WMKT101 Distribution Marketing Fundamentals 代写

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  • WMKT101 Distribution Marketing Fundamentals 代写

    WMKT101 Distribution
    Distribution (place)
    Learning objectives:
    • understand the concept of place and how distribution
    channels connect producers and consumers/organisational
    buyers
    • describe the major activities involved in the distribution of
    products
    • recognise the characteristic structures involved in distribution
    • understand the advantages and disadvantages of using
    distributors
    • appreciate the differences in managing distribution based on
    “cooperation” versus “conflict”
    • understand the major aspects of retailing and the challenges
    facing conventional retailers
    The marketing process
    4
    Channels of distribution
    are distinctive and important because they :
    •are relatively enduring and inflexible (longer than product life
    cycles)
    •typically involve independent but interdependent
    organisations
    •(“Conflict” V. “Cooperation” Paradigms)
    •also involve the customer as an active participant
    •are a major “entry barrier” and determinant of profit
    •are inextricably linked to “customer service”
    •are a key driver of marketplace changes (linked to
    technological change)
    •are a potential source of a “sustainable competitive
    advantage”
    Retailing versus e-tailing
    in the florist industry
    • Roses Only
    Dial-up Broadband
    Marketing channels
    • Marketing intermediaries are individuals or
    organisations that act in the distribution chain between
    the producer and the end user (e.g. industrial buyers,
    wholesalers, agents and brokers and retailers).
    • The distribution channel involves a group of individuals
    and organisations directing products from producers to
    end users.
    Marketing channels
    • Effective intermediaries in marketing channels achieve the
    following:
    • Time utility: Making products available at the time the
    consumer wants to purchase them
    Marketing channels
    • Effective
    intermediaries in
    marketing channels
    achieve the following:
    • Place utility: Making
    products available in
    the locations that the
    consumer wants
    them
    Marketing channels
    • Effective intermediaries in
    marketing channels achieve
    the following:
    • Form utility: Customising
    products to the consumer’s
    particular needs
    Marketing channels
    • Effective intermediaries in marketing channels achieve
    the following:
    • Exchange efficiencies: Making transactions as simple and
    cheap as possible by establishing and managing efficient
    exchange processes.
    Marketing channels and
    the economy of reduced contacts
    Consumer product
    marketing channels
    “Export”
    $$
    Business-to-business product
    marketing channels
    Functions (flows) in distribution
    1. Physical Flows 1. Material Flow 1. Logistics
    Function
    2. Title Flows 2. Contract Flow 2. Transaction
    Function
    3. Payment Flows
    4. Information Flows 3. Contact Flow 3. Facilitation
    Function
    5. Promotional Flow
    15
    Five marketing flows in the
    marketing channel for forklift trucks
    Effective
    Delivery
    ADDED
    VALUE
    Selling
    Skills
    Market
    Segmentation
    Customer
    Contacts
    Market
    Knowledge
    & Coverage
    Customer &
    Manufacturer
    Services
    Specialisation
    Lower Costs
    Advantages of using distributors
    Middleman’s
    Profit
    ADDED
    COSTS
    Competitors’
    Products
    Poor
    Management
    Inadequate
    Communi-
    cations Conflicting
    Objectives
    Less
    Customer
    Contact
    Lack
    Technical
    Expertise
    Less
    Control
    Disadvantages of using distributors
    Types of Intermediaries
    • Merchants (take title and negotiate sales)
    •Wholesalers
    •Retailers
    • Agents (negotiate sales but do not take title)
    •Brokers,
    •Representative Agents
    • Facilitators (neither take title nor negotiate sales, but still
    perform ancillary functions)
    •Transport Companies
    •e-fulfilment Specialists
    •Finance Intermediaries
    •Warehousers
    Golden rules of channel structure
    1. One can eliminate or substitute institutions in the
    channel arrangement
    2. However, the functions these institutions perform
    cannot be eliminated
    3. When institutions are eliminated, their functions
    are shifted either forward or backward in the
    channel and, therefore, are assumed by other
    members
    Thus, you can eliminate channel members but you
    cannot eliminate the functions they perform.
    The value-adds versus costs of
    different channels
    Break-even Cost
    Chart
    (the “make or buy”
    decision?
    Marketing channels
    • The market coverage decision takes
    into account the nature of the product
    and its target market.
    • Generally, marketers will choose from:
    • intensive distribution which
    distributes products via every suitable
    intermediary
    Marketing channels
    • Exclusive distribution which distributes products through a single
    intermediary for any given geographic region
    • ** “exclusively available at Woolworths”
    Marketing channels
    • selective distribution which distributes products through
    intermediaries chosen for some specific reason.
    Supply-chain management
    • Supply-chain management
     Managing marketing channels based on ongoing
    partnerships among marketing channel members that
    reduce costs, eliminate redundant processes and
    develop new ways to deliver value to customers.
    • When one member of the marketing channel can exert
    power over the ability of other members to achieve
    goals, that member is known as the channel captain, and
    has channel power.
    Supply-chain management
    • Channel Conflict:
    • The more parties involved in a marketing
    channel, the greater the potential for conflict.
    Source: J French & B Raven, ‘The Bases of Social Power’
    in D Cartwright (ed) Studies in Social Power, 1959
    Managing channel relationships:
    sources of channel power
    • Coercive
    • Legitimate
    • Reward
    • Expert
    • Referent
    Referent Power
    Co-operation
    Satisfaction
    High Performance
    Coercive Power
    Conflict
    Dissatisfaction
    Low Performance
    Uses of channel power:
    evaluating supply chain performance
    Power Base Employed
    Channel
    Atmosphere
    http://www.smh.com.au/business/retail/table
    s-will-turn-on-woolworths-coles-says-jeff-
    kennett-20151009-gk5fxk
    Channel power in supermarkets
    Supply-chain management
    • Horizontal channel integration
    • Bringing organisations at the
    same level of operation under a
    single management structure
    • e.g. When a retailer buys out a
    competitor
    • Vertical channel integration
    • Bringing different stages of the
    marketing channel under a
    single management structure.
    Supply-chain management
    • Vertical marketing system (VMS)
    • A marketing channel in which all stages
    occur under a single management
    structure.
    • Franchising
    • An approach to business in which one
    party (a franchiser) licenses the
    business model to another party (a
    franchisee).
    Retailing
    • Retailing
    • Any exchange in which the buyer is the
    ultimate consumer of the product.
    • Retailing excludes transactions in which the
    buyer intends to resell the product or use it
    in the making of another product.
    Types of retailers
    • There are many different types of retailers. Generally,
    they fall under the categories:
    • General-merchandise retail store
    Offer a wide variety of products, e.g. department store, convenience
    stores
    • Speciality retail store
    Carry just one or a small number of
    different types of products, but within
    that product line, they carry a great
    deal of variety.
    Types of retailers
    • Direct marketing
    • Non-store retailing that promotes and sells
    products via mail, telephone or the web (eg
    Dell).
    • The main types of direct marketing are
    online retailing, telemarketing, catalogue
    marketing, television shopping and direct
    response marketing.
    • Mobile e-commerce is also an example of
    direct marketing.
    Types of retailers
    • Door-to-door selling
    • Sometimes known as ‘direct
    selling’. In the past, salesperson
    would walk from door to door to
    promote products to the person
    at home. Usually, customers are
    now identified by other means
    and an appointment is made.
    • e.g. Tupperware parties
    • Automatic vending
    • Use of machines to dispense a
    product; used for small, routinely
    purchased products.
    Types of retailers
    • The ‘wheel of retailing’ theory
    • The theory is that retailers enter the market with low
    costs, low margins and low prices, but move to high costs
    and high prices as they seek to compete with copiers,
    only to then have to compete with new low-price
    entrants.

    WMKT101 Distribution Marketing Fundamentals 代写
    • Online retailing (or e-tailing) involves selling to
    customers via the internet.
    • Mobile e-commerce is the use of a mobile phone to
    make purchases.
    Retailing challenges
    • Newsagencies facing tough times
    Broadband
    Distribution (place)
    Learning objectives:
    • understand the concept of place and how distribution
    channels connect producers and consumers/organisational
    buyers
    • describe the major activities involved in the distribution of
    products
    • recognise the characteristic structures involved in distribution
    • understand the advantages and disadvantages of using
    distributors
    • appreciate the differences in managing distribution based on
    “cooperation” versus “conflict”
    • understand the major aspects of retailing and the challenges
    facing conventional retailers
    WMKT101 Distribution Marketing Fundamentals 代写