey proves that global companies are not taking globalization efforts seriously enough. Globalization is an invisible force – and the majority of companies have yet to use the right technology to take advantage of it. Corporations need to take terminology management seriously since it is essential to communicating consistently with global audiences and has a profound effect on brand management.”

For more information, click here.

About LISA

LISA is the leading international forum for organizations doing business globally. It has distilled the right ways and wrong ways of supporting international customers, products and services over the last seventeen years from more than 500 corporate members, public & private institutions, government ministries and trade organizations. www.lisa.org

About SDL

SDL is the leader in Global Information Management (GIM) solutions that empower organizations to accelerate the delivery of high-quality multilingual content to global markets. Its enterprise software and services integrate with existing business systems to manage the delivery of global information from authoring to publication and throughout the distributed translation supply chain.

Global industry leaders rely on SDL to provide enterprise software or hosted services for their GIM processes, including ABN-Amro, Best Western, Bosch, Canon, Chrysler, CNH, Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft, Philips, SAP, Sony, SUN Microsystems and Virgin Atlantic.

SDL has implemented more than 480 enterprise GIM solutions, has deployed over 150,000 software licenses across the GIM ecosystem and provides access to on-demand translation portals for 10 million customers per month. Over 1,000 service professionals deliver consulting, implementation and language services through its global infrastructure of more than 50 offices in 30 countries. For more information, visit www.sdl.com

All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Nicola Bogle (SDL)
+44 (0)1628 417225
nbogle@sdl.com