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Marketing Channels and Supply Chain Management

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Discuss how channel members interact and how they organize ... Ford and its independent franchised dealers. Manufacturer-Sponsored Wholesaler Franchise System ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Marketing Channels and Supply Chain Management


1
Marketing Channels and Supply Chain Management
  • Chapter 10

2
Road Map Previewing the Concepts
  • Explain why companies use distribution channels
    and discuss the functions these channels perform.
  • Discuss how channel members interact and how they
    organize to perform the work of the channel.
  • Identify the major channel alternatives open to a
    company.

3
Road Map Previewing the Concepts
  • Explain how companies select, motivate, and
    evaluate channel members.
  • Discuss the nature and importance of marketing
    logistics and supply chain management.

4
How Channel Members Add Value
  • The use of intermediaries results from their
    greater efficiency in making goods available to
    target markets.
  • Offers the firm more than it can achieve on its
    own through the intermediaries
  • Contacts
  • Experience
  • Specialization
  • Scale of operation

5
  • What is a channel of distribution?
  • A set of interdependent organizations
    (intermediaries) involved in the process of
    making a product or service available for use or
    consumption by consumer or business users.
  • Usually the most time consuming and costly to
    change
  • Distribution Channels show the flow of
    goods/services, their ownership, their payments,
    their information, and/or their promotion from
    the manufacturer to the end consumer.
  • Marketing Channel decisions are among the most
    important and expensive decisions that management
    face, and will directly affect every other
    marketing decision.
  • The use of intermediaries results from their
    greater efficiency in making goods available to
    target markets.
  • Offers the firm more than it can achieve on its
    own through the intermediaries
  • Contacts
  • Experience
  • Specialization
  • Scale of operation

6
Common Misperceptions about Distribution
Channels.
  • What is the minimum cost of any channel? This
    is why your professor depicts a channel in what
    may appear to be a backward order. (Figure 10.2
    revised) Note that each channel intermediary
    performs some work which brings the product
    and/or its ownership closer to the final buyer.

C
P
Channel 1
Direct Channel
Indirect Channels
C
P
R
Channel 2
C
R
W
P
Channel 3
C
R
J/A
W
P
Channel 4
  • The use of intermediaries results from their
    greater efficiency in making goods available to
    target markets.
  • Offers the firm more than it can achieve on its
    own through the intermediaries
  • Contacts
  • Experience
  • Specialization
  • Scale of operation

7
Common Misperceptions about Distribution
Channels
  • Each member depicted in a channel of
    distribution
  • (excluding individual/household consumers) is
    an
  • independent business/organizationSears as an
    example.

C
P
Channel 1
Direct Channel
Indirect Channels
C
P
R
Channel 2
C
R
W
P
Channel 3
C
R
J/A
W
P
Channel 4
  • The use of intermediaries results from their
    greater efficiency in making goods available to
    target markets.
  • Offers the firm more than it can achieve on its
    own through the intermediaries
  • Contacts
  • Experience
  • Specialization
  • Scale of operation

8
Common Misperceptions about Distribution Channels
  • What is the minimum cost of any channel? This
    is why your professor depicts a channel in what
    may appear to be a backward order. (Figure 12.2
    revised) Note that each channel intermediary
    performs some work which brings the product
    and/or its ownership closer to the final
    buyer/user/renter.

C
P
Channel 1
Direct Channel
Indirect Channels
C
P
R
Channel 2
C
R
W
P
Channel 3
C
R
J/A
W
P
Channel 4
  • The use of intermediaries results from their
    greater efficiency in making goods available to
    target markets.
  • Offers the firm more than it can achieve on its
    own through the intermediaries
  • Contacts
  • Experience
  • Specialization
  • Scale of operation

9
Common Misperceptions about Distribution Channels
  • Each member depicted in a channel of
    distribution (excluding individual/household
    consumers) is an independent business/organization
    Sears as an example.

C
P
Direct Channel
Channel 1
Indirect Channels
C
P
R
Channel 2
C
R
W
P
Channel 3
C
R
J/A
W
P
Channel 4
  • The use of intermediaries results from their
    greater efficiency in making goods available to
    target markets.
  • Offers the firm more than it can achieve on its
    own through the intermediaries
  • Contacts
  • Experience
  • Specialization
  • Scale of operation

10
Common Misperceptions about Distribution Channels
  • As small firms grow (usually geographically or
    in terms of distribution intensity), they will
    tend to transverse downward through the channels
    depicted below.

C
P
Channel 1
Direct Channel
Indirect Channels
C
P
R
Channel 2
C
R
W
P
Channel 3
C
R
J/A
W
P
Channel 4
  • The use of intermediaries results from their
    greater efficiency in making goods available to
    target markets.
  • Offers the firm more than it can achieve on its
    own through the intermediaries
  • Contacts
  • Experience
  • Specialization
  • Scale of operation

11
Common Misperceptions about Distribution Channels
  • Business may use multiple channels may to
    service the same or different market segments for
    the same (or different) product(s).

C
P
Channel 1
Direct Channel
Indirect Channels
C
P
R
Channel 2
C
R
W
P
Channel 3
C
R
J/A
W
P
Channel 4
  • The use of intermediaries results from their
    greater efficiency in making goods available to
    target markets.
  • Offers the firm more than it can achieve on its
    own through the intermediaries
  • Contacts
  • Experience
  • Specialization
  • Scale of operation

12
Common Misperceptions about Distribution
Channels
  • When a distribution channels product
    substantially changes form and/or is added to
    other products to form/ create a new product, it
    marks the end of one channel of distribution and
    the beginning of a new channel.

C
P
Channel 1
Direct Channel
Indirect Channels
C
P
R
Channel 2
C
R
W
P
Channel 3
C
R
J/A
W
P
Channel 4
13
Common Misperceptions about distribution Channels
  • Lets eliminate the middleman! Who are they?
    Why will eliminating the middleman not
    necessarily save money and therefore potentially
    not reduce prices charged to the ultimate
    customer?

C
P
Channel 1
Direct Channel
Indirect Channels
C
P
R
Channel 2
C
R
W
P
Channel 3
C
R
J/A
W
P
Channel 4
  • The use of intermediaries results from their
    greater efficiency in making goods available to
    target markets.
  • Offers the firm more than it can achieve on its
    own through the intermediaries
  • Contacts
  • Experience
  • Specialization
  • Scale of operation

14
Common Misperceptions about distribution Channels
  • Fanning and distribution Channelssee Table 10.1

15
Channel Functions
  • Information
  • Promotion
  • Contact
  • Matching
  • Negotiation
  • Physical distribution
  • Financing
  • Risk taking

16
Channel Behavior
  • The channel will be most effective when
  • each member is assigned tasks it can do best.
  • all members cooperate to attain overall channel
    goals.
  • If this does not happen, conflict occurs
  • Horizontal Conflict occurs among firms at the
    same level of the channel (e.g., retailer to
    retailer).
  • Vertical Conflict occurs between different levels
    of the same channel (e.g., wholesaler to
    retailer).
  • Some conflict can be healthy competition.

17
Vertical Marketing System
  • A distribution channel structure in which
    producers, wholesalers, and retailers act as a
    unified system
  • One channel member owns the other, has contracts
    with them, or has so much power that they all
    cooperate.

18
Types of Vertical Marketing Systems
  • Corporate VMS
  • Contractual VMS
  • Administered VMS

19
Franchise Organization
  • Manufacturer-Sponsored Retailer Franchise System
  • Ford and its independent franchised dealers
  • Manufacturer-Sponsored Wholesaler Franchise
    System
  • Coca-Colas licensed bottlers
  • Service-Firm Sponsored Retailer Franchise System
  • McDonalds, Avis, and Holiday Inn

20
Innovations in Marketing Systems
  • Horizontal Marketing System
  • Hybrid Marketing System

21
Changing Channel Organization
  • Disintermediation means that more and more,
    product and service producers are bypassing
    intermediaries and going directly to final
    buyers, or that radically new types of channel
    intermediaries are emerging to displace
    traditional ones.

22
Channel Design Decisions
  • Analyzing Consumer Needs
  • Setting Channel Objectives
  • Identifying Major Alternatives
  • Types of intermediaries
  • Number of intermediaries
  • Responsibilities of intermediaries

23
Types of Intermediaries
  • Company sales force
  • Manufacturers agency
  • Industrial distributors

24
Number of Intermediaries
  • Intensive distribution
  • Exclusive distribution
  • Selective distribution

25
Evaluating the Major Alternatives
  • Economic Criteria
  • A company compares the likely sales, costs, and
    profitability of different channel alternatives.
  • Control Issues
  • How and to whom should control be given?
  • Adaptive Criteria
  • Consider long-term commitment vs. flexibility.

26
Channel Management Decisions
  • Selecting channel members
  • Managing and motivating channel members
  • Evaluating channel members

27
Public Policy and Distribution Decisions
  • Exclusive distribution
  • Exclusive dealing
  • Exclusive territorial agreements
  • Tying agreements

28
Logistics and Supply Chain Management
  • Planning, implementing, and controlling the
    physical flow of goods, services, and related
    information from points of origin to points of
    consumption to meet customer requirements at a
    profit.
  • Includes
  • Outbound distribution
  • Inbound distribution
  • Reverse distribution

29
Major Logistics Functions
  • Warehousing
  • Inventory management
  • Transportation
  • Logistics information management

30
Warehousing
  • How many, what types, and where?
  • Storage warehouses
  • Distribution centers
  • Automated warehouses

31
Inventory Management
  • Must balance between too much and too little
    inventory.
  • Just-in-time logistics systems
  • RFID, AutoID, or Smart Tag technology

32
Transportation
  • Trucks
  • Railroads
  • Water carriers
  • Pipelines
  • Air
  • Internet
  • Intermodal transportation

33
Integrated Logistics Management
  • The logistics concept that emphasizes teamwork,
    both inside the company and among all the
    marketing channel organizations, to maximize the
    performance of the entire distribution system.
  • Involves
  • Cross-functional teamwork inside the company
  • Building logistics partnerships
  • Third-party logistics

34
Rest Stop Reviewing the Concepts
  • Explain why companies use distribution channels
    and discuss the functions these channels perform.
  • Discuss how channel members interact and how they
    organize to perform the work of the channel.
  • Identify the major channel alternatives open to a
    company.

35
Rest Stop Reviewing the Concepts
  • Explain how companies select, motivate, and
    evaluate channel members.
  • Discuss the nature and importance of marketing
    logistics and integrated supply chain management.
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