Lesson 2 Types of Retailers Types of Retailers

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LESSON 2

Types of Retailers

Adapted from:

Levy M., Weitz B. and Grewal D., Retailing Management, 10th


Edition, McGraw-Hill, New York, 2019,

©McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom. No reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Learning Objectives
Learning Objective 2-1 List the different characteristics
that define retailers.
Learning Objective 2-2 Categorize the various types of
food retailers.
Learning Objective 2-3 Identify the various types of
general merchandise retailers.
Learning Objective 2-4 Explain the differences between
service and merchandise retailers.
Learning Objective 2-5 Illustrate the types of ownership
for retail firms.

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Retailer Characteristics 1 of 6
Learning Objective 2-1 List the different characteristics that define retailers.

Type of Merchandise
• North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS)
• Six-digit code assigned to every business

©McGraw-Hill Education.
EXHIBIT 2-1 NAICS Codes for
Retailers

Jump to long description in


appendix SOURCE: “North American Industry Classification System (NAICS),” U.S. Census Bureau,
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Retailer Characteristics 2 of 6
Variety and Assortment
• Variety (breadth)
• Assortment (depth)
• Variety and assortment also apply to a specific merchandise
category rather than entire store
• Stock-keeping unit (SKU)

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Retailer Characteristics 3 of 6
Services Offered
• Certain services expected
• Displaying merchandise
• Accepting credit cards
• Providing parking

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Retailer Characteristics 4 of 6

Retailers differ in the


services they offer
customers
• Wheelworks offers
assistance in selecting
the appropriate bicycle
as well as bicycle
repairs.
• Walmart, however,
doesn’t provide any
additional services.

©McGraw-Hill Education. © Holger Burmeister/Alamy Stock Photo


Retailer Characteristics 5 of 6

Amazon
offers the
largest
variety and
assortment
of any U.S.
retailer

©McGraw-Hill Education. © franky242/Alamy Stock Photo


Retailer Characteristics 6 of 6

Prices and Cost of Offering Breadth and Depth of


Merchandise and Services
• Stocking a deep and broad assortment (like
Wheelworks) is costly for retailers.
• Many SKUs
• Retailer must have backup stock for each SKU
• This leads to a rise in inventory investment cost

• Broader variety, deeper assortment requires retailer to


charge higher prices to make a profit.

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Food Retailers 1 of 9

Learning Objective 2-2 Categorize the various types of food retailers.

Conventional
supermarkets
account for less than
65% of food sales
• Offer services:
pharmacies, health
care, banks, coffee
• Want customers to
think of it as a
place to “hang out”

©McGraw-Hill Education. © Damian Dovarganes/AP Images


EXHIBIT 2-3 Sales and Growth Rate for Retail Sectors
1 of 2

Estimated Sales, 2013 ($mil) Estimated Sales Growth 2008-2013


Food Retailers
Conventional Supermarkets $622,896 3.3%
Supercenters 354,905 7.1
Warehouse clubs 159,075 6.7
Convenience stores 748,186 3.0
General Merchandise
Retailers
Department stores 73,291 -0.9
Apparel/accessory stores 210,236 4.5
Jewelry stores 36,848 3.4
Shoe stores 29,606 1.8
Furniture stores 66,262 2.2
Home furnishing stores 59,465 2.8
Office supply stores 26,404 2.2
©McGraw-Hill Education.
EXHIBIT 2-3 Sales and Growth Rate for Retail Sectors
2 of 2

Estimated Sales, 2013 ($mil) Estimated Sales Growth 2008-2013

General Merchandise Retailers


Sporting goods stores $49,717 5.3%
Bookstores 19,101 2.1
Building material, hardware, 393,254 3.6
garden supply stores
Consumer electronics 141,800 4.4
Drugstores 250,172 4.2
Full-line discount stores 126,385 0.0
Extreme-value stores 52,454 3.1
NonStore Retailers
Nonstore retailing 340,421 9.0
E-commerce 282,055 15.0

©McGraw-Hill Education.
EXHIBIT 2-4 Characteristics of Food Retailers

Limited-
Conventional Assortment Warehouse Convenience
Supermarket Supermarket Supercenter Club Store
Percentage food 70-80 80-90 30-40 60 90

Size (000 sq. ft.) 35-40 7-10 160-200 100-150 3-5


SKUs (000) 30-40 1-1.5 100-150 20 2-3
Variety Average Narrow Broad Broad Narrow
Assortment Average Shallow Deep Shallow Shallow
Ambience Pleasant Minimal Average Minimal Average
Service Modest Limited Limited Limited Limited
Prices Average Lowest Low Low High
Gross margin (%) 20-22 10-12 15-18 12-15 25-30

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Food Retailers 2 of 9
Supermarkets
• Conventional supermarkets
• Perishables (meat, dairy,
produce) are almost 54% of sales

• Limited assortment
supermarkets
• Extreme-value food retailers
• 1500 SKU
• Offer one or two brands and sizes
• Maximize efficiency to reduce
costs
• Merchandise up to 40% lower
than conventional supermarkets

©McGraw-Hill Education. © Ulrich Baumgarten/Getty Images


Food Retailers 3 of 9
Competition
• Supercenters
• Warehouse Clubs
• Convenience Stores
• Extreme Price Retailers
• Convenience Stores
• Drug Stores

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Food Retailers 4 of 9
Fresh Merchandise
• Power perimeter
Green Merchandise
• Fair trade
• Locavore movement
Ethnic Merchandise
Private-Label
Merchandise

©McGraw-Hill Education. © Kristoffer Tripplaar/Alamy Stock Photo


Food Retailers 5 of 9

Supercenters
• Combine supermarket with full-line discount store
• One-stop shopping experience
• Hypermarkets emphasize perishables
• Big-box stores

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Food Retailers 6 of 9

Warehouse Clubs
• Offer limited and irregular assortment of food and
general merchandise
• Little service and low prices
• Low-rent districts
• Simple interiors
• Low inventory holding costs

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Food Retailers 7 of 9

©McGraw-Hill Education. © Justin Sullivan/Getty Images


Food Retailers 8 of 9
Convenience Stores
• Limited assortment of merchandise
• Convenience shopping
• Prices generally higher than supermarkets
• Tailoring assortment to local markets
• Offering more fresh options
• Adding services: banking, movie tickets, gift cards

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Food Retailers 9 of 9
Online Grocery Retailers
• Customers willing to pay
more to save time
• Online retailers continues to
expand
• About 30% of orders are for
nonfood items
• Paper products, cleaning
items
• Slim profit margins continue
to be a problem

©McGraw-Hill Education. © Mario Tama/Getty Images


EXHIBIT 2-5 Characteristics of General
Merchandise Retailers 1 of 2
Learning Objective 2-3 Identify the various types of general merchandise
retailers.

Size
SKUs
Type Variety Assortment Service Prices (000 Location
(000)
sq. ft.)
Department Broad Deep to Averag Averag 100– 100 Regional
stores average e to e to 200 malls
high high
Discount Broad Average to Low Low 60–80 30 Stand-alone,
stores shallow power strip
centers
Category Narrow Very deep Low to Low 50– 20– Stand-alone,
specialists high 100 40 power strip
centers
Specialty Narrow Deep High High 4–12 5 Regional
stores malls

©McGraw-Hill Education.
EXHIBIT 2-5 Characteristics of General
Merchandise Retailers 2 of 2

Size
SKUs
Type Variety Assortment Service Prices (000 Location
(000)
sq. ft.)
Home Narrow Very deep Low to Low 80– 20– Stand-alone,
improveme high 120 40 power strip
nt centers centers
Drugstores Narrow Very deep Averag Averag 3–15 10– Stand-alone,
e e to 20 strip centers
high
Off-price Average Deep but Low Low 20–30 50 Outlet malls
stores varying
Extreme- Average Average and Low Low 7–15 3–4 Urban, strip
value varying
retailers

©McGraw-Hill Education.
General Merchandise Retailers 1 of 8
Department Stores
• Broad variety, deep assortment
• Customer services and distinct merchandise
departments
• Soft goods, hard goods, durable goods
• Three tiers
• Upscale, high-fashion chains
• Moderate pricing with less customer service
• Value-oriented

©McGraw-Hill Education.
General Merchandise Retailers 2 of 8
Department Stores
continued
• Must minimize eroding
market share
• Aggressively seeking
exclusive brands
• More emphasis on
developing private-
label/store brands
• Expanding omnichannel
and social media
presence

©McGraw-Hill Education. © Bernard Weil/Toronto Star/Getty Images


General Merchandise Retailers 3 of 8
Full-Line Discount Stores
• Broad variety, limited service, low prices
• Walmart
• Converted many discount stores into supercenters
• Online order with store pick-up
• Expanding product range
• Target
• Fashionable merchandise “cheap chic” appeal
• Kmart
• Seeking innovative solutions as it continues to struggle

©McGraw-Hill Education.
General Merchandise Retailers 4 of 8
Category Specialists
• Deep, narrow
assortment
• Self-service approach
• Category killers –
consumers drawn to
deep assortment and
competitive prices
• Intense competition
• Trying to differentiate
with customer service

©McGraw-Hill Education. © Seth Perlman/AP Images


General Merchandise Retailers 5 of 8
Specialty Stores
• Concentrate on limited number of complementary
merchandise categories
• Deep but narrow variety
• Sales associate expertise
• Among most-profitable and fastest-growing firms
• Growing specialty store sector
• Resale stores
• Thrift stores
• Consignment shops

©McGraw-Hill Education.
General Merchandise Retailers 6 of 8
Drugstores
• Concentrate on health and beauty care
• Competition from pharmacies, some food retailers,
pressure to reduce costs
• Offer wider assortment of merchandise
• Offer more services with drive-through windows, curbside
pick-up, in-store clinics

©McGraw-Hill Education.
General Merchandise Retailers 7 of 8

Extreme-Value
Retailers
• Dollar stores
• Broad variety,
but shallow
assortment
• Target low-
income
© Daniel Acker/Bloomberg/Getty Images
consumers

©McGraw-Hill Education. © Daniel Acker/Bloomberg/Getty Images


General Merchandise Retailers 8 of 8
Off-Price Retailers
• Inconsistent assortment of brand-name merchandise
• Significant price discounts – 20% to 60% lower than
suggested retail price
• Closeouts
• Irregulars
• Outlet stores
• Factory outlets
• Flash sale sites

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Service Retailing 1 of 2

Learning Objective 2-4 Explain the differences between service and


merchandise retailers.

Sell service rather than merchandise

Jump to long description in


appendix
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Service Retailing 2 of 2
Differences between
Service and
Merchandise
Retailers
• Intangibility
• Simultaneous
production and
consumption
• Perishability
• Inconsistency of
offerings to
customers

©McGraw-Hill Education. © Quique Garcia/AFP/Getty Images


Types of Ownership 1 of 3

Learning Objective 2-5 Explain the types of ownership for retail firms.

Independent, Single-Store Establishments


• Rely on owner/manager capabilities to make retail
decisions
• Some join wholesale-sponsored voluntary
cooperative groups

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Types of Ownership 2 of 3
Corporate Retail Chains
• Retail chains operate multiple units under common
ownership
• Centralized decision-making for defining and
implementing strategy

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Types of Ownership 3 of 3
Franchising
• Franchisor sells rights
to use business
trademark to
franchisee for a fee
• More than 40% of U.S.
retail sales
• Drawbacks
• Start-up costs
• Must adhere to
franchisor’s
rules/guidelines

©McGraw-Hill Education. © In Pictures Ltd./Corbis/Getty Images


Key Terms 1 of 8
assortment The number of SKUs within a merchandise category. Also
called depth of merchandise.
big box store Large, limited-service retailer.
breadth of merchandise The number of different merchandise
categories within a store or department. Also called variety.
category killer A discount retailer that offers a narrow but deep
assortment of merchandise in a category and thus dominates the
category from the customers’ perspective. Also called a category
specialist.
closeout An offer at a reduced price to sell a group of slow-moving or
incomplete stock.
consignment shop A store that sells used merchandise and reimburses
the individual customers who provide the items only after they sell.

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Key Terms 2 of 8
convenience store A store that provides a limited variety and
assortment of merchandise at a convenient location in a 2,000- to
3,000-square-foot store with speedy checkout.
conventional supermarket A self-service food store that offers
groceries, meat, and produce with limited sales of nonfood items, such
as health and beauty aids and general merchandise.
department store A retailer that carries a wide variety and deep
assortment, offers considerable customer services, and is organized
into separate departments for displaying merchandise.
depth of merchandise The number of SKUs within a merchandise
category. Also called assortment.
dollar store Small, full-line discount store that offers a limited
merchandise assortment at very low prices. Also called extreme-
value retailer.

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Key Terms 3 of 8
drugstore Specialty retail store that concentrates on pharmaceuticals
and health and personal grooming merchandise.
durable goods Merchandise expected to last for several years, such
as appliances and furniture. Also known as hard goods.
exclusive brand A brand developed by a national brand vendor, often
in conjunction with a retailer, and sold exclusively by the retailer.
extreme value food retailer A supermarket offering a limited number
of SKUs.
extreme value retailer Small, full-line discount store that offers a
limited merchandise assortment at very low prices. Also called dollar
store.

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Key Terms 4 of 8
factory outlet Outlet store owned by a manufacturer.
fair trade Purchasing practices that require producers to pay workers a
living wage, well more than the prevailing minimum wage, and offer
other benefits, like onsite medical treatment.
franchising A contractual agreement between a franchisor and a
franchisee that allows the franchisee to operate a retail outlet using
a name and format developed and supported by the franchisor.
full-line discount store Retailers that offer a broad variety of
merchandise, limited service, and low prices.
hard goods Merchandise expected to last for several years, such as
appliances and furniture. Also known as durable goods.
hypermarket Large (100,000–300,000 square feet) combination food
(60–70 percent) and general merchandise (30–40 percent) retailer.

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Key Terms 5 of 8
irregular Merchandise that has minor mistakes in construction.
limited-assortment supermarket A supermarket offering a limited
number of SKUs.
locavore movement A movement focusing on reducing the carbon
footprint caused by the transportation of food throughout the world.
North American Industry Classification System (NAICS)
Classification of retail firms into a hierarchical set of six-digit codes
based on the types of products and services they produce and sell.
off-price retailer A retailer that offers an inconsistent assortment of
brand-name, fashion-oriented soft goods at low prices.
outlet store Off-price retailer owned by a manufacturer or department
or specialty store chain.
power perimeter The areas around the outside walls of a supermarket
that have fresh merchandise categories.
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Key Terms 6 of 8
private-label brand Products developed and marketed by a retailer
and available for sale only by that retailer. Also called store brand,
house brand, or own brand.
retail chain A firm that consists of multiple retail units under common
ownership and usually has some centralization of decision making in
defining and implementing its strategy.
resale store Retailer that sells secondhand or used merchandise.
service retailer Organization that offers consumers services rather
than merchandise. Examples include banks, hospitals, health spas,
doctors, legal clinics.
soft goods Merchandise with a relatively short life span, such as
clothing or cosmetics.

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Key Terms 7 of 8
specialty store A type of store concentrating on a limited number of
complementary merchandise categories and providing a high level
of service.
stock-keeping unit (SKU) The smallest unit available for keeping
inventory control. In soft goods merchandise, an SKU usually means
a size, color, and style.
store brand Products developed and marketed by a retailer and
available for sale only by that retailer. Also called private-label
brands, house brand, or own brand.
supercenter Large store (150,000 to 220,000 square feet) combining a
discount store with a supermarket.
supermarket A conventional supermarket is a large, self-service retail
food store offering groceries, meat, and produce, as well as some
nonfood items, such as health and beauty aids and general
merchandise.
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Key Terms 8 of 8
thrift store A retail format offering used merchandise.
variety The number of different merchandise categories within a store
or department.
warehouse club A retailer that offers a limited assortment of food and
general merchandise with little service and low prices to ultimate
consumers and small businesses.
wholesale-sponsored voluntary cooperative group An organization
operated by a wholesaler offering a merchandising program to
small, independent retailers on a voluntary basis.

©McGraw-Hill Education.
Appendix of Image Long
Descriptions
Appendix 1 EXHIBIT 2-1 NAICS Codes for Retailers

Twelve NAICS codes for merchandise sellers are listed: 441 motor vehicle and
parts dealers; 442 furniture and home furnishing stores; 443 electronics and
appliance stores; 444 buildings material and garden equipment and
supplies dealers; 445 food and beverage stores; 446 health and personal
care stores; 447 gasoline stations; 448 clothing and clothing accessories
stores; 451 sporting goods, hobby, book, and music stores; 452 general
merchandise stores; 453 miscellaneous store retailers; 454 nonstore
retailers.
448 clothing and clothing accessories stores can be further categorized as
4481 clothing stores, 4482 shoe stores, and 4483 jewelry, luggage, and
leather goods stores.
Clothing stores are further categorized as 44811 men’s clothing stores; 44812
women’s clothing stores; 44813 children’s and infants’ clothing stores;
44814 family clothing stores; 44815 clothing accessories stores; and 44819
other clothing stores. Shoe stores are further categorized as 44821 shoe
stores. Jewelry, luggage, and leather goods stores are further categorized
as 44831 jewelry stores and 44832 luggage and leather goods stores.
Return to original slide
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Appendix 2 Service Retailing 1 of 2

Business are listed as follows from left to right: wholesale


club, supermarket, category specialist,
specialty/department store, optical center, restaurant,
airline, bank/university.

Return to original slide


©McGraw-Hill Education.

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