Title: Chapter 1- An Introduction to Retailing
1Chapter 1- An Introduction to Retailing Chapter
2- Building and Sustaining Relationships in
Retailing Chapter 3- Strategic Planning in
Retailing
2Retailing
- Retailing encompasses the business activities
involved in selling goods and services to
consumers for their personal, family, or
household use. It includes every sale to the
final consumer.
3Issues in Retailing
- How can we best serve our customers while earning
a fair profit? - How can we stand out in a highly competitive
environment where consumers have so many choices? - High unemployment, low consumer confidence, high
savings rates have reduced consumer spending. At
the same time retail competition has increased
through increased format blurring (sales of
cameras at office supply stores, carpeting and
major appliances at home improvement centers). - How can we grow our business while retaining a
core of loyal customers?
4The Philosophy
- Retailers can best address these questions by
fully understanding and applying the basic
principles of retailing, as well as the elements
in a well-structured, systematic, and focused
retail strategy.
5The Framework of Retailing
6An Ideal Candidate for a Retailing Career
- Must be a people person (more important than
technical knowledge). Technical skills can be
taught more easily than people skills - Must be flexible
- Should be decisive
- Must have analytical skills
- Must have stamina
7Table 1-1 The 10 Largest Retailers in the United
States (2011)
Rank Company Main Emphasis
1 Wal-Mart Full-line discount stores, supercenters, membership clubs
2 Kroger Supermarkets, convenience stores, jewelry stores
3 Target Full-line discount stores, supercenters
4 Walgreens Drugstores
5 Home Depot Home centers
6 Costco Membership warehouse clubs
7 CVS Caremark Pharmacies
8 Lowes Home centers
9 Best Buy Electronics, major appliances
10 Sears Holdings Department store, discount (Kmart)
8Figure 1-4 A Typical Channel of Distribution
Retailer
Manufacturer
Wholesaler
Final Consumer
9Figure 1-5 The Retailers Role in the Sorting
Process
10Multi-Channel Retailing
- A retailer sells to consumers through multiple
retail formats - Web sites
- Physical stores
11Multi-Channel Retailing
- Cross selling across channels (in-store product
availability info on Web site) - Consistent pricing in all channels (credibility)
- Can buy, and return product regardless on channel
- Role of each channel
- Store try on, ease of return, fast availability
(immediacy), compare offerings - Web 24/7, product information, product reviews
by customers, personalization (tailored
assortment based on past purchases), most current
pricing, closeout sales - Catalog-permanency, true color
12Figure 1-6 Apple
13Distribution Types
- Exclusive suppliers make agreements with one or
few retailers, designating such retailers as the
only ones to carry certain brands or products
within a specified geographic area - Intensive suppliers sell through as many
retailers as possible - Selective suppliers sell through a moderate
number of retailers
14Exclusive vs Intensive Distribution
- Exclusive Distribution Fate of retailer is tied
to manufacturer success, retailer has no
free-rider concerns, retailer has less price
competition, manufacturer is better assured of
high levels of customer support - Intensive Distribution- Manufacturer is better
assured of maximizing sales (especially for
convenience goods), retailers face strong
competition for price and service, intratype
competition
15Figure 1-7 Comparing Distribution Types
16Figure 1-8 Special Characteristics Affecting
Retailers
Impulse Purchase
Small Average Sale
Retailers Strategy
Popularity of Stores
17Retail Strategy
- An overall plan for guiding a retail firm
- Influences the firms business activities
- Influences firms response to market forces
18Six Steps in Strategic Planning
- 1. Define the type of business (corporate
mission) - 2. Set long-run and short-run objectives
- 3. Determine the customer market
- 4. Devise an overall, long-run plan
- 5. Implement an integrated strategy
- 6. Evaluate and correct (fine-tune)
19Expect More. Pay Less at Target
20Aspects of Targets Strategy
- Growth objectives
- Appeal to a prime market
- Distinctive image
- Focus
- Customer service
- Multiple points of contact
- Employee relations
- Innovation
- Commitment to technology
- Community involvement
- Monitoring performance
21Figure 1-10 Applying the Retailing Concept
Customer Orientation
Retailing Concept
Coordinated Effort
Retail Strategy
Value-driven
Goal Orientation
22The Build-A-Bear Experience Never Boring
23Customer Service
- Activities undertaken by a retailer in
conjunction with the basic goods and services it
sells. This includes - Store hours
- Parking
- Shopper-friendliness
- Credit acceptance
- Salespeople
24A Customer Respect Checklist
- Do we trust our customers?
- Do we stand behind what we sell?
- Is keeping commitments to customers important to
our company? - Do we value customer time?
- Do we communicate with customers respectfully?
- Do we treat all customers with respect?
- Do we thank customers for their business?
- Do we respect employees?
25Relationship Retailing
- Retailers seek to establish and maintain
long-term bonds with customers, rather than act
as if each sales transaction is a completely new
encounter - Concentrate on the total retail experience
- Monitor satisfaction
- Stay in touch with customers
26Effective Relationship Retailing
- Use a win-win approach
- It is easier to keep existing customers happy
than to gain new ones (present value of current
customers income stream cost of keeping existing
customers content versus cost of replacing them
with new customer - Develop a customer database (loyalty programs)
- Ongoing customer contact is improved with
information on peoples attributes and shopping
behaviors
27Types of Loyalty Programs
- Additional discounts at register
- Not a real loyalty program
- 1 free with every n items purchased
- Easily copied, no customer database
- Rebates based on cumulative purchases
- Customer maintains records
- Can develop heavy half programs like Hilton
- Targeted offerings and mailing based on purchase
history - Tesco example Market research staff know more
about my customers than board chairperson
28Relationship Management Among Retailers and
Suppliers
- Disagreements may occur in the following areas
(channel conflict) - control over channel (private label)
- profit allocation (resale price control)
- number of competing retailers (exclusive,
selective or intensive distribution) - product displays
- promotional support (cooperative advertising
funds and restrictions) - payment terms (payment on time)
- operating flexibility
- gray market sales
- markdown monies, chargebacks by dominant
retailers
29Approaches to the Study of Retailing
Institutional
Functional
Strategic
30Parts of Retail Management A Strategic Approach
- Building relationships and strategic planning
- Retailing institutions
- Consumer behavior and information gathering
- Elements of retailing strategy
- Integrating, analyzing, and improving retail
strategy
31CHAPTER 2 STRATEGIC PLANNING IN RETAILING
32Chapter Objectives
- To explain what value really means and to
highlight its pivotal role in retailers building
and sustaining relationships - To describe how both customer relationships and
channel relationships may be nurtured in todays
highly competitive marketplace
33Chapter Objectives (cont.)
- To examine the differences in relationship
building between goods and services retailers - To discuss the impact of technology on
relationships in retailing - To consider the interplay between retailers
ethical performance and relationships in retailing
34Definition of Value
- Value Results Process Quality
- Price Customer Access Costs
- Results Overall quality, instructions, ease of
assembly, taste/quality/health, warranty, product
testing by retailer - Process Quality Wide aisles, ease of finding,
high in-stock position, fun experience, short
waiting times - Price Costs delivery assembly credit
- Customer access costs warehouse club membership
fees, inconvenient location, poor store hours,
inadequate parking
35What is Value? (cont.)
- Channel
- Perspective
- Value is a series of activities and processes
(the value chain) that provide a certain value
for the consumer.
- Customer
- Perspective
- Value is a perception that the shopper has of the
value chain. - It is the view of all the benefits from a
purchase versus the price paid.
36Retail Value Chain
- Represents the total bundle of benefits offered
to consumers through a channel of distribution - Store location and parking, retailer ambience,
customer service, brands/products carried,
product quality, retailers in-stock position,
shipping, prices, image, and other elements
37Potential Pitfalls to Avoid in Planning a
Value-Oriented Retail Strategy
- Planning value solely from a price perspective
- Providing value-enhanced services that customers
do not want or will not pay extra for - Competing in the wrong value/price segment
- Believing augmented elements alone create value
- Paying lip service to customer service
38Figure 2-2 A Value-Oriented Retailing Checklist
- Is value defined from a consumer perspective?
- Does the retailer have a clear value/price point?
- Is the retailers value position competitively
defensible? - Are channel partners capable of value-enhancing
services? - Does the retailer distinguish between expected
and augmented value chain elements? - Has the retailer identified potential value chain
elements? - Is the retailers value-oriented approach aimed
at a distinct market? - Is the retailers value-oriented approach
consistent?
39Figure 2-2 A Value-Oriented Retailing Checklist
(cont.)
- Is the retailers value-oriented approach
effectively communicated? - Can the target market clearly identify the
retailers positioning? - Does the retailers positioning consider sales
versus profits? - Does the retailer set customer satisfaction
goals? - Does the retailer measure customer satisfaction
levels? - Is the retailer careful to avoid the pitfalls in
value-oriented retailing? - Is the retailer always looking out for new
opportunities that will create customer value?
40Customer Service
- Expected customer service is the service level
that customers want to receive from any retailer
such as basic employee courtesy.
- Augmented customer service includes the
activities that enhance the shopping experience
and give retailers a competitive advantage.
41Expected Versus Augmented Levels of Customer
Service
- Expected Must have elements do not
differentiate retailer. While absence of these
expected values provides anguish, presence does
not provide satisfaction - AugmentedServices that can provide a competitive
advantage. Double warranty, special delivery,
product demonstrations
42Figure 2-4 Classifying Customer Services
43Fundamental Decisions
- What customer services are expected and what
customer services are augmented for a particular
retailer? - What level of customer service is proper to
complement a firms image? - Should there be a choice of customer services?
- Should customer services be free?
- How can a retailer measure the benefits of
providing customer services against their costs? - How can customer services be terminated?
44Table 2-1 Typical Customer Services
- Credit
- Delivery
- Alterations/ Installations
- Packaging/gift wrapping
- Complaints/Returns handling
- Gift certificates
- Trade-ins
- Trial purchases
- Special sales
- Extended store hours
- Mail/phone orders
45Table 2-1b Miscellaneous Customer Services
- Bridal registry
- Interior designers
- Personal shoppers
- Ticket outlets
- Parking
- Water fountains
- Pay phones
- Baby strollers
- Restrooms
- Restaurants
- Babysitting
- Fitting rooms
- Beauty salons
- Fur storage
- Shopping bags
- Information
46Figure 2-6 Turning Around Weak Customer Service
Focus on Customer Concerns
Empower Frontline Employees
Show That You Are Listening
Express Sincere Understanding
Apologize and Rectify the Situation
47Principles of Category Management
- Retailers listen more to customers
- Profitability is improved because inventory more
closely matches demand - By being better focused, each department is more
desirable for shoppers - Retail buyers are given more responsibilities and
accountability for category results - Retailers and suppliers must share data and be
more computerized - Retailers and suppliers must plan together
48Figure 2-7 Elements Contributing to Effective
Channel Relationships
49Three Kinds of Service Retailing
- Rented goods services leased cars, hotel rooms,
carpet cleaning equipment - Owned goods services plumbing, appliance repair,
- Non-goods services haircut, professional
services (physician, lawyer)
50Four Characteristics of Services Retailing
- Intangibility
- Inseparability
- Perishability
- Variability
51Figure 2-8a Characteristics of Service Retailing
Intangibility
- No patent protection possible
- Difficult to display/communicate
- service benefits
- Quality judgment is subjective
- Some services involve
- performances/experiences
52Figure 2-8b Characteristics of Service Retailing
Inseparability
- Consumer may be involved in
- service production
- Centralized mass production difficult
- Consumer loyalty may rest
- with employees
53Figure 2-8c Characteristics of Service Retailing
Perishability
- Services cannot be inventoried
- Lost revenues from unsold services are lost
forever - Effects of seasonality can be severe
- Planning employee schedules can be complex
- Need to balance supply and demand
- (yield management pricing)
54Figure 2-8d Characteristics of Service Retailing
Variability
- Standardization and quality control hard
- to achieve
- Customers may perceive variability even
- when it does not actually occur
- Need to industrialize/mechanize/service
- blueprint services to factor out variability
55Figure A2-1 Lessons in Service Retailing
56Technology Icons
57Examples of Consumerism in Retailing
- Proper testing of items for safety issues
- Programming cash registers not to accept payment
for recalled goods - Charging fair prices for goods in short
supply--Home Depot plywood example in hurricane - Age labeling of toys, warning labels on goods
beyond legal requirements
58Store Sale
59Understanding the Americans with Disabilities Act
60- CHAPTER 3STRATEGIC PLANNING IN RETAILING
61Chapter Objectives
- To show the value of strategic planning for all
types of retailers - To explain the steps in strategic planning for
retailers situation analysis, objectives,
identification of consumers, overall strategy,
specific activities, control, and feedback
62Chapter Objectives (cont.)
- To examine the individual elements of a retail
strategy (both controllable and uncontrollable),
and to present strategic planning as a series of
integrated steps - To demonstrate how a strategic plan can be
prepared
63Retail Strategy
- The overall plan or framework of action that
guides a retailer - One year in duration
- Outlines mission, goals, consumer market, overall
and specific activities, and control mechanisms
64Elements of a Retail StrategyRetail Strategy
65Benefits of Strategic Retail Planning
- Provides thorough analysis of the requirements
for doing business for different types of
retailers - Outlines retailer goals
- Allows retailer to determine how to differentiate
itself from competitors - Allows retailer to develop an offering that
appeals to a group of customers - Offers an analysis of the legal, economic, and
competitive environment - Provides for the coordination of firms total
efforts - Encourages anticipation and avoidance of crises
66Organizational Mission
Retailers commitment to a type of business and
to a distinctive role in the marketplace.
67Ownership and Management Alternatives
- Sole proprietorship is an unincorporated retail
firm owned by one person - A partnership is an unincorporated retail firm
owned by two or more persons, each with a
financial interest - A corporation is a retail firm that is formally
incorporated under state law it is a legal
entity apart from its officers
68Figure 3-3 Checklist to Consider When Starting a
New Business
69Figure 3-4 Checklist for Purchasing an Existing
Retail Business
70Figure 3-5a Selected Kinds of Retail Goods and
Service Establishments
Durable Goods Stores Automotive group Furniture
and appliances group Lumber, building, and
hardware group Jewelry stores
Nondurable Goods Stores Apparel group Food
group General merchandise group Gasoline service
stations
71Figure 3-5b Selected Kinds of Retail Goods and
Service Establishments
Service Establishments (Personal) Laundry and
dry cleaning Beauty/barber shops Funeral
services Health-care services
Service Establishments (Amusement) Movie
theaters Bowling alleys Dance halls Golf courses
72Figure 3-5c Selected Kinds of Retail Goods and
Service Establishments
Service Establishments (Repair) Automobile
repair Car washes Consumer electronics
repair Appliance repairs
Service Establishments (Hotel) Hotels Motels Trai
ler parks Camps
73Image and Positioning
An image represents how a given retailer is
perceived by consumers and others.
74Positioning Approaches
- Mass merchandising is a positioning approach
whereby retailers offer a discount or
value-oriented image, a wide or deep merchandise
selection, and large store facilities. - Niche retailing occurs when retailers identify
specific customer segments and deploy unique
strategies to address the desires of those
segments rather than the mass market.
75Figure 3-6 Niche Retailing by Babies R Us
76Selected Retail Positioning Strategies
77Target Market Selection
- Three techniques
- Mass marketing
- Concentrated marketing
- Differentiated marketing
78La Boqueria
79Strategic Implications of Target Market
Techniques
- Retailers location
- Goods and service mix
- Promotion efforts
- Price orientation
- Strategy
80Developing an Overall Retail Strategy
- Uncontrollable
- Variables
- Consumers
- Competition
- Technology
- Economic
- conditions
- Seasonality
- Legal restrictions
- Controllable
- Variables
- Store location
- Managing business
- Merchandise
- management
- and pricing
- Communicating
- with customer
Retail Strategy
81Retail Strategy Low Costs
- Removal of bad costs
- Use of private label products to reduce costs of
national/manufacturer brands - Reduce product proliferation
- Obtain best net price instead of focus on
promotional monies, trade incentives and forward
buying
82Retail Strategy Low Costs (cont.)
- Supply chain initiatives
- Low promotional expense (everyday low pricing)
- Proper employee utilization
83Retail Strategy--Differentiation
- Well-thought out private labels (Trader Joes,
Target, King Arthur flour, etc.) - Hiring right employees (value-profit chain)
- Empowering employees
- Use of a fun atmosphere
- Little things that mean a lot
- Money-back guarantees
84Legal Environment and Retailing
- Store Location
- zoning laws
- blue laws
- environmental laws
- direct selling laws
- local ordinances
- leases and mortgages
- Managing the Business
- licensing provisions
- personnel laws
- antitrust laws
- franchise agreements
- business taxes
- recycling laws
85Legal Environment and Retailing
- Merchandise Management and Pricing
- trademarks
- merchandise restrictions
- product liability laws and lemon laws
- sales taxes
- unit-pricing laws
- collusion laws
- sale prices
- price discrimination laws
86Legal Environment and Retailing
- Communicating with the Customer
- truth-in-advertising and selling laws
- truth-in-credit laws
- telemarketing laws
- bait-and-switch laws
- inventory laws
- labeling laws
- cooling-off laws
87Sample Strategic Plan
- Sallys is a small, independently owned,
high-fashion ladies clothing shop located in a
suburban strip mall. It is a full-price,
full-service store for fashion-forward shoppers.
Sallys carries sportswear from popular
designers, has a personal shopper for busy
executives, and has an on-premises tailor. The
store is updating its strategic plan as a means
of getting additional financing for an
anticipated expansion.
87
88Additional Concerns for Global Retailing
- In addition to the strategic planning process
- assess your international potential
- get expert advice and counseling
- select your countries
- develop, implement, and review an international
retailing strategy
89Factors Affecting the Success of a Global
Retailing Strategy
- Timing
- A balanced international program
- A growing middle class
- Matching concept to market
- Solo or partnering
- Store location and facilities
- Product selection
90Factors to Consider When Engaging in Global
Retailing