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PowerPoint Presentation - Channel Conflict

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Business Law International the 2001 Conference of the IBA Channel Conflict or E-Commerce Avoidance: Successful Examples for an Integration of Suppliers and/or Sales ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation - Channel Conflict


1
Business Law International the 2001 Conference
of the IBA Channel Conflict or E-Commerce
Avoidance Successful Examples for an Integration
of Suppliers and/or Sales Intermediaries in an
Internet Sales Channel
Michael M. Sax B.A., B.C.L., LL.B.,
LL.M. Barrister Solicitor Trade Mark Agent
2
Success Factors for On-Line Sales
INTRODUCTION
  • How well the target market of the product matches
    the demographic profile of Internet users.
  • The efficiency of using the Internet as a sales
    channel, such as the ease by which the sales
    transaction can be conducted on-line, and the
    proportion of shipping expenses relative to the
    value of the product.
  • The degree of consideration required to make the
    purchase.

3
Two Additional Factors
Success Factors for On-Line Sales
  • The ability of the consumer to pay for on-line
    purchases through the existing payment
    mechanisms and
  • The ability to successfully manage conflict with
    existing offline distributors while attracting
    new purchasers of the products and services
    concurrently maintaining existing ones.

4
What we will Cover Today
  • Examine Channel Conflict arising between
    Supplier and its offline Distributor.
  • Decision process should supplier go online or
    even permit its intrabrand distributor to go
    online.
  • Look at decisions made to go alone, to go
    together, not go or not permit the channel
    distributor to go online Examples
  • The legal ability of suppliers to restrict
    intrabrand distributors to offer their product or
    service online or favour one over another.

5
Channel Conflict
  • Some businesses will find it difficult to conduct
    e-business because of possible channel conflict
  • Computer hardware manufacturers Compaq and IBM
    ventured cautiously in order to avoid the ire of
    their retail distribution channels. Even in
    international markets, some may find that on-line
    orders may fall into the territories of their
    existing distributors in other countries.
  • Some retailers have by-passed the issue
    completely by using the web to engage people and
    get them into showrooms, actually or virtually,
    like GM Buypower web site, which moves customers
    along the sales cycle by referring them to local
    dealers  

6
Channel Conflict
GM Buypower Web Site
7
Channel Conflict
Selling On-Line Conflicts and Risks
  • A large proportion of sales at the retail level
    could be displaced by e-tail sales.
  • Retailer' s perceived or actual vulnerability can
    provoke retailers to refuse or threaten to refuse
    to sell the manufacturer's products. (Home
    Depot)
  • Selling online can prompt retaliation from
    offline retailers that significantly and possibly
    permanently lowers a manufacturer's revenues and
    market share. (Compaq)
  • For manufacturers who sell through a sales force
    whose compensation is based only on the
    performance of offline operations, selling online
    may cause low morale and high turnover.

8
Types of Channel Conflict
Direct Channel Conflict
Is created by manufacturers who launch a new
channel that they own and who currently sell
through an offline channel that they do not own
such as independent dealers or retailers in the
case of auto manufacturers or clothing retailers.
These manufacturers are at greatest risk of
retailer retaliation.
9
Types of Channel Conflict
Internal Channel Conflict
Is created by manufacturers who sell through
their own web site and through an offline channel
that they also own. An issue of cannibalization
of offline sales by the online channel lowers the
compensation of the company's offline personnel.
e.g., Dell avoided this problem.
10
Types of Channel Conflict
External Channel Conflict
Occurs when a manufacturer owns neither its
online nor its offline channel. This form of
channel conflict is the least frequent and the
least threatening to retailers.
11
Factors Whether or not to Sell Online
  • Does selling online make economic sense
  • What is the manufacturers market position?
  • Is the industry as a whole moving online?
  • The degree of dependency or interdependency

12
Factors Whether or not to Sell Online
? Standley
13
Strategic Choices for Suppliers
  • Some suppliers may wish to ban all sales by
    distributors/retailers over the Internet out of
    concern for maintaining the integrity of their
    distribution system.
  • Some suppliers may wish to market and sell over
    the Internet directly to retailers and end users,
    in addition to maintaining their traditional
    sales channels through distributors.
  • Some suppliers reserve some or all Internet sales
    to themselves under their distributorship
    agreements.

14
CONFLICT Sell Online Without Making Any
Concessions to their Offline Channel
15
CONFLICT Sell Online Without Making Any
Concessions to their Offline Channel
  • Are the economics of selling online favorable?
    Yes unless tactile, visual or audio senses are
    important to the consumer and that outweighs
    price advantage
  • Is the manufacturer a market leader? Yes they are
    the benchmark in many products.
  • Is the industry moving online? Yes
  • Is the offline channel dependent on the
    manufacturer? Yes the brand is strong.

16
AVOID CONFLICT Sell Online and Appease their
Offline Channel
  • Spin-Offs
  • Price Differentiation
  • Product Differentiation
  • Market Separation
  • Share

17
AVOID CONFLICT Sell Online and Appease their
Offline Channel
18
AVOID CONFLICT Sell Online and Appease their
Offline Channel
19
AVOID CONFLICT Sell Online and Appease their
Offline Channel
20
AVOID CONFLICT Sell Online and Appease their
Offline Channel
21
Choose Not to Sell OnlineAvoiding E-Market
Risks
  • Offline customers will shop on their competitors'
    sites.
  • May lose market share
  • May lose a valuable opportunity to improve their
    profitability.
  • Lose the opportunity to engage the customer and
    have millions of potential customers visit a site
    annually at a fraction of the cost of trying to
    use other media to get the same exposure.

22
Legal Ability of Suppliers to Restrict Intrabrand
Distributors
  • In Canada, authorities place low priority on
    cases of low economic impact
  • Cases in Canada have been dealt with indirectly -
    Polaroid Canada Inc. V.  Continent-Wide
    Enterprises Limited
  • Section 75 Refusal to Deal - Chrysler Canada
    Ltd. V. Canada ( Competition Tribunal)

23
Legal Ability of Suppliers to Restrict Intrabrand
Distributors
  • In the US,-United States v. Colgate Co.
  • A Manufacturer can defend Internet restrictions
    on two levels
  • manufacturer's unilateral Colgate right to deal
    only with those distributors it wishes in the
    absence of an intent to monopolize
  • a manufacturer can show that its non-price
    restrictive contracts with distributors are
    pro-competitive because they promote efficient
    delivery and a stable supply of goods and
    services for the consumer, and increase
    interbrand competition by enhancing the ability
    of manufacturers within an industry to compete
    for customers

24
Legal Ability of Suppliers to Restrict Intrabrand
Distributors
  • EU
  • Will be covered by Heiko Tietz, M.B.L.-HSG

25
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