INTERNATIONAL MARKETS FOR DIVERSE REGIONAL MANUFACTURING CLUSTERS
Ralf Wilhelms
Letitia Phillips
Lake Superior State University
ABSTRACT
Rural areas encounter challenges to economic growth in a knowledge-based economy. The
limited capacity to reach economies of scale and declining populations are at the core of the
underperformance of rural economic development. The two main industries present in rural areas
are agriculture and manufacturing.
This study utilizes students from an international marketing course at Lake Superior State
University to identify potential international markets based on personal knowledge, cultural
backgrounds, and personal connections to the manufacturing industry in the Eastern Upper
Peninsula of Michigan. The project examined a rural regional cluster in terms of geographical
setting rather than in terms of the common industry categorization.
A website was created with products from Eastern Upper Peninsula (EUP) manufacturing
firms and numerous country specific marketing campaigns were employed. The visitor data was
recorded and then analyzed. The findings pointed towards an increased international audience for
the EUP and showed initial support for the geographic cluster paradigm. The project also offered
a framework as well as suggestions for future rural regional exporting initiatives.