Chapter 13 - Retailing & Wholesaling
three types of off-price retailers (stores that sell merchandise bought at less-than-regular wholesale price)
1. Factory Outlets 2. Independent off-price retailers 3. Warehouse clubs
Retail atmospherics
Retailers want to create a unique store experience, one that suits the target market and moves customers to buy
Reatiler
a business whose sales come primarily from retailing
Franchise
a contractual association between a manufacturer, wholesaler, or service organization (a franchisor) and independent businesspeople (franchisees) who buy the right to own and operate one or more units in the system (Panera)
Wholesaler
a firm engaged primarily in wholesaling activities
Retailing
all the activities involved in selling goods and services directly to final consumers for their personal, nonbusiness use
Wholesaling
all the activities involved in selling goods and services o those buying for resale or business use
full service retailers can be found
at high-end stores selling luxury items like Tiffany or Nordstrom
A shopping center is a
group of retail businesses built on site that is planned, developed, owned as a unit
Merchant wholesalers are
independently owned businesses that take title to all merchandise handled. broken down into full-service and limited-service
Service Retailers
retailer whose product line is actually a service (hotels, colleges, banks, etc.)
Factory outlets are
owned and operated by manufacturers
independent off-price retailers are
owned and run by entrepreneurs or by divisions of larger retail corporations (TJ Maxx)
Full-service wholesalers
provide a full line of services: carrying stock, maintaining a sales force, offering credit, making deliveries, etc.
limited service retailers
provide more sales assistance because they carry more shopping goods about which customers need information (JC Penney)
Agents:
represent buyers or sellers on a more permanent basis than brokers
Warehouse clubs
sell limited selections of goods at deep discounts to consumers who pay membership fees (Costco)
wholesaler add value by performing one or more of the following:
selling & promoting, buying, bulk breaking, warehousing, transportation, financing, risk-bearing, market information, management service/advice
self-service retailers
serve customers who are willing to perform their own locate-compare-select process to save time & money (kohl's)
Wheel-of-Retailing Concept
states that many new types of retailing forms begin as low-margin, low-price, and low-status operations. they challenge established retailers that have become "fat" by letting their costs and margins increase. the new retailers eventually become the conventional retailers they replaced
Corporate chain
two or more outlets that are commonly owned and controlled (Target)
Shopper marketing:
using in-store promotions and advertising to extend brand equity to "the last mile" and encourage favorable point-of-purchase decision
Voluntary Chain
wholesaler-sponsored group of independent retailers engaged in group buying and merchandising (Independent Grocer's Alliance)
Manufacturers' Sales Branches and Offices
wholesaling is done by sellers or buyers themselves rather than through independent wholesalers
Wholesale industry remains vulnerable to two enduring trends
1. the need for ever-greater efficiency 2. need added-value customer relationships or they may get dropped
two ways brokers and agents differ from merchant wholesalers:
1. they do not take title to goods 2. they perform only a few functions
two types of full-service wholesalers:
1. wholesale merchants - sell primarily to retailers 2. industrial distributors - sell to manufacturers
4 types of shopping centers:
1. Regional shopping center- over 50-100 stores 2. community shopping center - 15-50 3. neighborhood shopping centers/strip malls - 5-15 4. Lifestyle centers - smaller, open-air malls with upscale stores & non-retail activities
types of limited-service wholesalers:
1. cash-and-carry: carry limited line of fast moving goods to small retailers for cash 2. truck wholesalers -selling and delivery function 3. drop shipper - selects a manufacturer who ships merchandise directly to a customer 4. rack jobbers - service grocery, drug retailers, nonfood items 5. mail-order or web - send catalogs or maintain web sites
4 major types of retail organizations
1. corporate chains 2. franchise 3. voluntary chain 4. retailer cooperative
Types of wholesalers:
1. merchant wholesalers - full-service & limited-service 2. brokers and agents 3. manufacturers' sales branches & offices
STP in a retail setting characteristics
1. product assortment should differentiate it while matching target shopper's expectations 2. services mix can also help set one retailer apart from another 3. price policy must fit its target market and positioning 4. with solid targeting and positioning a retailer can compete effectively against even the largest & strongest competitors
Major Store Retailer Types
1. specialty store - Radioshack 2. department store - Macy's 3. supermarket - Kroger 4. convenience store - 7-Eleven 5. discount store - Walmart 6. off-price retailer - TJ Maxx 7. Superstore 8. Service Retailers
Experimental Retailing
exemplified by Cabela's - stores are as much natural history museums for outdoor enthusiasts as they are retail outlets
Retailer Cooperative
a group of independent retailers who jointly establish a central buying organization and conduct joint promotion efforts (Ace Hardware)
Broker
brings buyers and sellers together and assists in negotiation. they are paid by the party who hired them
Price Decision for retailers:
either seek high markups on lower volume (specialty stores) or low markups on higher volume (mass merchandisers and discount stores)