Chapter 10 Marketing
Wholesaler
buys goods in bulk from producers and sells them to retailers or other businesses
Multimodal transportation
combining two or more modes of transportation
Value delivery network
company, suppliers, distributors, and customers who partner with each other to improve the performance of the entire system
Vertical distribution system
consists of producers, wholesalers, and retailers acting as a unified system and the flows down to the consumer
intermediary
create greater efficiency in making goods available to target markets. Through their contacts, experience, specialization, and scale of operation, they usually offer the firm more than it can achieve on its own
Downstream
everyone involved in moving the finished product to customers
Upstream
everything and everyone that provide the materials and inputs before production
Conventional distribution channel
flows from a producer, wholesaler, retailer and then to the consumer
Horizontal marketing system
in which two or more companies at one level join together to follow a new marketing opportunity
Distribution center
large, highly automated warehouses that receive goods, take orders, fill them, and deliver goods to customers. (designed to move goods)
Outbound Logistics
movement of finished products from the company to customers
Inbound Logistics
movement of materials from suppliers to the company
Direct marketing channel
no intermediary levels
Horizontal conflict
occurs among firms at the same level of the channel. (Ford Dealership vs Ford Dealership)
Vertical conflict
occurs between different levels of the same channel. (KFC parent company and its franchise operations)
Indirect marketing channels
one or more intermediary level
Reverse Logistics
process of returning products from customers back to the company for returns, recycling, or disposal
Retailer
sells products directly to the final consumer
Downstream partners
serve as distribution channels that link the firm and its customers
Storage warehouses
store goods for moderate to long periods
Upstream partners
supply the raw materials, component, parts, information, finances, and expertise needed to create a product or service
Supply chain
the entire network of organizations, people, activities, and resources involved in producing a product and delivering it to the customer
Channel of distribution
the path a product takes from the producer to the final customer, including all intermediaries involved
Channel member functions
they gather info, promote, find customers, match products to needs, negotiate, move and store goods, finance, and take on risk
What are the different transportation options?
truck, rail, water, pipeline, and air.
Which is preferred, conventional or vertical?
vertical
JIT
Just-in-time logistics (carry small amount of inventory; new stock arrives right when you need it! Key? Forecasting!)
RFID
Radio frequency identification, smart tag technology, gives the physical location of a product. (Makes the supply chain intelligent, transparent and automated.)
Define logistics? What are the key areas?
Planning, implementing, and controlling the physical flow of materials, final goods, and related information from points of origin to consumption
Intensive distribution
Sold everywhere → for everyday items (e.g., snacks)
Selective distribution
Sold in some outlets → for mid-range products (e.g., electronics)
Exclusive distribution
Sold in very few outlets → for luxury/premium items (e.g., designer watches)
