Title: Retailing and Wholesaling
1 Chapter 13
- Retailing and Wholesaling
2What is Retailing?
Retailing
Includes all the activities Involved
in Selling Goods or Services Directly to Final
Consumers for Their Personal, Nonbusiness Use.
3Retailing
- Retailing can be done in stores (store retailing)
or out of a store (nonstore retailing) such as - Direct mail,
- Catalogs,
- Telephone,
- Home shopping shows,
- Internet.
4Classification of Retailing
Amount of Service Self-Service, Limited-Service
and Full-Service Retailer
Product Line Length and Breadth of the
Product Assortment
Relative Prices Pricing Structure that is Used
by the Retailer
5Classification of RetailingAmount of Service
Self-Service Retailer Provide Few or No
Services to Shoppers i.e. Best Buy
Limited-Service Retailers Provide Only a Limited
Number of Services to Shoppers i.e. Sears
Full-Service Retailers Retailers that Provide a
Full Range of Services to Shoppers i.e. Neiman
Marcus
6Classification of RetailingProduct Line (Tab.
13.1)
Store Description
7Classification of RetailingRelative Prices
Higher Prices and Offer Higher-Quality Goods and
Customer Service
Regular Prices and Offer Normal-Quality Goods
and Customer Service
Low Prices and Offer Lower-Quality Goods and
Customer Service
Catalog Showrooms
Discount Stores
Off-Priced Retailers
8Classification of RetailingRetail Organization
Corporate Chain
Merchandising Conglomerates
Voluntary Chain
Franchise Organizations
Retailer Cooperatives
9Retailer Marketing Decisions (Fig. 13.1)
Retailer Marketing Mix Product and service
assortment Prices Promotion Place (location)
Retailer Strategy Target Market Retail
Store Positioning
10Product Assortment and Services Decisions
11Retailers Price, Promotion, and Place
Decisions
Location, Location, Location!
12The Future of Retailing
New Retail Forms and Shortening Retail Lifecycle
Growth of Nonstore Retailing
Increasing Intertype Competition
Rise of Megaretailer
Growing Importance of Retail Technology
Global Expansion of Major Retailers
Retail Stores as Communities or Hangouts
13The Wheel of Retailing
14Discussion Connections
- Online retailers provide an alternative to
shopping the old fashioned way. - Discuss the differences in shopping for books and
music at www.Amazon.com vs. Barnes Noble
Booksellers. - Discuss the differences in shopping for groceries
at www.peapod.com vs. your local grocery store. - Which do you prefer and why?
15What is Wholesaling?
- All the activities involved in selling goods and
services to those buying for resale or business
use. - Wholesaler - those firms engaged primarily in
wholesaling activity. - Wholesalers buy mostly from producers and sell
mostly to - Retailers,
- Industrial consumers, and
- Other wholesalers.
16Why are Wholesalers Used?
Management Services Advice
Selling and Promoting
Wholesalers are Often Better at Performing One or
More of the Following Channel Functions
Market Information
Buying and Assortment Building
Wholesaler Functions
Bulk Breaking
Risk Bearing
Financing
Warehousing
Transportation
17Types of Wholesalers
Merchant Wholesaler Independently Owned
Business that Takes Title to the Merchandise it
Handles.
Manufacturers Sales Branches and
Offices Wholesaling by Sellers or Buyers
Themselves Rather Than Through Independent
Wholesalers.
Brokers/ Agents They Dont Take Title to the
Goods, and They Perform Only a Few Functions.
18Wholesaler Marketing Decisions (Fig. 13.2)
Wholesaler Marketing Mix Product and service
assortment Prices Promotion Place (location)
Wholesaler Strategy Target Market Service Positi
oning
19Trends in Wholesaling
20Review of Concept Connections
- Explain the roles of retailers and wholesalers in
the distribution channel. - Describe the major types of retailers and give
examples of each. - Identify the major types of wholesalers and give
examples of each. - Explain the marketing decisions facing retailers
and wholesalers.