Channel participants: Retailers

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Channel participants: Retailers

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Clearly determine what a retailer is and understand the main ... services, health products, lingerie, insurance & gambling industries (over $15 billion) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Channel participants: Retailers


1
Channel participantsRetailers
  • Module 2b
  • Chapter 3

2
Module Overview what to know
  • What is retailing?
  • Retailing functions
  • History of retailing
  • Retail classifications
  • Retailing in Australia
  • Trends in retailing
  • Retail marketing decisions
  • Selecting a retailing site

3
Module objectives
  • Understand the nature of retailing
  • The role it plays in giving consumers access to
    products
  • How retailers are classified and
  • Clearly determine what a retailer is and
    understand the main functions of retailers
  • Understand the marketing decisions that need to
    be made by retailers
  • Cover some important trends in retailing

4
What is retailing?
  • business firms engaged primarily in selling
    merchandise for personal or household consumption
    and rendering services incidental to the sale of
    goods (Rosenbloom 1999, p. 55).

5
Which of these are retailers?
  • Hairdresser
  • Banks
  • Cafés
  • Travel agent
  • Taxi
  • Watch seller
  • Watch repairer
  • Supermarkets
  • Clothing specialist
  • Department stores
  • Electric goods stores
  • Electricians
  • Electricity provider
  • Bakery

business firms engaged primarily in selling
merchandise for personal or household consumption
and rendering services incidental to the sale of
goods (Rosenbloom 1999, p. 55). ..hmmmmmm!
6
Some other definitions
  • ABS
  • Berman (1996) and Cox Brittain (2002)
  • involved in the sale of goods and services to
    consumers for personal, family or household use
  • Dunne, Lusche Griffith (2002)
  • consists of the final activity and steps needed
    to place a product in the hands of the consumer
    or to provide services to the consumer

7
Now, which of these are retailers?
  • Supermarkets
  • Clothing specialist
  • Department stores
  • Electric goods stores
  • Electricians
  • Electricity provider
  • Bakery
  • Hairdresser
  • Banks
  • Cafés
  • Travel agent
  • Taxi
  • Watch seller
  • Watch repairer

DID YOUR LIST CHANGE?
8
Classifications of Retailers
  • Your text covers a number of ways to classify
    retailers. In groups, how would you classify the
    following retailers?
  • Spend less shoes
  • Wal-mart
  • Daimaru
  • Coles
  • Lowes
  • Cubby house toys
  • Subway
  • Starbucks
  • Gothic Hair
  • Digicall
  • Just Jeans
  • Silly sollys
  • Rivers
  • Bunnings
  • Stefans
  • Country road
  • Dymocks
  • Amcal
  • Athletes foot
  • Australia Post
  • Healthy life
  • Lifeline
  • Toys R Us
  • Video-ezy
  • NB style
  • The hat shop
  • Golders

9
Wheel of retailing
  • Name a retailer who entered the market as per the
    wheel of retailing theory and followed the phases
    described
  • Name a retailer who started at the high end of
    the wheel, then followed the phases in reverse
  • Name a retailer (mature) who didnt do anything
    like the wheel of retailing
  • Should retailers resist the changes as described
    in this theory?
  • How could a retailer resist such a change?

10
Trends in Retailing
  • Shorter retail life-cycles
  • New retailing formats emerging to supersede some
    of the older formats
  • What stage are these outlets in?
  • The Book café
  • Bunnings
  • IKEA
  • The Disney Store
  • Daimaru
  • Coles
  • Amcal pharmacies
  • Delta music
  • Victorias Secret

11
Other Findings and Trends
  • Consumers seeking entertainment through Hedonic
    consumption
  • New niche markets such as the aged, alternatives
    and elitist lifestyles
  • Pressure on more forms of convenience
  • Consolidating of big brands
  • Consumer empowerment creating demand revolution
  • dual virtual and physical stores

12
Future Retailing Challenges
  • Changing consumer profiles and behaviours
  • Shopping Centres
  • Impact of the Internet
  • Relationship retailing
  • Institutional evolution

13
1. Changing consumer profiles and behaviours
  • Price driven, respond to catalogues, haggle over
    price, wait for discounts
  • 54 dont have time to do things need or want to
    do
  • 40 working longer hours - Stressed
  • Prefer 1 stop shopping, closer to home,
    preference to time saving solutions
  • Focus on paying off debts, cutting down on
    expenses, cautious about financial position

14
  • Increase in complaining behaviour
  • Service has emerged as a key issue
  • Loyalty programs have little effect - 26
  • Boom in travel, wine, household services, health
    products, lingerie, insurance gambling
    industries (over 15 billion)
  • Move towards freshly prepared meals
  • Hygiene, taste and food quality important
    selection criteria

15
2. Shopping Centre Trends
  • rapidly increasing number of shopping centres
  • focus on expansions and refurbishment's
    resulting in repositioning
  • Two significant and pollarised trends
  • many customers are abandoning regional shopping
    centres - big crowds, longer distances to walk,
    parking
  • Others patronising only shopping centres for one
    stop shopping
  • small community shopping centres using innovative
    shopper loyalty programs
  • Major shopping centres are lacking relevance and
    excitement (same shops in all centres)

16
Marketing of Shopping Centres
  • branding and differentiation is the key
  • key factors - signage, ease of parking, right
    tenancy mix, variety (boredom beating)
  • more than shopping - entertainment and leisure
    facilities, food halls, community and social
    attraction, recreational attraction

17
New store and shopping centre formats
  • Focus on satisfying leisure and lifestyles
  • Shopping centres will become community hubs
  • Need to satisfy the FREE and NOW consumer
  • Focus on PLAY

18
3. What makes e-retailing different?
  • Traditional retailing - physical, attractive
    presentation, store design layout, efficient
    stock control
  • Shopping malls of 1970s 1980s defined how we
    shopped, spent our time and shaped suburban
    layouts
  • Shopping considered to be a social experience
    form of entertainment
  • Will Internet shopping fundamentally alter retail
    management practice ?

19
Internet retailing
  • The Internet is claimed to be faster, cheaper and
    better
  • Web retailers have significantly less costs than
    a traditional store front retailer
  • Major benefit - information - easily accessible
    comprehensive
  • Comparison shopping made much easier

20
4. Relationship Retailing
  • Customer relationships
  • customer base
  • loyalty programs
  • defection rates
  • Channel relationships
  • value delivery systems
  • category management
  • effective channel relationships

21
5. Institutional Evolution
  • Mergers
  • Diversification
  • Downsizing
  • Cost containment and driving value

22
So, In the 21st Century we will see more of
  • Direct marketing
  • dual distribution channels
  • emerging trends and changing lifestyles
  • Direct selling
  • call centres / home and office sales/delivery
  • Non-Traditional
  • Internet and www
  • video catalogues and kiosks
  • Polarisation of trends
  • As one trend emerges, the opposite will also work

23
How can traditional retailers survive ?
  • Presence of real goods people to provide
    service
  • Retailing must meet the social and hedonic needs
  • Destination shopping through feel, smell and
    atmosphere
  • Exciting products, mass customise, value added
  • Retailers need to integrate offline and online
    activities whilst customising the offer
  • Which retailers will survive, which will fail ?

24
Retail Marketing Decisions 1
  • Assume the following
  • You own Betros Brothers (small supermarket type
    store on Ruthven St) or a convenience store
  • Sunday trading has just been approved to start in
    3 months time
  • What do you do?

25
Retail Marketing Decisions 2
  • Assume the following
  • You own a music (CD/ record) store in Toowoomba
  • You have a good range and specialise in
    alternative
  • Sanity, HMV and In2music all have expanded their
    stores
  • You cannot compete on price
  • What do you do?

26
Retail Marketing Decisions 3
  • Assume the following
  • You own a small book shop
  • A massive category killer has just opened a store
    near you
  • You cant compete on price plus they have
    excellent coffee (sound familiar?)
  • What do you do?

27
Why is an understanding of retailing important?
  • Do the retailing trends, challenges and issues
    have implications for wholesalers?
  • Consider this for retail decision 2
  • Do the retailing trends, challenges and issues
    have implications for manufacturers?

28
Summary
  • What is retailing?
  • Retailing functions
  • History of retailing
  • Retail classifications
  • Retailing in Australia
  • Trends in retailing
  • Retail marketing decisions
  • Selecting a retailing site

29
Tutorial Program
  • Case 2 Sears, Roebuck and Company
  • Activity 2.7
  • Activity 2.8

Next Week
  • Identify the company for assignment 2
  • Possible Monday tute time change
  • Possible module change for next lecture
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