Introduction to Retail Management

log 561 retail management n.w
1 / 40
Embed
Share

Retailing is the business activities involving selling goods and services to consumers for personal, family, or household use. Learn about the value added by retailers, examples of retailers like Holiday Inn and McDonald's, and how retailers contribute to the distribution channel. Explore the functions performed by retailers to enhance the product and service value. Delve into the role of retailers in marketing, finance, accounting, operations, human resources, and MIS.

  • Retail Management
  • Retail Industry
  • Value Addition
  • Distribution Channel
  • Business Activities

Uploaded on | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

You are allowed to download the files provided on this website for personal or commercial use, subject to the condition that they are used lawfully. All files are the property of their respective owners.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LOG 561 Retail Management An Introduction to Retailing

  2. Retailing 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. 2

  3. What is Retailing? Retailing a set of business activities that adds value to the products and services sold to consumers for their personal or family use. A retailer is a business that sells products and/or services to consumers for personal or family use.

  4. Examples of Retailers Retailers: -Holiday Inn, McDonalds, Amazon.com.. Firms that are retailers and wholesalers that sell to other business as well as consumers: -The Home Depot, United Airlines, Bank of America..

  5. How Retailers Add Value Breaking Bulk -Buy it in quantities customers want Holding Inventory -Buy it at a convenient place when you want it Providing Assortment -Buy other products at the same time Offering Services -See it before you buy, get credit, layaway

  6. How Retailers Add Value The value of the product and service increases as the retailer performs functions. Doll can be bought on credit or put on layaway Doll is featured on floor display Doll is offered in convenient locations in quantities of one Doll is developed in several styles Doll is developed at manufacturer

  7. Manufacturers Perspective The Four P s of Marketing Retailers are part of the Retailers are part of the distribution channel distribution channel Product Price Distribution Promotion

  8. Distribution Channel Distribution Channel PPT 1-4

  9. Retailers are a Business Like Manufacturers Finance Marketing Accounting Operations Human Resources MIS

  10. Decision Variables for Retailers Customer Service Store Design and Display Merchandise Assortment Retail Strategy Pricing Location Communication Mix

  11. Hot Topics Retail Mix Customer Service Location Merchandise Assortment Store Design And Display Retail Strategy Pricing Communication Mix

  12. STRATEGIC IMPLICATIONS: RETAIL MARKETING STRATEGY A retailer develops a marketing strategy based on the firm s goals and strategic plans Two fundamental steps: 1. Picking a target market: size and profit potential. POSITION. 2. Developing a retailing mix to satisfy the chosen target market 1. 4Ps + Personnel & Presentation used to create a retail image

  13. The Retailing Mix Product Personnel Place Target Market Presentation Promotion Price

  14. Issues 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?

  15. The 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. 15

  16. Top 100 Retailers Walmart, Kroger, Costco, Target, The Home Depot, Walgreen, CVS Caremark, Lowe s, Amazon.com, Safeway... https://nrf.com/2014/top100-table

  17. A Typical Channel of Distribution Manufacturer Retailer Final Consumer Wholesaler

  18. The Retailers Role in the Sorting Process

  19. Multi-Channel Retailing A retailer sells to consumers through multiple retail formats: Web sites Physical stores

  20. Multi-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 o o o

  21. Non-Store Retailing Vending: hi costs; hi prices (flat sales) Vending is a $40 billion U.S. market Cashless vending=wave of future Direct Marketing (Mail, Catalog, Telemarketing) E-tailing (TV shopping, online) M-commerce: buy from mobile devices (e.g., cell phones) redbox

  22. Apple

  23. Distribution 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

  24. Exclusive 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 24 Retail Mgt. 12e (c) 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall

  25. Comparing Distribution Types

  26. Special Characteristics Affecting Retailers Small Average Sale Impulse Purchase Retailer s Strategy Popularity of Stores

  27. Retail Strategy An overall plan for guiding a retail firm Influences the firm s business activities Influences firm s response to market forces

  28. Six 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)

  29. Applying the Retailing Concept Customer Orientation Coordinated Effort Retailing Concept Retail Strategy Value-driven Goal Orientation

  30. The Build-A-Bear Experience: Never Boring

  31. Customer 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

  32. A 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?

  33. Relationship 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

  34. Effective 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 people s attributes and shopping behaviors

  35. Types 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

  36. Relationship 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 36 Retail Mgt. 12e (c) 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall

  37. Approaches to the Study of Retailing Institutional Functional Strategic

  38. Parts 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

  39. Retailing is a set of functions that adds value to products/services that are sold to end users = functional understanding, Retailing is a specific institution within a marketing channel that executes retail functions = institutional understanding

  40. End of Week 2, any questions???

Related


More Related Content