Title: Retailing
1Chapter 18
2Retailing
- Includes all activities involved in selling,
renting, and providing goods and services to
ultimate consumers
3Classifying Retail Outlets
- Form of ownership
- Level of Service
- Merchandise Line
4Form of Ownership
- Independent Retailer--owned by individual
- -advantage owner can be his/her own boss
- -may offer more personal service to consumers
- Corporate Chain--multiple outlets, common
ownership - -centralized decision making, purchasing
- -consumers benefit from similar merchandise,
mgt. policies - Contractual System--independently owned stores
band - together to act like a chain
- Franchise--parent companies provide name,
know-how, - and set of guidelines in exchange for fee and
royalties
5Level of Service
- Self Service--customer performs most functions
(gas stations) - Limited Service--outlets provide some service
(typical retailer) - Full Service--provide many services (dept.
stores)
6Merchandise Line
- Depth of Product Line--number of items in
product line - Category Killers--specialty discount outlets
that dominate - market in a category (e.g., Toys R Us, Home
Depot) - Breadth of Product Line--number of different
product lines - General Merchandise Stores--broad product line,
limited depth - Scrambled Merchandising--unrelated product
lines - Hypermarkets / Supercenters--food and other
goods
New phenomenon Intertype competition
7The Largest Retailers
Category
Retailers
Sales (, in billions)
Department stores
Sears J C Penney
41.322 30.678
Apparel
Limited TJX
9.347 7.949
Consumer Electronics
Circuit City Best Buy
8.871 8.358
Drug and Discount
Wal-Mart Kmart
139.208 33.674
Home Improvement
Home Depot Lowes
30.219 12.245
Home Shopping
Service Merchandise Fingerhut
3.327 1.912
Specialty Retailers
Costco Toys R Us
24.270 11.200
8Retail Positioning Strategies
Types of Retailers
Keys to Success
High Value-added/ broad line
(Bloomingdales)
Creative merchandising image excitement,
leader High price/high margin Store Ambiance
Low Value-added/ broad line (K-Mart)
Economies of scalevolume Image good guys,
conveniences Low price/low margin Low or self
service Efficiency of operations
High Value-added/ narrow line (Tiffany)
Unique or high quality products
Imageexclusive specialty High price/high
margin Personal service/advice Expensive
presentation
Low Value-added/ narrow line (Just for
Feet)
Specialty mass merchandising Image value
conscious, consistent Low price, loss leaders
Little or self service Cookie-cutter stores
9The Retailing Mix
- Retail Pricing
- decide markup / markdown
- timing of discounts
- off-price retailing (e.g., warehouse clubs,
factory outlets) - Store Location
- central business district
- regional shopping centers
- community shopping centers
- strip locations / power centers
- freestanding stores
-
- Image and Atmosphere
10Image and Atmosphere
- Store personality
- Store layout
- Traffic flow (grid vs. free-flow)
- Merchandise density
- Fixtures and Furniture
- Music
- Color and lighting
- Store personnel
11The Retail Life Cycle
12Nonstore Retailing
- Direct marketing
- Customers are exposed to products through
print or electronic media - Direct mail / Catalogs
- Eliminates the cost of a store and clerks
- Segmentation and targeting efficiencies
- In-home shopping
- Includes television-assisted retailing and
computer-assisted retailing.
- Direct selling
- Involves direct sales of goods and services to
consumers through personal interactions and
demonstrations in their home or offices. - e.g., door-to-door, parties, multilevel networks
- Telemarketing
- Uses the telephone to interact with and sell
directly to consumers.
- Automatic vending
- Serves customers when and where stores cannot.
13Telemarketing Rules from the FTC
Telemarketers must
- state they are making a sales call, and the
nature of the product being offered - disclose that no purchase is necessary to win
prize promotions - tell consumer the cost of the products and any
restrictions on getting the goods or prizes
before asking for money - obtain a verifiable authorization before
attempting to collect for a purchase - call after 800 a.m. and before 900 p.m. and
- discontinue calls to consumers who have said they
dont want to be called.