Retailing: Bricks and Clicks

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Retailing: Bricks and Clicks

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A new Oklahoma law raised the legal drinking age from 18 to 21 (1982? ... Tupperware, Avon, Pampered Chef, etc. network marketing. Amway, Creative Memories, etc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Retailing: Bricks and Clicks


1
Retailing Bricks and Clicks
(chapter 16)
2
Real People, Real Choices
  • Eskimo Joes (Stan Clark)
  • A new Oklahoma law raised the legal drinking age
    from 18 to 21 (1982?).
  • How to ensure that Eskimo Joes would survive the
    new law?
  • Option 1 convert the beer bar into a
    full-service restaurant.
  • Option 2 continue operating as a beer bar and
    offset declining beer sales with an increase in
    apparel sales.
  • Option 3 close Eskimo Joes bar and refocus on
    building the growing apparel business.

3
Retailing
  • purchase for personal use
  • Wheel of Retailing
  • entry at the low end
  • gradual evolution
  • augmentation costs
  • moves into high end
  • leaving room for new formats
  • Retail Life Cycle
  • Retailers are born, grow and mature, and
    eventually die or become obsolete.
  • Introduction
  • Growth
  • Maturity
  • Decline

4
Retailing in the Future
  • Significant trends
  • demographics
  • convenience for working consumers
  • longer hours
  • easier access
  • specific age segments
  • ethnic diversity
  • Technology
  • e-tailing
  • POS systems
  • cart-top computer
  • RIFD tags
  • preference cards
  • Intellifit systems

5
Retailing in the Future
  • Globalization
  • U.S. firms going international
  • adaptations required
  • Wal-Mart unsuccessful in both Korea and Germany
  • firms from other countries competing here

6
Retail Classification
  • Merchandise Mix
  • Level of Service
  • self-service
  • limited-service
  • full-service
  • Merchandise selection
  • breadth
  • depth

7
Retail Classification
  • Kinds (forms)
  • convenience
  • supermarkets
  • specialty stores
  • discount stores
  • general merchandise
  • off-price
  • warehouse clubs
  • factory outlet store
  • department stores
  • hypermarkets

8
Nonstore Retailing
  • Direct selling
  • door-to-door sales
  • declining here, increasing elsewhere
  • parties and networks
  • parties
  • Tupperware, Avon, Pampered Chef, etc.
  • network marketing
  • Amway, Creative Memories, etc.
  • Automatic vending
  • coin or credit card operated machine that
    dispenses product
  • can be almost anything (including beer)

9
Nonstore Retailing
  • limitations
  • security
  • potential for fraud
  • postage/handling
  • sight/sound only senses involved
  • color on monitors
  • delay in receipt
  • B2Cs effect
  • destination retail
  • B2C e-commerce
  • benefits
  • Reaching new audiences
  • 24/7 shopping
  • product choices
  • information available

10
Retailing As Theatre
  • Mall of America
  • Store image
  • how the TM perceives the store
  • Atmospherics
  • use of color, lighting, scents, furnishings, etc.
    to create a feeling
  • Store design
  • store layout
  • grid
  • free-flow
  • fixture type and density
  • music
  • color and lighting

11
Retailing As Theatre
  • Store personnel (the actors)
  • quality often rated low
  • greeters (from Japan)
  • Nordstroms
  • Pricing
  • Store Location
  • central business district
  • shopping center
  • owned and operated as a single entity
  • free-standing
  • non-traditional

12
Retailing As Theatre
  • Site selection
  • trade area
  • area demographics
  • saturated trade area
  • under-stored area
  • over-stored area
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