Sales & Distribution Management
Sales & Distribution Management
Sales & Distribution Management
Distribution is one of the classic 4 Ps of marketing (product, promotion, price, placement a.k.a. distribution) Its a key element in your entire marketing strategy It helps you expand your reach and grow revenue.
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Learning Goals
1. Understand why companies use distribution channels and discuss the functions that these channels perform 2. Discuss how channel members interact and how they organize to perform the work of the channel 3. Identify the major channel alternatives open to a company 4. Understand how companies select, motivate, and evaluate channel members
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Learning Goals
1. Understand why companies use distribution channels and discuss the functions that these channels perform 2. Discuss how channel members interact and how they organize to perform the work of the channel 3. Identify the major channel alternatives open to a company 4. Explain how companies select, motivate, and evaluate channel members 5. Discuss the nature and importance of physical distribution
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Marketing channel
Set of interdependent organizations involved in the process of making a product or service available for use or consumption by the consumer or business user.
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Producers lose more control and face greater channel complexity as additional channel levels are added.
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Learning Goals
1. Understand why companies use distribution channels and discuss the functions that these channels perform 2. Discuss how channel members interact and how they organize to perform the work of the channel 3. Identify the major channel alternatives open to a company 4. Explain how companies select, motivate, and evaluate channel members 5. Discuss the nature and importance of physical distribution
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Types of Conflict:
Horizontal conflict: occurs among firms at the same channel level. Grocery store vs. drug store. Vertical conflict: occurs among firms at different channel levels producer versus wholesaler producer versus retailer Channel Power is the ability to influence or determine behaviour of others in channel. Based on expertise, rewards and sanctions
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Quit doing business with big retailers whose demands are too strict and outlandish. Become a retailer. Merge with another manufacturer.
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Integrates successive stages of production and distribution under single ownership channel ownership is established through common ownership Coordination and conflict through regular organizational channels
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Leadership through the size and power of dominant channel members Leadership could be manufacturer or retailer
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Two or more companies at one channel level join together to increase coverage Example: Banks in Grocery Stores
A single firm sets up two or more marketing channels to increase coverage Example: Retailers, Catalogs, and Sales Force
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Producer consumer (direct) Producer retailer consumer Producer wholesaler retailer consumer Producer agent retailer consumer Producer agent wholesale retailer consumer
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Consumer Channels
PRODUCERS OF CONSUMER GOODS
Agents
Agents
Merchant wholesalers
Merchant wholesalers
Retailers
Retailers
Retailers
Retailers
ULTIMATE CONSUMERS
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Business Channels
PRODUCERS OF BUSINESS GOODS
Agents
Agents
BUSINESS USERS
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Service Channels
PRODUCERS OF SERVICES
Agents
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Learning Goals
1. Explain why companies use distribution channels and discuss the functions that these channels perform 2. Discuss how channel members interact and how they organize to perform the work of the channel 3. Identify the major channel alternatives open to a company 4. Explain how companies select, motivate, and evaluate channel members
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Intensive Distribution
Selective Distribution
Exclusive Distribution
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Your distribution strategy should deliver the information and service your prospects need. For each customer segment, consider: How and where they prefer to buy Whether they need personalized education and training Whether they need additional products or services to be used along with yours Whether your product needs to be customized or installed Whether your product needs to be serviced
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If your end-users need a great deal of information and service, your company can deliver it directly through a sales force. You can also build a channel of qualified resellers or consultants. The size of the market and your price will probably dictate which scenario is best.
If the buying process is fairly straightforward, you can sell direct via a website/catalog or perhaps through a wholesale/retail structure. You may also use an inbound telemarketing group or a field sales team. If you need complete control over your products delivery and service, adding a channel probably isnt right for you.
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Intensive Distribution
Selective Distribution
Exclusive Distribution
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Intensive Distribution
Selective Distribution
Exclusive Distribution
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SELECTIVE Distribution through multiple, but not all, reasonable outlets in a market
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Types of Intermediaries
Company sales force Manufacturers agency Industrial distributors
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Multiple Channels
Wholesaler/Distributor Direct/Internet Direct/Catalog Direct/Sales Team Value-Added Reseller (VAR) Consultant Dealer Retail Sales Agent/Manufacturers Rep
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You have a sales team that sells directly to Fortune 100 companies.
You have a second product line for small businesses. Instead of using your sales team, you sell this line directly to end-users through your Your dealers are essentially website and marketing your customers, and you have campaigns. a strong program to train and support them with marketing You have two markets and campaigns and materials. two distribution channels.
You sell a product through a geographical network of dealers who sell to end-users in their areas. The dealers may service the product as well.
A VAR may work with an enduser to determine the right products and configurations, and then implement a system that includes your product.
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Intensive Distribution
Selective Distribution
Exclusive Distribution
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AC
Economic Criteria
Control Issues
Adaptive Criteria
EC
CI
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Learning Goals
1. Explain why companies use distribution channels and discuss the functions that these channels perform 2. Discuss how channel members interact and how they organize to perform the work of the channel 3. Identify the major channel alternatives open to a company 4. Explain how companies select, motivate, and evaluate channel members
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Motivating
Evaluating
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Exclusive dealing. Sellers cannot demand exclusivity for their product from resellers if it can be proven that it will lessen competition or create a monopoly Exclusive territories. Sellers may grant exclusive territories, but may have trouble demanding that resellers deal only within that exclusive territory Tying agreements. demanding that resellers buy and/or stock all products within a product line, as a condition of doing business. Not illegal but a source of much channel conflict
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Dealers rights. Producers are free to select dealers, but are limited in their ability to terminate dealers; they must show cause, and cannot drop dealers who refuse to participate in doubtful legal arrangements Sources of supply. Ethical concerns over supply sources from countries with human rights violations or use the proceeds to fund armed conflict
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2. Find organizations who already have access to your prospects. Think broadly about
Media they consume (online content, podcasts, industry publications, newspapers, etc.) Services they subscribe to Consultants or vendors they work with Companies they buy from regularly Organizations they belong to Events they attend
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1.Make it a priority