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Distributing

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About half the cost of the things we buy are marketing costs ... Safeway, Lucky, Whole Foods. Supermarket. Nordstrom Rack, Liz Claiborne Outlet, Nike Outlet ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Distributing


1
Chapter
15
Distributing Products Quickly and Efficiently
14-1
2
Marketing Intermediaries and the Supply Chain
This arrow really represents a series of
suppliers, e.g. the farmer, grain wholesaler and
flour mill owner are each in the chain that
provides flour.
The Wholesalers arrow represents one or more
sequential wholesalers.
3
Channels of Distribution
4
Are Intermediaries Bad?
  • About half the cost of the things we buy are
    marketing costs that go largely to pay for the
    work of intermediaries.
  • Why dont we get rid of the intermediaries and
    pass the savings on to the consumer?

5
Cutting Out the Middleman
Traditional Book Distribution
Borders/ Barnes and Noble Model
Amazon.com
Publisher
Publisher
Publisher
Wholesalers
Amazon.com
Retail Chain
Independent bookstores
Consumers
Consumers
Consumers
6
For every dollar you spend on food, ___ goes to
7
Functions Performed by Marketing Intermediaries
  • Transportation
  • Storage
  • Selling, including
  • Merchandising
  • Personal selling
  • Advertising

8
Exchange Efficiency in a World Without
Intermediaries
9
Exchange Efficiency in a World with Intermediaries
10
Three Basic Points About Intermediaries
  • Marketing intermediaries can be eliminated, but
    their activities cant.
  • Intermediaries have survived in the past because
    they have performed marketing functions more
    effectively and efficiently than others could.
  • Intermediaries add costs to products, but these
    costs are usually more than offset by the values
    they create.

11
Form Utility
12
Time Utility
13
Place Utility
The 18 Starbucks Locations Nearest You
14
Possession Utility
15
Possession Utility (cont.)
  • Credit
  • Delivery
  • Installation
  • Anything that facilitates the transfer of
    ownership

16
Information Utility
17
Service Utility
18
Types of Merchant Wholesalers
  • Full-service wholesalers
  • Perform sales functions, carry inventories (with
    the associated risks), provide delivery, and
    extend credit to customers
  • Rack jobbers
  • Limited-function wholesalers
  • Cash-and-carry wholesalers
  • Drop-shippers

19
Agents and Brokers
  • Neither take title to the goods
  • Agents maintain a long-term relationship with the
    people they represent. Examples
  • Sports agents
  • Manufacturers agent (rep)
  • Insurance agent
  • Brokers are usually hired on a temporary basis.
    Examples
  • Real estate broker
  • Farm commodities broker

20
Types of Retailers
21
Types of Retailers
22
Retail Distribution Strategy
23
Retail Distribution Strategy
Intensity Level
Objective Product Type
Examples
Selective
  • Work with selected
  • intermediaries
  • Shopping and some
  • specialty goods.

DVD players, TVs, personal computers, cameras,
furniture, most clothing
24
Retail Distribution Strategy
Intensity Level
Objective Product Type
Examples
Exclusive
  • Work with very fewintermediaries
  • Specialty goods

Some designer clothing and purses, private
helicopters, private airplanes
25
Non-Store Retailing
  • Direct selling
  • Vending machines, kiosks, and carts

26
Multilevel marketing
  • E.g. Amway, Mary Kay Cosmetics
  • NOT pyramid schemes!
  • Pyramid scheme example The Plane Game

27
Electronic retailing
  • Sometimes called E-tailing or B2C E-commerce
  • Amazon.com
  • Target.com

28
Direct marketing
29
Supply Chain Management
  • Re-engineering the processes along the entire
    value chain from producers to consumers to
    simultaneously reduce inventories and reduce
    stock-out or line-down situations.

30
The Supply Chain for Fiberrific Cereal
ManufacturingFacility
Storage
CompanyHQ
Warehouse
Consumer
31
Logistics
  • Inbound logistics is concerned with bringing raw
    materials, packaging, and parts from suppliers to
    your company efficiently.
  • Materials handling is the movement of raw
    materials, parts, and goods within the company.

32
Outbound Logistics
  • Outbound logistics is concerned with managing the
    flow of finished products from your company to
    your customers.

33
Freight Forwarder
  • A freight forwarder is a company that puts many
    small shipments together to create a single large
    shipment that can be transported cost-effectively
    to the final destination.

34
Choosing the right transportation mode
  • The largest percentage of goods in the U.S. (by
    volume) is shipped by rail (35-40).
  • Trucks are the second most popular surface
    transportation mode, handling about 25 of the
    volume.
  • Can deliver to almost any business destination

35
Choosing the right transportation mode
  • Water transportation is the cheapest per pound,
    but is slow and offers limited destinations.
  • Pipelines are used primarily for transporting
    water, petroleum, and petroleum products.
  • Air transportation is the fastest, but the most
    expensive per pound.

36
Intermodal transportation
  • Piggyback loading truck trailers on railcars.

37
Intermodal transportation
  • Fishyback loading truck trailers onto ships

38
Intermodal transportation
  • Birdyback loading truck trailers onto airplanes
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