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Chapter 02 - Rosenbloom 8ed PDF

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235 views28 pages

Chapter 02 - Rosenbloom 8ed PDF

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Gilarie Alison
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Part 1: Marketing Channel Systems

Marketing Channels
A Management View
8e
Rosenbloom

Part 1: Marketing Channel Systems

2
CHAPTER
The Channel Participants
The Channel
Participants
©2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
1. Major participants in marketing channels
2. Why shift distribution tasks to intermediaries?
Learning Objectives

3. Major types of wholesalers


4. Major Trends in Wholesale Structure
5. Merchant Wholesalers Specialize in Performance
Distribution Tasks

6. Retail structure
7. Retail structure trends
8. Distribution Tasks Performed by Retailers
9. Retailers’ Growing Power in Marketing Channels
10. Facilitating Agencies in Marketing Channels 2

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Objective
Major Participants in Marketing
1 Channels

* Commercial Channel * Target Markets

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Objective
Why shift distribution tasks to
2 intermediaries?

Producers
& Intermedia
Manufacture ries
rs

• Spread high fixed costs


over large quantities of
• Lack expertise
diverse products
• Lack economies of
• Achieve economies of
scale
scope and economies of
scale
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Example: Distribution of Crayons

Manufacturer direct
to customers

• Huge order processing


= cost
facility
• Huge inventory
prohibitive
• Several warehouse
locations
• Transportation of
product to consumers
5

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Objective
Major Types of Wholesalers
3

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Merchant Wholesalers
Tasks Performed:
Buy
Take title
Hold Inventory
Handle

Large quantities of
products

Resell to:

Industrial,
commercial,
or Other
Retailers
institutional Wholesalers
concerns
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Agents, Brokers, & Commission
Merchants
Involved in buying &
selling
while acting on behalf
of clients

Commissions
on
sales or purchases

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Manufacturers’ Sales Branches & Offices

Separated from manufacturing plants

Distribute
Owned & operated by
manufacturer’s
manufacturers
products at
wholesale

Some wholesale allied &


supplementary products
purchased from other
manufacturers.
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Objective

4 Major Trends in Wholesale Structure


1992—2002

42.0% Wholesale trade

26.5% Manufacturer’s
sales
branches & offices

51.7% Merchant
wholesalers

36.7% Agents, brokers, &


commission
merchants
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Trends in Size & Concentration
Measured by: Types of Wholesalers
Size of Majority are small businesses
wholesaler
Sales volume Nearly 45% of all firms have annual sales
of less than $1 million

# of Employees per About 50% of firms had fewer than 5


firm employees

Economic 50 largest manufacturers’ sales branches


concentration in terms & offices garnered nearly 63% of sales for
of % of total sales this type

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Objective
Merchant Wholesalers Specialize in
5 Performance Distribution Tasks
1. Provide market coverage
2. Make sales contacts
3. Hold inventory
4. Process orders
5. Gather market information
6. Offer customer support

• Operate at high levels of effectiveness and efficiency


• Average cost curves lower than those for their suppliers
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Merchant Wholesalers’ Distribution
Tasks Serve Customers

1. Assure product availability


2. Provide customer service
3. Extend credit & financial
assistance
4. Offer assortment convenience
5. Break bulk
6. Help customers with advice &
technical support

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Agent Wholesalers’ Distribution
Tasks

Manufacturers

Agents

⮚ Market coverage

⮚ Sales contacts

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Agent Wholesalers’ Distribution
Tasks

Selling
Agents

⮚ Market coverage
⮚ Sales contacts
⮚ Order processing
⮚ Marketing Information
⮚ Product availability
⮚ Customer services

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Agent Wholesalers’ Distribution
Tasks

Brokers

⮚ Market coverage
⮚ Sales contacts
⮚ Order processing
⮚ Marketing Information
⮚ Product availability
⮚ Customer services

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Agent Wholesalers’ Distribution
Tasks

Commission
Merchant

⮚ Market coverage
⮚ Sales contacts
⮚ Order processing
⮚ Breaking bulk
⮚ Credit
⮚ Holding inventory

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Objective
Retail Structure
6
Alternative Bases for Classifying Retailers

• By Ownership of Establishment • By Method of Consumer


Contact
• By Kind of Business
(Merchandise Handled) • By Type of Location
• By Type of Service
• By Size of Establishment Rendered
• By Degree of Vertical • By Legal Form of
Integration Organization
• By Type of Relationship with • By Management
other Business Organizations Organizations or
Operational Technique

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Kind-of-Business Classifications
Retail
Trade
• Motor vehicle & parts • Gasoline stations
dealers • Clothing & clothing
• Furniture & home accessories stores
furnishings stores • Sporting goods, hobby,
• Electronics & appliance book, & music stores
stores • General merchandise
• Building material & garden stores
equip. & supply dealers • Miscellaneous store
• Food & beverage stores retailers
• Health & personal care • Non store retailers
stores

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Objective
Retail Structure Trends
7

Decreasing number of establishments

Increasing sales

= increase in size of retail establishments


measured by average sales volume
per store

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Concentration in Retailing

In 2002
4% of all retail firms
accounted for nearly 80%
of total sales!!

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Objective
Distribution Tasks Performed by
8 Retailers

The role of the retailer in the distribution channel,


regardless of his size or type, is to interpret the
demands of his customers and to find and stock
the goods these customers want, when they
want them, and in the way they want them. This
adds up to having the right assortments at the
time customers are ready to buy.


Charles Y. Lazarus
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Distribution Tasks Performed by
Retailers

• Offer manpower & physical facilities close to


consumers’ residences
• Provide personal assistance to help sell products
• Interpret and relay consumer demand
• Divide large quantities into consumer-sized lots
• Offer storage
• Remove risk by ordering in advance of the season

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Objective
Retailers’ Growing Power in
9 Marketing Channels

Increased size & buying Become power retailers


power &
category killers
Application of advanced Information technology &
Technologies the Internet; threetailing

Use of modern marketing Modern techniques;


strategies relationship marketing

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Objective
Facilitating Agencies in Marketing
10 Channels

• Transportation agencies
• Storage agencies
• Order processing agencies
• Advertising agencies
• Financial agencies
• Insurance companies
• Marketing research firms

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Discussion Question #1
Wrigley is the world’s leading manufacturer of
chewing gum, producing literally millions of packages of
gum every day. It is a large, financially strong company
whose manufacturing technology for producing gum is
state-of-the-art. It sells its products to millions of gum-
chewing consumers all over the United States and many
other countries around the world. Still, Wrigley has never
attempted to sell its chewing gum directly to consumers,
but instead uses a wide variety of intermediaries at the
wholesale and retail levels.

Why do you suppose Wrigley has chosen to use


intermediaries rather than sell direct to consumers?
Explain the underlying economics of the company’s
policy.
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Discussion Question #5
Best Buy is by far the largest consumer electronics retailer in
the world with sales of over $45 billion and almost 4,000 stores world
wide. Best Buy enjoys tremendous power in the marketing channels
within which it operates. All manufacturers and other suppliers
providing products to Best Buy have to pay close attention to what this
1,000 pound gorilla of a retailer wants. But even when suppliers go out
of their way to meet the demands of Best Buy, they are finding that the
giant retailer could block them from getting their products to consumers
because Best Buy may favor certain suppliers with which it can make
especially attractive deals. In addition, Best Buy is increasing its
emphasis on offering its own private brand products such as the thinnest
laptop on the market and an all-electrical motorcycle. Some of Best
Buy’s own products may even compete directly with famous supplier
brands, such as Apple and Sony.

Why do you think Best Buy is flexing its muscles in the channel?
Do you think this type of behavior is inevitable on the part of giant
dominant retailers?

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Discussion Question #6
Jacobson Companies, headquartered in Des
Moines, Iowa, describes itself on its Web site as a “can do”
third party logistics company. The company is indicative of
the new breed of logistics services firms that can do it all. If
a company, whether a manufacturer, wholesaler, retailer
or other type of firm, needs logistical help, they can find
“one-stop shipping” for logistical services if they deal with
3PL firms. Along with the availability of an almost unlimited
range of services, is the capability of many 3PLs to custom
tailor the logistical services they provide to fit the
particular
needs of their clients.

Why do you think 3PLs have become such an


important type of facilitating agency in market channels?
©2013
Do you expect this trend to continue?
Cengage Learning.
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