mkt exam 3
Reorder Point =
(Order Lead Time × Usage Rate) + Safety Stock
Procurement
(Sometimes called supply management) involves the processes to obtain resources to create value through sourcing, purchasing, and recycling, including materials and information(long-term)
Marketing channel
(channel of distribution or distribution channel) - A group of individuals and organizations that direct the flow of products from producers to customers within the supply chain -influence on the other elements of the marketing mix -presence and accessibility -long-term commitments among a variety of firms -least flexible(hard to change)
•Birdyback
(truck and air)
•Piggyback
(truck and rail)
•Fishyback
(truck and water)
Electronic data interchange (EDI)
A computerized means of integrating order processing with production, inventory, accounting, and transportation •Functions as an information system that links marketing channel members and outsourcing firms together
General-merchandise retailers
A retail establishment that offers a variety of product lines that are stocked in considerable depth -The primary types of general-merchandise retailers are: •Department stores •Discount stores •Convenience stores •Supermarkets •Superstores •Hypermarkets •Warehouse clubs •Warehouse showrooms
•Exclusive dealing
A situation in which a manufacturer forbids an intermediary from carrying products of competing manufacturers •Only considered legal if the: •Exclusive deal blocks competitors from less than 15 percent of the market •The sales volume is small The producer is smaller than the retailer
Convenience store
A small self-service store that is open long hours and carries a narrow assortment of products, usually convenience items
•Catalog marketing
A type of marketing in which an organization provides a catalog from which customers make selections and place orders by mail, telephone, or the internet
•Power shopping center -
A type of shopping center that combines off-price stores with category killers •Bypasses the traditional department store anchor and instead anchors with stores such as the Gap, T.J. Maxx, PetSmart, and Home Depot
•Lifestyle shopping center -
A type of shopping center that is typically open air and features upscale specialty, dining, and entertainment stores
•Neighborhood shopping centers -
A type of shopping center usually consisting of several small convenience and specialty stores 10 min drive
•Community shopping centers -
A type of shopping center with one or two department stores, some specialty stores, and convenience stores
•Regional shopping centers -
A type of shopping center with the largest department stores, widest product mixes, and deepest product lines of all shopping centers •national chain stores
•Superregional shopping centers -
A type of shopping center with the widest and deepest product mixes that attracts customers from many miles away •Often have special attractions beyond stores, such as skating rinks, amusement centers, or upscale restaurants
•Category killer
A very large specialty store that concentrates on a major product category and competes on the basis of low prices and product availability •Expand rapidly and gain sizable market shares, taking business away from smaller, high-cost retail outlets
•Commission merchants -
Agents that receive goods on consignment from local sellers and negotiate sales in large, central markets
Supply chain
All the organizations and activities involved with the flow and transformation of products from raw materials through to the end consumer
•Retailing
All transactions in which the buyer intends to consume the product through personal, family, or household use(ultimate consumer)
Tying agreement
An agreement in which a supplier furnishes a product to a channel member with the stipulation that the channel member must purchase other products as well •Suppliers may institute tying agreements as a means of getting rid of slow-moving inventory •A franchiser may tie the purchase of equipment and supplies to the sale of franchises, justifying the policy as necessary for quality control and protection of the franchiser's reputation •Courts accept tying agreements when: •The supplier is the only firm able to provide products of a certain quality •The intermediary is free to carry competing products as well •A company has just entered the market •Most other tying agreements are considered illegal
Strategic channel alliance
An agreement whereby the products of one organization are distributed through the marketing channels of another
•Franchising
An arrangement in which a supplier (franchisor) grants a dealer (franchisee) the right to sell products in exchange for some type of consideration •The franchisor may receive a percentage of total sales in exchange for furnishing equipment, buildings, management know-how, and marketing assistance to the franchisee •The franchisee supplies labor and capital, operates the franchised business, and agrees to abide by the provisions of the franchise agreement
•Industrial distributor
An independent business organization that takes title to industrial products and carries inventories low cost but inventory costs local standardized items independent
•Manufacturers' agent
An independent businessperson who sells complementary products of several producers in assigned territories and is compensated through commissions(large accounts gravitated) technical information low inventory
•Just-in-time (JIT)
An inventory-management approach in which supplies arrive just when needed for production or resale •Usually there is no safety stock •Requires a high level of coordination between producers and suppliers •Eliminates waste •Reduces inventory costs
Experience qualities
Attributes that can be assessed only during purchase and consumption of a service
Horizontal channel integration
Combining organizations at the same level of operation under one management
Vertical channel integration
Combining two or more stages of the marketing channel under one management - contractual vms
Private warehouses vs Public warehouses
Company-operated vs leased by companies
Digital distribution
Delivering content through the Internet to a computer or other device
Client publics
Direct consumers of a product of a nonprofit organization
•Multichannel retailing
Employing multiple distribution channels that complement their brick-and-mortar stores with websites, catalogs, and apps where consumers can research products, read other buyers' reviews, and make actual purchases
Third-party logistics (3PL)
Firms have special expertise in core physical distribution activities such as warehousing, transportation, inventory management, and information technology and can often perform these activities more efficiently
•Television home shopping
Form of selling in which products are presented to television viewers, who can buy them by calling a toll-free number and paying with a credit card
Form utility
Formed by assembling, preparing, or otherwise refining the product to suit individual customer needs
•Megacarriers
Freight transportation firms that provide several modes of shipment
•Limited-line wholesalers -
Full-service wholesalers that carry only a few product lines but many products within those lines
•Specialty-line wholesalers
Full-service wholesalers that carry only a single product line or a few items within a product line
•General-merchandise wholesalers
Full-service wholesalers with a wide product mix but limited depth within product lines
•Rack jobbers
Full-service, specialty-line wholesalers that own and maintain display racks in stores
•Superstores
Giant retail outlets that carry food and non-food products found in supermarkets, as well as most routinely purchased consumer products
time utility
Having products available when the consumer wants them
•Retail positioning
Identifying an unserved or underserved market segment and serving it through a strategy that distinguishes the retailer from others in the minds of consumers in that segment
•Manufacturers' agents
Independent intermediaries that represent two or more sellers and usually offer customers complete product lines
•Merchant wholesalers
Independently owned businesses that take title to goods, assume ownership risks, and buy and resell products to other wholesalers, business customers, or retailers(full/limited)
General publics
Indirect consumers of a product of a nonprofit organization
•Brokers -
Intermediaries that bring buyers and sellers together temporarily
•Selling agents
Intermediaries that market a whole product line or a manufacturer's entire output
•Agents
Intermediaries that represent either buyers or sellers on a permanent basis
Distribution centers
Large, centralized warehouses that focus on moving rather than storing goods
•Supermarkets
Large, self-service stores that carry a complete line of food products, along with some non-food products
•Warehouse clubs (buying clubs) -
Large-scale, members-only establishments that combine features of cash-and-carry wholesaling with discount retailing
•Drop shippers (desk jobbers)
Limited-service wholesalers that take title to goods and negotiate sales but never actually take possession of product
•Truck wholesalers (track jobbers)
Limited-service wholesalers that transport products directly to customers for inspection and selection
•Cash-and-carry wholesalers
Limited-service wholesalers whose customers pay cash and furnish transportation
Place utility
Making products available in locations where customers wish to purchase them
Operations management
Managing activities from production to final delivery through system-wide coordination(creation)
•Sales branches -
Manufacturer-owned intermediaries that sell products and provide support services to the manufacturer's sales force
•Sales offices
Manufacturer-owned operations that provide services normally associated with agents
Nonprofit marketing
Marketing to achieve some goal other than ordinary business goals such as profit, market share, or return on investment •Nonprofit-organization marketing •Social cause marketing Change in values Financial contribution Donation of services •Greater opportunities for creativity •More difficult to judge performance •Sometimes controversial
•Full-service wholesalers
Merchant wholesalers that perform the widest range of wholesaling functions
•Limited-service wholesalers
Merchant wholesalers that provide some services and specialize in a few functions
Marketing intermediaries
Middlemen that link producers to other intermediaries or ultimate consumers through contractual arrangements or through the purchase and resale of products
Unit loading
One or more boxes are placed on a pallet or skid materials handling
•Freight forwarders
Organizations that consolidate shipments from several firms into efficient lot sizes
Logistics management
Planning, implementing, and controlling the efficient and effective flow and storage of products and information from the point of origin to consumption to meet customers' needs and wants (delivery) •Order processing •Inventory management •Materials handling •Warehousing •Transportation
•Warehousing
Provides time utility by enabling firms to compensate for dissimilar production and consumption rates •Helps stabilize prices and the availability of seasonal items
•Extreme-value stores -
Retailers that are a fraction of the size of conventional discount stores and typically offer very low prices on smaller size name-brand nonperishable household items
•Discount stores
Self-service, general-merchandise stores that offer brand-name and private-brand products at low prices •Accept lower profit margins than conventional retailers in exchange for high sales volume Carry a wide but carefully selected assortment of products in order to keep inventory turnover high
Stockouts
Shortage of products
•Off-price retailers
Stores that buy manufacturers' seconds, overruns, returns, and off-season merchandise for resale to consumers at deep discounts
Traditional specialty retailers
Stores that carry a narrow product mix with deep product lines limited-line retailers / single-line retailers apparel, jewelry, sporting goods, fabrics, computers, and pet supplies
•Hypermarkets
Stores that combine supermarket and discount store shopping in one location •Are larger than superstores
Search qualities
Tangible attributes that can be judged before the purchase of a product(airline schedule)
•Channel power
The ability of one channel member to influence another member's goal achievement
Order lead time
The average time lapse between placing the order and receiving it
Containerization
The consolidation of many items into a single, large container that is sealed at its point of origin and opened at its destination materials handling
Possession utility
The customer has access to the product to use or to store for future use
Distribution
The decisions and activities that make products available to consumers when and where they want to purchase them
•Direct selling -
The marketing of products to ultimate consumers through face-to-face sales presentations at home or in the workplace
•Intensity of market coverage
The number and kinds of outlets in which a product will be sold •Replacement rate •Product adjustment (services) •Duration of consumption •Time required to find the product
•Telemarketing
The performance of marketing-related activities by telephone
•Atmospherics
The physical elements in a store's design that appeal to consumers' emotions and encourage buying traffic,outside,inside
Sourcing
The process of determining what materials a firm needs, where those materials come from, and how they impact marketing integrity
Usage rate
The rate at which a product's inventory is used or sold during a specific time period
Order processing
The receipt and transmission of sales order information •Order entry - Begins when customers or salespeople place purchase orders •Order handling - Product availability and customer creditworthiness is verified; order assembly occurs •Order delivery - Delivery is scheduled with an appropriate carrier
•Cycle time
The time needed to complete a process •Firms should look for ways to reduce cycle time while maintaining or reducing costs and maintaining or improving customer service
Multichannel distribution
The use of a variety of marketing channels to ensure maximum distribution
•Vending -
The use of machines to dispense products
•Direct marketing
The use of the telephone, internet, and nonpersonal media to introduce products to customers, who can then purchase them via mail, telephone, or the internet
•Wholesaling
Transactions in which products are bought for resale, for making other products, or for general business operations •It does not include exchanges with ultimate consumers •supply-chain management activities(info/sales/distrib/inven)
•Intermodal transportation
Two or more transportation modes used in combination
•Intensive distribution
Using all available outlets to distribute a product Is appropriate for products that: •Have a high replacement rate •Require almost no service •Are bought based on price cues •must be available at a store nearby and be obtained with minimal search time
Radio frequency identification (RFID)
Using radio waves to identify and track materials tagged with special microchips •Is also useful for asset management and data collection materials handling
Credence qualities
attributes that customers may be unable to evaluate even after purchasing and consuming a service(day care)
pipelines
automated slow cheap dependable "shrinkage"?
empathy
caring and listening
waterways
cheapest method heavy, low value, nonperishable water accessible dependent
assurance
competence and covey confidence
reliability
confirmation ticket departing on time accurate bank statement
intensive market coverage
convenience products like chips and soda
channel conflict
each members role must be clear agreement needs strong but now overpowering leadership
tangibles
equipment used in medical exam neatly attired repair person freshness of food
airways
fastest most expensive highvalue or perishable goods
trucks
flexible schedule and routes expensive weather dependent size and weight restrictions
railroad
heavy bulky frieght long distance over land
•Department stores
large retail organizations characterized by a wide product mix and organized into separate departments to facilitate marketing efforts and internal management •Are distinctly service oriented •Are found in most places with populations of more than 50,000 •Facing intense competition from discount stores and online retailing
location
least flexible public transportation kinds of product compeytition
•Mail-order wholesalers -
limited-service wholesalers that sell products through catalogs
retailers
make shopping easier comparison shopping
Service Quality Specifications
manager commitment
•Channel captain (channel leader)
producer, wholesaler, or retailer w/ channel power
Off-peak pricing
reducing prices of services during slow periods in order to boost demand
•Direct-response marketing
retailer advertises a product and makes it available through mail or telephone orders
selective market coverage
shopping products like iphones and shoes
exclusive market coverage
specialty products like gucci and bmw
category management
store isles share sales data
•Retailers strategically use
store location, technology, retail positioning, store image, and category management
•Trade-offs
strategic decisions to combine (and recombine) resources for greatest cost-effectiveness •The goal is not always to find the lowest cost, but rather to find the right balance of costs
Safety stock
the amount of extra inventory a firm keeps to guard against stockouts resulting from above-average usage rates and/or longer-than-expected lead times
responsiveness
water refill
characteristics of services marketing
•Intangibility •Inseparability of production and consumption(consumer present) •Perishability(cant store for later) •Heterogeneity(Variation in quality) •Client-based relationships •Customer contact(healthcare vs drycleaning)
•Transportation
•Is the most expensive physical distribution method
specialty retailers
•Traditional specialty retailers •Category killers •Off-price retailers