Title: Retailing
1Retailing
- Final stop on the distribution path
- The process by which products are sold to
consumers for personal use - Retailers add value with image, inventory,
service quality, location, and pricing policies
2The Wheel of Retailing
- New types of retailers find it easiest to enter
the market by offering goods at lower prices than
competitors after they gain a foothold, they
gradually trade up, improving facilities and
increasing the quality and assortment of
merchandise, and offering special amenities
upscaling increases costs causing prices to rise
higher prices open the door for a new entrant
charging lower prices
3Wheel of Retailing
4Wheel of Retailing
5Retail Life Cycle
- Retailers are also products because they provide
benefits and must offer a competitive advantage
to survive - Introduction new retailer takes a unique
approach to doing business - Growth retailer catches on with shoppers, sales
and profits rise, others start to copy it so
retailer expands offerings - Maturity many have copied it and an entire
industry has formed, profits decline - Decline retail format becomes obsolete
6Whats in Store for the Future
Demographics
Globalization
Technology
7Major Demographic Factors
Convenience
Catering to specific age groups
Recognizing ethnic diversity
8Meeting Multiple Needs
9Retailers Go Global
10Classifying Retailers
- All retailers are classified by the NAICS codes
- Some lines still blurred
- scrambled merchandising - strategy of carrying a
combination of food and nonfood items
11Classifying Retailers by Service
Self-service
Limited-service
Full-service
12Limited-Service Retailer
13Self-Service Retailer
14Limited-Service Retailer
15Full-Service Retailer
16Classifying by Merchandise Selection
- Merchandise breadth is the number of different
product lines available - Narrow versus broad assortments
- Merchandise depth is the variety of choices
available for each specific product - Shallow versus deep assortments
17Merchandise Selection
18Store Types
- Convenience stores
- Supermarkets
- Specialty stores
- Department stores
- Hypermarket stores
- Discount stores
- General merchandise discount stores
- Off-price retailers
- Warehouse clubs
- Factory outlet stores
19Convenience Stores
20Warehouse Clubs
21Nonstore Retailing
- Any method a firm uses to complete an exchange
that does not require a customer visit to a store - Direct selling
- Automatic vending
22Direct Selling
- Direct selling occurs when a salesperson presents
a product to one individual or a small group,
takes orders, and delivers the merchandise - Door-to-Door Sales
- Parties and Networks
- party plan systems
- multilevel pyramid schemes
23Party Plan System
24Multi-level Networks
Amway uses direct selling through multi-level
networks to expand globally
25Automatic Vending
- Appealing for selling convenience goods because
of small space required, and minimal personnel to
maintain and operate
26Vending Machines
27Levi Strauss Vending Machine
Levi Strauss sells jeans in vending machines to
French consumers
28Virtual Models Online
29E-Commerce and the Customer
- Benefits
- Shop 24/7
- Less travel
- More choices
- More information
- Price competition
- Fast delivery
- Limitations
- Lack of security
- Fraud
- Cant touch items
- Hard to distinguish color/texture online
- Expensive to return
30Comparison Web sites
31E-Commerce and the Marketer
- Benefits
- The World is your marketplace
- Decreases costs
- Very specialized businesses possible
- Real-time pricing
- Tracking of consumer behavior
- Limitations
- Lack of security
- Must maintain site
- Price competition
- Conflicts with conventional retailers
- Legal issues not resolved
32The Problem of Identity Theft
33Store Positioning Strategy
Store Image
Atmospherics
34REI Enhances Store Image
35Mapping Store Personality
36Store Design Setting the Stage
- Store layout and traffic flow
- Fixture type and merchandise density
- The sound of music
- Color and lighting
- The Actors Store Personnel
- Pricing policy
37Building the Theater Store Location
- Types of locations
- Site selection
- Location planners evaluate trade area and conduct
site evaluation - traffic flow, number of parking spaces available,
ease of delivery access, visibility from street,
local zoning laws, population characteristics,
community life cycle, mobility, degree of
competition
38Grid Layout
39Types of Store Locations
40Site Selection
- Reflect growth strategy
- Convenient to customers in trade area
- Population characteristics
- Degree of competition
- Target market location