1 / 30

Chapter :- 8

Chapter :- 8. Distribution management & Marketing Mix. Meaning and definition.

ross
Download Presentation

Chapter :- 8

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter :- 8 Distribution management& Marketing Mix

  2. Meaning and definition • Distribution refers to bringing the product to the market and giving it to the final consumerAccording to Mossmam & Norton “distribution is the operation which creates time,place & form utility through the movement of goods and persons from one place to another”.

  3. Distribution Channels Defined • Are sets of interdependent organizations involved in the process of making a product or service available for use or consumption

  4. 7 Rs • Right product in Right quantity in Right condition at the Right time and Right place for the Right customer atRight cost

  5. Distribution Channels • Are intermediaries or middlemen • Exist because producers cannot reach all their consumers • Multiply reach and provide efficiency to the marketing process • Facilitate smooth flow and create time, place and possession utilities • Have the core competence and reach • Provide contact, experience, specialisation and scales of operation

  6. The Marketing Mix • Product • Place • Price • Promotion • Distribution channels help in the ‘place’ aspect of the marketing mix • Distribution provides place, time and possession utility to the consumer

  7. Example • Consumer wants to buy a tube of toothpaste • Made available at a retail outlet close to her residence – place • Made available at 8 pm on a Tuesday evening when she wants it – time • She can pay for the toothpaste and take it away – possession • The company distribution function has made all this possible. • The situation would be similar if a customer wants to buy a refrigerator or medicines or even an electric motor

  8. Discrepancies and Distribution channel • Spatial discrepancy :- the difference between the location of a producer and the location of widely scattered markets • Temporal discrepancy:- a situation that occurs when a product is produced but a customer is not ready to buy it • Need for breaking the bulk • Need for assortment

  9. Distribution Channel Strategy • Derived from the corporate strategy and the marketing strategy • Steps for designing the distribution strategy are: • Defining customer service levels • Distribution objectives and steps • Set of activities • The distribution organization • Key performance indicators • Critical success factors

  10. Customer Service Levels • Defined by the nature of the industry, the products, competition and market shares. • Affordability also decides the service level • It should at least match competition. • Customer expectations have no limit

  11. Distribution Objectives • Influenced by the customer expectations • Defines the extent of time, place and possession utility which the customer can expect out of the channel network Set of activities….

  12. Set of Activities • Manner in which the company and its marketing channels go about achieving the customer service levels • Some of these steps could be: • Sales forecasts • Despatch plans • Market coverage beat plans • Journey plans for service engineers • Collection of sales proceeds • Carrying out promotional activities • The company also decides as to who is to perform which task Organization….

  13. Distribution Organization • Extent of company support and outsourcing to be decided • Budget for the cost of the distribution effort • Select suitable channel partners – C&FAs, and distributors • Setting clear objectives for the partners • Agree on level of financial commitments by the channel partners. Policy and procedure..

  14. Policy & Procedure • Define policy and implementation guidelines through Operating Manuals • Policy guidelines include • Code of conduct for channel members • System for redressal of complaints • Any additional subsidies etc • Handling institutional business • Service policy for engineering products KPIs….

  15. Key Performance Indicators • For measurement of effectiveness. Some of these could be: • Consistent achievement of targets by product groups, periods and territories • Achievement of market shares • Achievement of profitability • Zero complaints from customers • No stock returns • Ability to handle emergencies and sudden spurts in demand

  16. Key Performance Indicators • For measurement of effectiveness. Some of these could be: • Balanced sales achievement during a period – no period end skews • Market coverage with ready stocks • Excellent management of accounts receivables • Minimize losses on account of stock-outs • Minimize damages to products CSFs…

  17. Critical Success Factors • The distribution strategy also needs the support and encouragement of top management to succeed • Some of the CSFs could be: • Clear, transparent and unambiguous policy and procedure • Serious commitment of the channel partners • Fairness in dealings • Clearly defined customer service policy • High level of integrity • Equitable distribution at times of shortage • Timely compensation of channel partners

  18. Listing of Channel Members • C&FAs and CSAs • Distributors, dealers, stockists, value-added re-sellers • Agents and brokers • Franchisees • Electronic channels • Wholesalers • Retailers

  19. C&FAs / C&SAs • C&FA: carrying and forwarding agent and C&SA: carrying and selling agent – both are on contract with a company • Both are transporters who work between the company and its distributors • Collect products from the company, store in a central location, break bulk and despatch to distributors against indents • Goods belong to the company • C&SA also sells the goods on behalf of the company but remits proceeds after sale

  20. Distributors, Dealers, Stockists, Agents • Name denotes the extent of re-distribution done by them • Distributors invest in the products – buy products from the company • Are on commission, margins or mark-up • May or may not get credit – but extend credit • Distributors cover the markets as per a beat plan. All others merely finance the business. • Distributors could be exclusive for a company • Agents bring buyer and seller together

  21. Wholesalers • Operate out of the main markets • Deal with a number of company products of their choice • Are not on contract with any company • Sell to other wholesalers, retailers and institutions • Negotiate about 15 days credit from company distributors – also provide credit to their customers • Operate on high volumes and low margins

  22. Retailers • The final contact with consumers • Operate out of their shops and sell a large assortment and variety of goods • Located closest to consumers • Buy from company, distributors or wholesalers • Highest margins in the network • Provide personalised services to their customers

  23. Industrial Products Customers may also direct from company sales force Producer Producer Agent/middleman Industrial Distributor Industrial Distributor Industrial Customer Industrial Customer

  24. Consumer Products Retailers may also direct from company sales force Producer Producer Producer Distributor Distributor Wholesaler Retailer Retailer Retailer Customer / consumer Customer/ Consumer Customer/ Consumer

  25. Patterns of Distribution • Determines the intensity of the distribution • Intensity decides the service level provided • Types of distribution intensity: • Intensive • Selective • Exclusive

  26. Intensive distribution:- a form of distribution aimed at having a product available in every outlet where target customers might want to buy it. • Selective distribution:- a form of distribution achieved by screening dealers to eliminate all but a few in any single area • exclusive distribution:- a form of distribution that establishes one or a few dealers within a given area

  27. Distribution Intensity • Intensive: distribution through every reasonable outlet available – FMCG • Selective: multiple, but not all outlets in the market – pharma, frozen food • Exclusive: may be only one outlet in a market - car dealers

  28. Intensive Distribution • Strategy is to make sure that the product is available in as many outlets as possible • Preferred for consumer, pharmaceutical products and automobile spares

  29. Selective Distribution • A few select outlets will be permitted to keep the products • Outlets selected in line with the image the company wants to project • Preferred for high value products • Tanishque jewelry • Keeps distribution costs lower

  30. Exclusive Distribution • Highly selective choice of outlets – may be even one outlet in an entire market • Could include outlets set up by companies – Titan, Bata • Producer wants a close watch and control on the distribution of his products. Channel strategy…

More Related