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Title: School of International Business


1
School of International Business BA (HONS)
Business Studies with Specialisms MKT301 LECTURER
Jacqueline Doherty Tel 028 71376 506
2
School of International Business BA (HONS)
Business Studies with Specialisms MKT301 LECTURE
9 Place
3
  • Lecture Outline
  • Place Nature of Marketing Channels
  • Functions of Marketing Channels
  • Channels for Consumer Products
  • Wholesaling Physical Distribution
  • Retailing
  • Channel for B2B and Industrial Products
  • Multiple Channels Integration
  • Choosing Distribution Channels

4
Nature of Marketing Channels
  • A channel of distribution (or marketing channel)
    is a group of individuals and organisations that
    direct the flow of products from producers to
    customers.
  • Providing customer satisfaction should be the
    driving force behind all marketing channel
    activities.
  • Channels of distribution make products available
    at the right time, in the right place and in the
    right quantity.

5
Nature of Marketing Channels
  • Most channels of distribution have marketing
    intermediaries, though there is a current growth
    of direct marketing by which a supplier interacts
    with consumers without the use of intermediaries.
  • A marketing intermediary, or middleman, links
    producers to other middlemen or to those who
    ultimately use the products.

6
Nature of Marketing Channels
  • Marketing intermediaries perform the following
    channel activities
  • Marketing information
  • Marketing management
  • Facilitating exchange
  • Promotion
  • Price
  • Physical distribution
  • Customer service
  • Relationship building

7
Nature of Marketing Channels
  • Merchants take title to products and re-sell
    them.
  • Retailers purchase products for the purpose of
    re-selling them to users.
  • Merchant wholesalers re-sell products to other
    wholesalers and to retailers.
  • Functional middlemen do not take title to
    products.
  • Functional wholesalers, such as agents and
    brokers, expedite exchanges between producers and
    resellers and are compensated through fees or
    commissions.

8
Nature of Marketing Channels
  • Channel members share certain significant
    characteristics.
  • Each member has different responsibilities
    within the overall structure of the distribution
    system, but mutual profit and success can be
    attained only if channel members co-operate in
    delivering products to the market.
  • The area of relationship management is
    increasingly important in delivering adequate
    customer service to target market customers.

9
Nature of Marketing Channels
  • Distribution decisions exercise a powerful
    influence on the rest of the marketing mix.
  • They determine a products market presence and
    buyers accessibility to the product.
  • The strategic significance of these decisions is
    heightened by the fact that they entail long term
    commitment, since changing distribution systems
    is not an easy task.

10
Nature of Marketing Channels
  • It may be necessary for companies to use
    different distribution paths in different
    countries or for different target segments.
  • Marketing channels are commonly classified into
    channels for consumer products or channels for
    industrial or business-to-business products.

11
Functions of Marketing Channels
  • Marketing channels serve many functions, most of
    which are accomplished through both independent
    and joint efforts of channel members.
  • These functions include (1) creating utility,
    (2) facilitating exchange efficiencies,
    (3) alleviating discrepancies, (4) standardising
    transactions and (5) providing customer service.

12
Channels for consumer products
13
Channels for consumer products
  • Channel Aproducer to consumeris a direct
    channel that includes customers who harvest their
    own fruit from commercial growers or buy products
    from door-to-door salespeople.
  • Although this channel is the simplest, it is not
    necessarily the cheapest or the most efficient
    method of distribution.
  • E-commercethe use of the Internet for marketing
    communications, selling and purchasinghas in
    recent years led to a growth in direct marketing
    for a variety of products, notably travel
    tickets, books, videos and CDs, financial
    services and merchandise retailed by the
    traditional mail order catalogue operators.

14
Channels for consumer products
  • Channel Bproducer to retailer to consumeris
    used by large retailers such as Marks Spencer
    that can buy in quantity from a manufacturer.
  • Clothing, food and cars are commonly sold
    through this type of marketing channel.

15
Channels for consumer products
  • Channel Cproducer to wholesaler to retailer to
    consumeris a very practical option for a
    producer that sells to hundreds of thousands of
    consumers through thousands of retailers.
  • Manufacturers of tobacco products,
    confectionery, some home appliances, hardware and
    many convenience goods use this type of marketing
    channel.

16
Channels for consumer products
  • Channel Dproducer to agent to wholesaler to
    retailer to consumeris used for products
    intended for mass distribution, such as processed
    foods.
  • A long channel may be the most efficient
    distribution channel for certain consumer goods
  • When several channel intermediaries are
    available to perform specialised functions, costs
    may be lower than if one channel member is
    responsible for all the functions in all
    territories.
  • Besides these channels, a manufacturer may use
    sales branches or sales offices

17
Wholesaling
  • Wholesaling includes all transactions in which
    the purchaser intends to use the product for
    re-sale, for making other products or for general
    business operations
  • A wholesaler is an individual or organisation
    engaged in facilitating and expediting exchanges
    that are primarily wholesale transactions.

18
Classifying Wholesalers
  • Wholesalers are classified according to whether
    they are owned by the producer and whether they
    take title to products they handle, and by the
    range of services they provide and the breadth
    and depth of their product lines.
  • Merchant wholesalers take title to goods and
    assume the risks associated with ownership
  • Full service wholesalers offer the widest
    possible range of wholesaling activities,
    including product availability, suitable
    assortments, bulk breaking functions, financial
    assistance and credit lines, technical advice and
    after sales service.

19
Wholesalers
  • Limited service wholesalers are middlemen who
    provide only some marketing services and
    specialise in a few functions.
  • Agents and brokers negotiate purchases and
    expedite sales but do not take title to products
  • Manufacturers sales branches and offices
  • Facilitating agenciestransport companies,
    insurance companies, advertising agencies,
    marketing research agencies and financial
    institutionsperform activities that enhance
    channel functions.

20
Changing Patterns in Wholesaling
  • Changes in the nature of the marketing
    environment itself have transformed various
    aspects of the industry.
  • There is an increasing reliance on computer
    technology to expedite the ordering, delivery and
    handling of goods.
  • The trend towards globalisation of world markets
    has resulted in other changes.

21
Importance of Physical Distribution
  • Physical distribution is a set of
    activitiesconsisting of order processing,
    materials handling, warehousing, inventory
    management and transportationused in the
    movement of products from producers to consumers,
    or end users.
  • Setting up an effective physical distribution
    system can be a significant decision point in
    developing an overall marketing strategy because
    it can decrease costs and increase customer
    satisfaction.

22
Physical distribution objectives
  • The main objective of physical distribution is
    to decrease costs while increasing customer
    service.
  • Physical distribution managers strive for a
    reasonable balance of service, costs and
    resources.
  • Customer service is a set of activities through
    which all businesses, in varying degrees, attempt
    to satisfy customers needs and wants.
  • In terms of physical distribution, customer
    service refers to availability, promptness and
    quality.

23
Distribution System
  • Order processingthe first stage in a physical
    distribution systemis the receipt and
    transmission of sales order information.
  • There are three main tasks in order processing
    (1) order entry, (2) order handling and (3) order
    delivery.
  • Order processing can be done manually or
    electronically, depending on which method
    provides greater speed and accuracy within cost
    limits.

24
Distribution System
  • Materials handling, or the physical handling of
    products, is important for efficient warehouse
    operations and in transport from points of
    production to points of consumption.
  • Warehousing is the design and operation of
    facilities for storing and moving goods.
  • Inventory management involves developing and
    maintaining adequate assortments of products to
    meet customer needs.
  • Transportation adds time and place utility to a
    product by moving it from where it is made to
    where it is purchased and used.

25
Strategic Issues in Physical Distribution
  • Effective marketers work to ensure that the
    businesss overall marketing strategy is enhanced
    by physical distribution, with its dual
    objectives of decreasing costs while increasing
    customer satisfaction

26
Product
  • Product design and packaging must allow for
    efficient stacking, storage and transport.
  • Differentiating products by size, colour and
    style places additional demands on warehousing
    and shipping facilities.

27
Price
  • Competitive pricing may depend on a companys
    ability to provide reliable delivery or emergency
    shipments of replacement parts.
  • Quantity discounts may encourage large purchases

28
Promotion
  • Promotional campaigns must be co-ordinated with
    distribution functions.
  • Order processing departments must be able to
    handle additional sales order information
    efficiently.

29
Distribution
  • Distribution planners must consider warehousing
    and transport costs.
  • These costs may influence the companys policy
    on stock-outs or its choice to centralise (or
    decentralise) its inventory.

30
Strategies
  • Any distribution system must be evaluated
    continually and adapted as necessary.
  • Customers changing needs and preferences must be
    considered.
  • Changes in any one of the major distribution
    functions will necessarily affect all other
    functions.

31
Retailing
  • Retailing includes all transactions in which the
    buyer intends to consume the product through
    personal, family or household use.

32
Department and variety stores
  • Department stores are physically large stores
    that occupy prominent positions in the
    traditional heart of the town or city or as
    anchor stores in out-of-town malls.
  • Variety stores are slightly smaller and more
    specialised stores than department stores,
    offering a reduced range of merchandise.
  •  

33
Supermarkets, superstores and hypermarkets
  • Supermarkets and superstores are large (5,500
    square metres), self-service stores that carry a
    complete line of food products as well as other
    convenience items, such as cosmetics,
    non-prescription drugs and kitchenwares.
  • Hypermarkets take the benefits of the superstore
    even further, using their greater sizeover 9,000
    square metresto give the customer a wider range
    and depth of products.

34
Discount Stores
  • Discount Stores are operations that take short
    term leases in un-let units in malls, selling
    such items as stationery, toys, confectionery and
    gifts at deeply discounted prices.

35
Warehouse clubs, Speciality Shops Convenience
Stores
  • Warehouse clubs are large scale, members only
    selling operations combining cash and carry
    wholesaling with discount retailing.
  • Speciality shops are stores that offer
    self-service but a greater level of assistance
    from store personnel than department stores and
    carry a narrow product mix with deep product
    lines.
  • Convenience stores are shops that sell essential
    groceries, alcoholic drinks, drugs and newspapers
    outside the traditional shopping hours.

36
Factory Outlet Villages
  • An emerging trend is factory outlet
    villagesconverted rural buildings or purpose
    built out-of-town retail parks for manufacturers
    outlets retailing branded seconds, excess stocks
    and last seasons lines or trialling new lines.
  • Markets and cash and carry warehouses
  • Catalogue showrooms

37
Non-store Retailing
  • Non-store retailing is the selling of goods or
    services outside the confines of a retail
    facility.
  • This form of retailing accounts for an
    increasing percentage of sales and includes
    personal sales methods, such as in-home retailing
    and telemarketing, and non-personal sales
    methods, such as automatic vending and mail order
    retailing.

38
Non-store Retailing
  • Direct marketing is the use of non-personal
    media, the Internet or telesales to introduce
    products to consumers, who then purchase the
    products by mail, telephone or the Internet.
  • Telemarketing, mail order and catalogue
    retailing are all examples of direct marketing,
    as are sales generated by coupons, direct mail
    and Freephone, bell gratis 0800 numbers and the
    Internet.

39
Non-store Retailing
  • In-home retailing is selling via personal
    contacts with consumers in their own homes.
  • Door-to-door selling

40
Franchising
  • Franchising is an arrangement whereby a supplier
    (franchisor) grants a dealer (franchisee) the
    right to sell products in exchange for some type
    of consideration.
  • A franchisor may receive some percentage of
    total sales in exchange for furnishing equipment,
    buildings, management know-how, marketing
    assistance and branding to the franchisee.
  • The franchisee supplies labour and capital,
    operates the franchised business and agrees to
    abide by the provisions of the franchise
    agreement.

41
Major types of retail franchises
  • A manufacturer authorises a number of retail
    stores to sell a certain brand name item, such as
    cars.
  • A producer licenses distributors to sell a given
    product, such as soft drinks, to retailers.
  • A producer licenses distributors to sell a given
    product, such as soft drinks, to retailers.
  • In this arrangement, the franchisors primary
    role is the careful development and control of
    marketing strategies, an approach used by fast
    food restaurants

42
Strategic Issues in Retailing
  • Consumer purchases are often the result of
    social influences and psychological factors.
  • Location is the strategic retailing issue that
    dictates the limited geographic trading area from
    which a store must draw its customers.
  • Property ownership
  • Product assortment
  • Retail positioning
  • Atmospherics
  • Store image

43
Channels for industrial, business-to-business
products
44
Channels for industrial, business-to-business
products
  • Channel Eproducer to business-to-business
    buyeris most feasible for many manufacturers of
    industrial goods because there are fewer
    customers, and those customers may be clustered
    geographically.
  • Buyers of complex industrial products can
    receive technical assistance from the
    manufacturer more easily in a direct channel.
  • As with consumer markets, e-commerce and the
    desire to develop one-to-one relationships have
    led to a growth in the use of this marketing
    channel option.

45
Channels for industrial, business-to-business
products
  • Channel Fproducer to business-to-business
    distributor to business-to-business buyeris used
    when a line of industrial products is aimed at a
    large number of customers.
  • This channel includes business-to-business or
    industrial distributors, merchants who take title
    to products and carry inventory.
  • Industrial distributors can be most effectively
    used when a product has broad market appeal, is
    easily stocked and serviced, is sold in small
    quantities and is needed rapidly to avoid high
    losses.

46
Channels for industrial, business-to-business
products
  • Channel Gproducer to agent to
    business-to-business buyermay be chosen when a
    manufacturer without its own marketing department
    needs market information, when a company is too
    small to field its own salesforce or when a
    company wants to introduce a new product.

47
Channels for industrial, business-to-business
products
  • Channel Hproducer to agent to
    business-to-business distributor to
    business-to-business buyera variation of Channel
    G, is used when a manufacturer without a
    salesforce has industrial customers who purchase
    products in small quantities or if they must be
    re-supplied frequently and therefore need access
    to decentralised inventories.

48
Multiple marketing channels
  • When aiming at diverse target markets, a
    manufacturer may use several marketing channels
    simultaneously, with each channel involving a
    different group of intermediaries.
  • Multiple channels can be used when the same
    product is directed to both consumers and
    industrial customers.

49
Different Levels of Market Coverage
  • In intensive distribution, all available outlets
    are used for distributing a product.
  • In selective distribution, only some available
    outlets in an area are used to distribute a
    product.
  • In exclusive distribution, only one outlet in a
    relatively large geographic area is used to
    distribute a product.

50
Choosing Distribution Channels
  • Choosing the most appropriate distribution
    channels for a product can be complex.
  • Producers must evaluate intermediaries carefully
    with regard to their sales and profit levels,
    performance records, other products carried,
    clientele, availability and so forth.
  • Other factors include organisational objectives
    and resources, market characteristics, buying
    behaviour, product attributes and environmental
    forces.
  • In some markets, these factors may indicate that
    multiple channels should be used.

51
Choosing Distribution Channels
  • Organisational objectives and resources
  • Producers must carefully consider their
    objectives and the cost of achieving them in the
    marketplace.
  • The organisation must determine if it possesses
    sufficient financial and marketing clout to
    control its distribution channels.
  • Companies must also consider how effective their
    past distribution relationships and methods have
    been and question their appropriateness in regard
    to current objectives.

52
Choosing Distribution Channels
  • Market characteristics
  • Beyond the basic division between consumer
    markets and industrial markets, several market
    variables influence the design of distribution
    channels.
  • Geography is one factor in most cases, the
    greater the distance between the producer and its
    markets, the less expensive is distribution
    through intermediaries rather than through direct
    sales

53
Choosing Distribution Channels
  • Market density must also be considered when
    customers tend to be clustered in several
    locations, the producer may be able to eliminate
    middlemen.
  • Market size, measured by the number of potential
    customers in a consumer or industrial market, is
    yet another variable.
  • The growing popularity of direct marketing and
    web based marketing, which results in direct
    customer-supplier relationships, is forcing
    marketers to re-appraise their market
    characteristics and deployment of channel
    intermediaries.

54
Choosing Distribution Channels
  • Buying behaviour
  • To be able to match intermediaries with
    customers, the producer must have specific,
    current information about customers who are
    buying the product and how, when, and where they
    are buying it.
  • The producer must also understand how buyer
    specifications vary according to whether buyers
    perceive products as convenience, shopping or
    speciality items.

55
Choosing Distribution Channels
  • Product attributes
  • Complex industrial products that require
    providing technical services to buyers both
    before and after the sale are usually shipped
    directly to buyers.
  • Perishable or highly fashionable consumer
    products with short shelf lives are also marketed
    through short channels.
  • Additional attributes that affect distribution
    channel selection include the products weight
    and bulkiness, and the relative ease of handling
    the product.

56
Choosing Distribution Channels
  • Environmental forces
  • Producers making decisions about distribution
    channels must consider the broader forces in the
    total marketing environmentthat is, the
    political, legal, regulatory, societal/green,
    technological, economic and competitive forces

57
Behaviour of Channel Members
  • The marketing channel is a social system with
    its own conventions and behaviour patterns.
  • Each channel member performs a different role in
    the system and agrees (implicitly or explicitly)
    to accept certain rights, responsibilities and
    rewards, as well as sanctions for non-conformity.
  • Marketers need to understand these behavioural
    issues to make effective channel decisions and to
    maintain relationships with facilitating channel
    members and loyal customers.

58
Behaviour of Channel Members
  • Channel co-operation and relationship building
  • Channel co-operation is vital if each member is
    to gain something from other members.
  • Without such co-operation, neither overall
    channel goals nor individual member goals can be
    realised.
  • Long term relationships can improve channel
    co-operation and help individual channel members
    better adapt to the needs of the others.

59
Behaviour of Channel Members
  • Channel conflict
  • Channel conflict arises when a given channel
    member does not conduct itself in the manner
    expected by other channel members.
  • Channel conflict also arises when dealers over
    emphasise competing products or diversify into
    product lines traditionally handled by other,
    more specialised intermediaries.
  • Conflict sometimes develops when producers
    strive to increase efficiency by circumventing
    intermediaries.
  • To resolve conflict, the role of each channel
    member must be specified, and channel members
    must institute measures of channel co-ordination.

60
Legal Issues in Channel Management
  • The laws governing channel management are based
    on the general principle that the public is best
    served when competition and free trade are
    protected.
  • Restricted sales territories
  • Tying contract
  • Exclusive dealing
  • Refusal to deal

61
  • Lecture Outline
  • Place Nature of Marketing Channels
  • Functions of Marketing Channels
  • Channels for Consumer Products
  • Wholesaling Physical Distribution
  • Retailing
  • Channel for B2B and Industrial Products
  • Multiple Channels Integration
  • Choosing Distribution Channels
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