International Expansion of Tim Hortons (The)

Numéro de cas : 9 00 2021 001
Cas publié dans la Revue internationale de cas en gestion, vol. 19, no 1
Date :  2021-01-18
Notes pédagogiques incluses :  Oui
Résumé

Tim Hortons built a successful business in Canada by creating a vertically integrated company working with small-scale franchisees and incorporating its “Canadian identity” in its marketing strategy. The company’s internationalization efforts were much less fruitful, however, with 80% of outlets located in Canada, and just 18% in the United States. In 2014, 3G Capital – a Brazilian-American private-equity firm – acquired Tim Hortons with plans to speed up the company’s internationalization process. The new owner’s attempts to implement cost-cutting measures were quickly met with strong resistance from both franchisees and Canadian consumers and, in 2019, it faced two major challenges: at home, it had to restore the confidence of franchisees and consumers and, abroad, it faced stiff competition from chains that enjoyed a significant head start in new international markets. On top of everything else, it appeared that Tim Hortons’s business model might not lend itself to internationalization.

Objectifs pédagogiques
  • Identify key components that can prevent a business model that is successful in a domestic market from being easily internationalized.
  • Understand how a multinational’s position is conditioned by multimarket competition. When competitors are simultaneously present in several countries, competitive responses are more complex.
Discipline principal :  Affaires internationales
Discipline secondaire :  Non disponible
Secteurs d'activité :  Biens de consommation
Type :  Cas traditionnel (Cas décisionnel)
Lieu de l'événement :  Canada and world
Année de début de l'événement :  2014
Année de fin de l'événement :  2019
Taille de l'entreprise :  Multinationale
Concepts et théories en lien avec le cas
  • Key elements defining a business model
  • The interrelationship between the elements of a business model
  • Difficulties inherent to internationalizing some elements of a business model