Marketing Indicator 3.05: Acquire Foundational Knowledge of Channel Management To Understand Its Role in Marketing
Marketing Indicator 3.05: Acquire Foundational Knowledge of Channel Management To Understand Its Role in Marketing
05
Channel Functions
Information Promotion Negotiation Funding
Contact
Matching
Risk taking
Physical distribution Payment options
Marketing
Packaging Financing
Delivery
Merchandising Personal Selling
Storage
Involves determining the characteristics that distinguish the better ones by evaluating channel members Do they: Provide value? Perform a function? Expect an economic return ? Years in business Lines carried Profit record
Selecting intermediaries that are sales agents involves evaluating Number and character of other lines carried Size and quality of sales force
Selecting intermediates that are retail stores that want exclusive or selective distribution involves evaluating Stores customers Store locations Growth potential
There are a variety of intermediaries that may get involved before a product gets from the original producer to the final user. Retailers Can be classified by: Type of goods being sold( e.g. clothes, grocery, furniture) Type of service (e.g. self-service, counter-service) Size (e.g. corner shop; superstore) Ownership (e.g. privately-owned independent; public-quoted retail group) Location (e.g. rural, city-centre, out-of-town) Brand (e.g. nationwide retail brands; local one-shop name) Wholesalers Distributors and dealers Franchises Agents
Producer
Producer
Producer
Producer
Agent
Consumer
Retailer
Wholesaler
Wholesaler
Retailer
Consumer
Producer
Producer
Producer
Producer
Buyer
BB distributor
Agent
Agent
Buyer
Buyer
Distributor
Buyer
Price Discrimination - Most price discrimination issues arise under the Robinson-Patman Act when a seller offers its otherwise uniform products at different prices due to size or geographic location of the buyer.
Vertical Non-Price Restraints - Manufacturers may attempt to implement a variety of restraints affecting distribution channels that trigger antitrust considerations. The three most common forms are tying, exclusive dealing, territorial and customer restrictions. Tying is an arrangement by which the sale or lease of Product X, which the buyer wants, is conditioned on the buyer also purchasing Product Y, which the buyer does not necessarily want. Exclusive dealing involves a situation in which a buyer contracts to purchase all of its requirements for a given product exclusively from a particular seller.
Gray Market
A gray market is a market created through the sale or resale of branded products through unauthorized dealers or distributors. These are real products showing up in places in which the firm never expected them to be sold and it happens all the time. Can and do cause problems for firms. Their existence can damage channel relationships, foster free-riding, dilute brands, undermine segmented pricing schemes and impact the firms reputation and legal liability.
Gray Marketcontinued
The existence of gray markets can, counter-intuitively, be somewhat beneficial to the firm. There is an opportunity for firms to learn from gray market activity.
In order to do so, firms must ask a specific set of questions, such as: Why is it occurring? Who is behind this activity? Who is buying on the gray market? What is being sold? When is it being sold? How is it being sold?
Call Center
Customer
Online Order
Warehouse
Inventory Check
Items
in Stock?
At the same time, there are opportunities for continuous improvement and performance management, resulting in improved market share.
The first is delivery performance, which is a measure of the percentage of customer orders delivered on time and in compliance. The second is order fulfillment lead time, or the amount of time from customer order to the customer receipt of the product. The third is distribution response time, which is the amount of time a distribution operation takes to respond to changes in demand at the least cost without penalties.
Distribution on Demand
Seamless, synchronized processes are what its about. Processes must be integrated end-to-end and demand the right mix of technology, infrastructure and labor to make them work. Distribution Intelligence Software (DIS) comes into play.
Existing assets (like WMS, MHE and labor) are all synchronized by DIS. Events are tracked by the software and data is turned into continuous feedback enabling performance evaluation and process synchronization.
o Each channel typically has its own software and computer system
o More information is available to all the channel levels and will they use it correctly? o Financial records may be viewed by employees/channel members who do not need that information