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Distribution Management &
             Marketing Mix
       Sales and Distribution Management
The Marketing Mix
 Product
 Price
 Promotion
 Place
  Distribution channels help in the ‘place’ aspect of the
  marketing mix
  Distribution provides place, time and possession utility to
  the consumer
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
Players Involved
 The company and its distribution network
   Direct company to consumer
   Company to a C&FA / distribution center to
   distributors to retailers
   Distributor to wholesaler to retailer

 All these intermediaries help the process of
 ‘exchange’ of the product or service.
Distribution Management
 Management of all activities which facilitate
 movement and co-ordination of supply and demand
 in the creation of time and place utility in goods

 The art and science of determining requirements,
 acquiring them, distributing them and finally
 maintaining them in an operationally ready condition
 for their entire life.
Distribution Channels Defined
 Are sets of interdependent organizations involved in
 the process of making a product or service available
 for use or consumption
                                       – Stern & Ansary

 Whether selling products or services, marketing
 channel decisions play a role of strategic importance in
 the overall presence and success a company enjoys in
 the marketplace.
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, specialization and
   scales of operation
Types of Channels
 Sales channel motivates buyers, shares information
 between company and its consumers, negotiates fair
 bargains for consumers and finances the transactions

 Delivery channel meant only for physical part of the
 distribution

 Service channel – performs after sales service
Listing of Channel Members
 Company own sales team
 C&FAs and CSAs
 Distributors, dealers, stockists, value-added re-sellers
 Agents and brokers
 Franchisees
 Electronic channels
 Wholesalers
 Retailers
C&FAs / C&SAs
 C&FA: carrying and forwarding agent
 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 dispatch 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
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
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
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 personalized services to their customers
Industrial Products
           Producer                        Producer


                                       Agent/middleman



     Industrial Distributor          Industrial Distributor


      Industrial Customer             Industrial Customer


Customers may also directly purchase from company sales force
Consumer Products
    Producer                Producer                 Producer


                           Distributor               Distributor


                                                     Wholesaler


    Retailer                Retailer                  Retailer


   Customer /              Customer/                 Customer/
   consumer                Consumer                  Consumer

Retailers may also direct from company sales force
Patterns of Distribution
 Determines the intensity of the distribution
 Intensity decides the service level provided
 Types of distribution intensity:
   Intensive
   Selective
   Exclusive
Intensive Distribution
 Distribution through every reasonable outlet
 available – FMCG
 Strategy is to make sure that the product is
 available in as many outlets as possible
 Preferred for consumer, pharmaceutical
 products and automobile spares
Selective Distribution
 Multiple, but not all outlets in the market
 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
   Tanishq jewelry
 Keeps distribution costs lower
Exclusive Distribution
 Highly selective choice of outlets – may be even one
 outlet in an entire market - car dealers
 Could include outlets set up by companies – Titan, Bata
 Producer wants a close watch and control on the
 distribution of his products.
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
   Structure of the network required
   Policy and procedure to be followed
   Define Key performance indicators
   State Critical success factors
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
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
 Manner in which the company and its marketing channels
 go about achieving the customer service levels
 Some of these steps could be:
   Periodic Sales forecasts
   Dispatch 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
Distribution Organization
 Primary aim: determine who will do what
 Major Decision points:
   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
 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
Key Performance Indicators
 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
Key Performance Indicators
 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
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
Marketing Channels
Sales and Distribution Management
Channel Functions
 Information gathering
 Consumer motivation
 Bargaining with suppliers
 Placing orders
 Financing
 Inventory management
 Risk bearing
 After sales support
Distribution Channels
 Take care of the following ‘discrepancies’
  Spatial
  Temporal
  Breaking bulk
  Assortment and
  Financial support
Spatial Discrepancy
 The channel system helps reduce the ‘distance’ between
 the producer and the consumer of his products.
  Consumers are scattered
  Have to be reached cost effectively
 Example: companies produce products in one location
 even for global needs
Temporal Discrepancy
 The channel system helps in speeding up in meeting
 the requirement of the consumers
  Time when the product is made and when it is consumed is
  different
  Limited number of production points but hundreds of
  consumers
 Maruti plant in Gurgaon – cars and spares are
 available when the consumer wants
Breaking Bulk
 The channel system reduces large quantities into
 consumer acceptable lot sizes
  Production has to be in large quantities to benefit from
  economies of scale
  Consumption is necessarily in small lot sizes
 India is the ultimate example in breaking bulk – you
 can buy one cigarette, one Anacin, one toffee etc
Need for Assortment
 The channel system helps aggregate a range of
 products for the benefit of the consumer – it could be
 made by one company or several of them.
  For the same product, it could be a variety of brands and
  pack sizes
 MICO makes fuel injection equipment, spark plugs etc
 in different plants but its dealer will sell the entire
 range.
Financial Support
 The channel system provides critical working
 capital to its customers by extending credit.
 Some channel members like stockists and
 wholesalers finance the business of their
 customers.
  Medical diagnostic equipment to hospitals
Channel Flows
 Forward flow – company to its customers – goods and
 services
 Backward flow – customers to the company – payment
 for the goods. Returned goods.
 Flows both ways - information
Three Flows Recognized


                                        FORWARD
               Goods and Services




                                                    Customers
Company




                                        BACKWARD
          Payment for goods / returns


                                        BOTH WAYS
                   Information
The Five Channel Flows
1.   Physical flow of goods
2.   Title flow of goods (negotiation, ownership and risk
     sharing also)
3.   Payment flows (financing and payment)
4.   Information flow (about goods, orders placed and
     orders executed)
5.   Promotion flows
Channel Flows
Some channel member/s have to perform them
There is a cost associated with each flow
If a channel member is discontinued, the flow has to
be performed by another
All flows and transactions can be effective only with
timely, accurate and correct information
The channel flow is ideally to be handled by the most
competent channel member who can deliver best
service at the lowest cost.
Direct Distribution
 Company to consumers or retailers without use of
 intermediaries. Also includes reaching Institutional
 buyers.
 Selling on the Internet
 If products are technically complex, this system is
 preferred
 Cost is a major consideration to adopt this mode
Direct Distribution - Examples
 Banking services
 Credit cards
 Petrol / diesel – company own outlets
 Land line phone connections
 Health services
 Utilities – electricity, water
 Subsidized ration
 Education
Indirect Distribution
 Goods may move through a set of intermediaries
  Most FMCG companies follow this route
 The intermediary has a far better reach than the company
 The cost of operations of an intermediary like a
 wholesaler / retailer is shared with many businesses.
Role of Intermediaries

    Company 1           Company 2           Company 3




                       Intermediary




                Large number of CONSUMERS
Indirect Distribution - Examples
 All FMCG, consumer durables and pharmaceutical
 Petrol / diesel / cooking gas - franchisees
 Insurance
 Mobile phones
 All kinds of passenger transport
Degree of Involvement
 Manufacturer          C&FA or            Distributor,        Wholesaler or
                 Distribution Center        dealers             retailer
• Physical       • Physical            • Physical            • Physical
• Title /        • Title               • Title / ownership   • Title / ownership
  ownership      • Information         • Information         • Information
• Information    • Payment             • Payment             • Payment
• Risk sharing   • Order processing    • Order placement     • Order
• Promotions                           • Negotiation           placement
                                       • Risk sharing        • Negotiation
                                       • Promotions          • Risk sharing
                                                             • Promotions
Channel Formats
Is decided by who ‘drives’ the channel system:
  Producer driven
  Seller driven
  Service driven
  Others
Producer Driven
 This is the effort of the manufacturer to reach the
 product to his consumers. Examples:
   Company owned retail outlets – petrol, Bata,
   Reliance mobiles
   Licensed outlets – KMF
   Consignment selling agents
   Franchisees
   Brokers
   Vending machines
   Company contracted distributors
Seller Driven
 Use of existing channels to reach the largest number of
 end users
   Existing wholesalers and retailers
   Modern retail formats
   Specialty stores – Shoppers’ Stop
   Discount stores – Subhiksha
   Pheriwalas
Service Driven
 These are the people who facilitate the distribution
   Transporters and freight forwarders
   Providers of warehouse space
   C&F agents
   3P Logistics service providers
   Couriers
Other formats
Multi-level marketing systems – Amway, Modicare,
Tupperware, Herbalife
Co-operative societies
Telephone kiosks
TV home shopping
Catalogue marketing
The internet
Exhibitions, fairs and trade shows
Database marketing
Channel Levels
 Zero level – if the product or service is provided to
 the end user directly by the company.
   Used mostly by companies delivering service like
   health, education, banking (also known as service
   channels)
 One level – consists of one intermediary
 Two level – consists of two intermediaries and is the
 most common for FMCG products
Channel Levels
  Producer       Producer    Producer


                             Wholesaler


                  Retailer    Retailer


 Customer /      Customer/   Customer/
 consumer        Consumer    Consumer

  Zero level     One level   Two level
Marketing Channel Systems
 Vertical:
  Corporate
  Administered
  Contractual
 Horizontal
 Multi-channel
Vertical Marketing System
 Various parties like producers, wholesalers and
 retailers act as a unified system to avoid conflicts
 Improves operating efficiency and marketing
 effectiveness
 3 types:
  Corporate
  Administered
  Contractual
Corporate VMS
 Combines successive stages of production and
 distribution under single ownership
 Examples:
   Bata, Bombay Dyeing, Raymond
   Sears, Goodyear
   Suppliers of food items could be also their own
   supplying firms - like Nilgiris
Administered VMS
 Co-ordinates distribution activities
 Gains market power by dominating a channel
 Usually true of dominant brands like GE,
 Kodak, Pepsi, Gillette, Coke and HLL in certain
 locations
  Command high level of co-operation in shelf space,
  displays, pricing policies and promotion strategies
Contractual VMS
 Independent producers, wholesalers and retailers
 operate on a contract
 Could take the forms of:
   Wholesaler sponsored voluntary chains
   Retailer co-operatives
   Manufacturer sponsored retail or wholesale
   franchise
   Franchise organizations
   Service firm sponsored retail franchise
Horizontal MS
 Two or more unrelated companies join together to
 pool resources and exploit an emerging market
 opportunity
  In-store banking in hotels, big stores
  Retail outlets in petrol bunks
  Coffee Day outlets in airports
Multi-channel Distribution
 Company uses different channels to reach /
 same or different market segments
 Most FMCG companies have separate
 networks for retail market and institutions
 Pharmacy companies may use different
 channels to reach doctors, chemists and
 hospitals
Multi-channel Distribution
 Used in situations where:
  Same product but different market segments
  Unrelated products in same market – detergents
  and ice creams (HLL)
  Size of buyers varies
  Geographic concentration of potential consumers
  varies
  Reach is difficult
Expectations from Channel
 Variety and assortment at one location
 Bulk Breaking
 Close to customer location
 Speed of Delivery
 Additional services
 Support
   Installation
   After-sales
   Financial
Wholesaling
Sales and Distribution Management
Need for Wholesalers
 Widespread economy – consumers can only reached
 by thousands of retailers (except for consumer
 durables and industrial products)
 Reaching these retailers by a company directly is not
 possible (except for consumer durables and industrial
 products)
 Hence the need for wholesalers in two forms:
   Well established free-lance wholesalers
   Contracted distributors, stockists and agents
Characteristics of Wholesalers
 Operate on large volumes but with chosen group of
 products
   Food, grocery, pharma or automobile spares etc
 The company itself, contracted parties or free lancers,
 can operate as wholesalers
 Mostly B2B business – trade and institutions
 Wholesaler could also be a retailer – in rural markets
 – W/s sells to other retailers and also to consumers
Characteristics of Wholesalers
 Sell physical inputs or products – tangible goods ( Ws
 in some service industries)
 Optimise results, maximise service (effectiveness)
 and minimise operating costs (efficiency)
 Buy goods for resale, keep inventory, take risks of
 price changes, negotiate terms, procure orders,
 deliver and extend credit.
Definition
Wholesaling is concerned with the activities of
  those persons or establishments that sell to
    retailers and other merchants and / or
 industrial, institutional and commercial users
 but do not sell in large amounts to consumers


                              US Bureau of Census
Delivering Value
 Keep goods accessible to customers instantly
 At times, get together to bargain for better
 terms
 Pass on benefits or incentives to their
 customers
 Have a wide trading area
Difference with Retailers
 Not too worried about location, ambience or
 promotions – prefer to be in the main market
 Deal with other businessmen and not consumers
 Deal with a specific group of products only
 Much larger trading area
 Much larger transactions with suppliers and
 customers
 Believe in low margins but high volumes.
Functions of Wholesalers
 Varies in degree between free-lance, company
 distributors and stockists / agents
 Sales and promotion of chosen company products
 Buying the assortment of goods
 Breaking bulk to suit customer requirements
 Storage and protection of goods till sold
Functions of Wholesalers
 Grading and packing of commodities
 Transportation of goods to customers
 Financing the buying of customers
 Bearing the risks associated with the business
 Collecting and disseminating market information to both
 suppliers and customers
Types of Wholesalers
 Full service: stocking, selling, offering credit, delivery
 and business assistance (company distributors,
 wholesale merchants)
 Limited service: range of service is limited (examples
 include Metro C&C, mail order)
 Merchant w/s: independent businesses
 Brokers and agents: bring buyer and seller together –
 do not take possession of goods
 Others: agri business, auction companies etc
Limitations of Wholesalers
 Some of them do not give complete information to
 suppliers for selfish reasons
 Cannot be relied on to do equitable distribution
 At times, do not want company and customers to
 meet
 Tend to hoard goods and influence pricing
 Consumers have no say in pricing or quality in a w/s
 dominated system
Major Wholesaling Decisions
 Which markets to operate in
 Manpower to employ
 What products to sell
 Pricing decisions / Promotional support
 Credit and collections
 Image and customer perception
 Warehouse location and design
 Inventory Control
Favourable Factors
Companies have limitations in market / outlet
coverage. Wholesalers are required to fill the gaps
Hundreds of small companies who cannot afford to
set up distribution networks – need to depend on
wholesalers
In food grains, fruits and vegetables – hardly any
organised distribution network. Wholesalers help
move goods from farm gate to consumers
Favorable Factors
 Big companies also need wholesalers to get big volumes
 W/s extend credit to customers. Companies cannot
 match this
 Retailers have to visit w/s markets to buy food grains,
 cereals and pulses – buy a lot more.
Unfavorable Factors
 Companies coverage focus on retailers and institutions
 through their distributors
 Using modern retail formats as wholesalers
 More outlets like Metro C&C being encouraged
 Enforcing strict price control so that w/s do not sell below
 company prices.
Distributor
 Is a wholesaler nominated by a company to
 exclusively re-distribute the company products to its
 customers in a designated territory. He does not deal
 in competitor’s products. Does not sell from his
 premises. Extends credit selectively.
   A redistribution stockist for HLL
   A distributor for Philips lighting division
   A distributor for L&T engineering division
Dealer
 Role similar to a distributor but
   May not have a clearly defined territory and may sell both in
   the market and from his shop
   May deal with competitive products also
   Extends credit selectively.
   Dealers in industrial products may have better defined roles.
 Examples:
   Dealer for an edible oil company
   A dealer for garment brands
Stockist
 May be working for a company with a designated
 territory but does not re-distribute the stocks. Sells from
 his premises. Extends credit selectively.
   A stockist for paper products
   A stockist for automobile spares
 Re-distribution is visiting customer premises to sell
 products
Managing Distributors
 The principles are similar across industry verticals. FMCG
 is the most complex.
 Has the capacity to maximize sales and market shares.
 Has to ensure buying goods from the company and re-
 distribution to the trade
Managing Distributors
Distributor responsibilities include:
  Buying adequate quantities by Stock Keeping Unit (SKU) for
  redistribution
  Ensuring full market coverage of all customers in the territory
  assigned to him
  Help finance the operations – pays for the goods upfront but
  extends credit to his customers
  Maintaining inventory of company products adequate at all
  times to service the market
  Assist company in its promotional efforts
Need for Distributors
 Under three circumstances:
   For entering a new town
   For additional coverage in the same town
   For replacing an existing distributor
 For entering a new town, assess the potential for
 business to decide:
   If the town can sustain a full fledged distributor
   The number of distributors required
 Starts with a town profile of potential, number of
 customers to be serviced and the competition.
Cost of Servicing
 Cost benefit of using distributors to be assessed
   Logistics cost of serving the market
   The number of customers to be covered by category –
   wholesalers, retailers, institutions
   Frequency of visits to markets and outlets
   Sales revenue estimate from each visit
   Markets to be covered with ready stocks or order booking
   for later delivery
   Likely collections during each visit – gives an idea of the
   credit requirements
Expectations from a Distributor
 To be stated at the start of the relationship
 Helps get the right kind of distributor also
   Achieving sales targets – volume, value and packs
   Financial commitment on inventory and credit
   Investment in infrastructure – space, vehicles
   Manpower – front line and back office
   Distribution effort – market and outlet coverage as per a
   beat plan with productive calls
   Developing new markets and new accounts
   Managing key accounts and institutional business
Expectations from a Distributor
 Merchandising and displays in the market
 Secondary sales efforts and tracking – critical for fmcg
 and pharma (secondary sales is sales from the
 distributor to the outlets in the market)
 Effectively handling promotions and schemes
 initiated by the company
 Managing damaged stocks
Expectations from a Distributor
 Organising and participation in promotional events
 Assist company in making a success of launching new
 products and packs
 Handling consumer quality complaints
 Handling statutory requirements on behalf of the
 company
 Payments and remittances promptly to the company
Retailing
Sales and Distribution Management
What is Retailing?
 Any business entity selling to consumers directly is
 retailing – in a shop, in person, by mail, on the
 internet, telephone or a vending machine
 Retail also has a life cycle – newer forms of retail
 come to replace the older ones – the corner grocer
 may change to a supermarket
 Includes all activities involved in selling or renting
 products or services to consumers for their home or
 personal consumption
Retailing
 Term retail derived from French word ‘retaillier’ meaning
 ‘to break bulk’
 Characteristics:
   Order sizes tend to be small but many
   Caters to a wide variety of customers. Keeps a large assortment
   of goods
   Lot of buying in the outlet is ‘impulse’- inventory management is
   critical
   Selling personnel and displays are important elements of the
   selling process
   Strengths in ‘availability’ and ‘visibility’
   Targeted customer mix decides the marketing mix of the retailer
Retailing
 Retail stores are independent of the producers – not
 attached to any of them
 A survey shows that only 35% of purchases are pre-
 planned.
 The rest are ‘impulse’- greatly influenced by quality of
 the merchandising efforts
Functions of Retailers
 Marketing functions to provide consumers a wide variety
 Helps create time, place and possession utilities
 May add form utility (alteration of a trouser bought by a
 customer)
 Helps create an ‘image’ for the products he sells
Functions of Retailers
 Add value through:
   Additional services – extended store timings, credit, home
   delivery
   Personnel to identify and solve customer problems
   Location in a bazaar to facilitate comparison shopping
How do Customers Decide on a Retailer?
 Price
 Location
 Product selection
 Fairness in dealings
 Friendly sales people
 Specialized services provided
Kinds of Retailers
    Type of                            Characteristics
    retailer
Specialty store   Narrow product line with deep assortment – apparel,
                  furniture, books
Department        Several product line in different departments – Shoppers
store             Stop, Big Bazaar
Supermarket       Large, low-cost, low-margin, high volume, self-service
                  operation with a wide offering
Convenience       Small stores in residential areas, open long hours all days of
store             the week – limited variety of fast moving products like
                  groceries, food
Discount store    Standard merchandise sold at lower prices for low margins -
                  Subhiksha
Kinds of Retailers
    Type of                           Characteristics
    retailer
Corporate         More outlets owned and controlled by one firm – Globus
chains
Voluntary chain   Wholesaler sponsored group of independent retailers


Retailer co-ops   Independent retailers with centralized buying operations
                  and common promotions
Consumer co-      Co-op societies of groups of consumers operating their own
ops               stores – farmers, industrial workers etc
Franchise         Contractual arrangement between the producer and
organisation      retailers – selling products exclusively – Kemp Toys
Retailers’ Strengths
 Choice of merchandise is their prerogative – put
 pressure on producer suppliers
 Many new products on offer. Can charge penalty if
 products do not do well
 New developments in IT help them run operations
 optimally and keep track of loyal customers. Also
 helps them identify profitable store locations.
Trade / Retail Format
  Range of goods and customer service dimensions
  determine the ‘format’. Elements distinguish
  between stores and include:
    Store ambience. (Kemp Fort)
    Saving in time for shopping – interiors of practical design –
    reduce time for search and pick-up of goods
    Location
    Physical characteristics – external appearance,
    arrangement of goods
  All these are parts of the positioning strategy and
  influence the ‘footfalls’ to the store.
Categories of Shoppers (1)
  Identified by Cook & Walters
  Task focused shopper – visits the store to buy
  specific things he has planned for
    Convenience, minimum time, easily accessible goods,
    pleasing store format
    Grocery shopping is an example
  Leisure shopper – more interested in the ambience
  and environment
    Has plenty of time, wants to have a good time while
    shopping
    Lifestyle stores are examples
Category of Shoppers (2)
 Convenience goods (low value): probable gain from
 shopping and making comparisons is small compared
 to the time, effort and mental discomfort required in
 the search -toothpaste
 Shopping goods (high value): gain is large -
 refrigerator
 Specialty goods: clearly distinguished by brand
 preferences – Maruti Zen car or Tag-Heuer watch
Trading Area
 Catchment area from where most of the customers of
 a retail store come
   Corner grocery store caters to the locality in which it is
   situated
   Discount stores have a wider area. Subhiksha locations for
   consumers in 2 km radius
   Specialty stores have a much wider trading area – MTR,
   Shoppers’ Stop etc
 Trading area increases with the size of the store and
 the variety it offers
Retail Strategy
 Positioning of the retailer
 Merchandising
 Customer service
 Customer communication
Positioning Strategy
 Wide range with a high value add – Lifestyle brand of
 stores
 Limited range but a high value add – Tanishque jewelry
 store
 Limited range with a limited value add – Bata stores
 Wide range of goods but a limited value add – a Food
 World outlet
Merchandising
 A set of activities involved in acquiring goods and
 services and making them available at the places,
 times and prices and the quantity that enable a
 retailer to reach his goals
 The most critical function in retail
 Directly effects the revenue and profitability of the
 store
 Also takes into account the assortment of goods and
 their quality
Customer Service Strategy
 Developed to create ‘stickiness’ in customers
 Personal data collected using IT – including
 purchasing practices and preferences
 Customer loyalty programs planned
 Create ‘customer’ delight
 Location strategy to give competitive advantage
 Understanding the buying profile of the customers
Customer Communication
 The manner in which the retailer makes himself
 known to his customers. Has two parts to it:
  The messages which the retailer sends to his customers and
  prospects
  The word of mouth support which satisfied customers give
  to the retailer by talking to others
 Retailer communicates about:
  Announcing the opening of a store
  Promotions running in the store
  Additional facilities introduced by the stores
Pricing Strategy
 Premium and indicating high value
 Reasonable pricing with good value
 Low pricing but high value for money
 All strategies are focused on giving value to the customer
Product Differentiation
 Feature exclusive national brands not available in
 competing retailers – unlikely
 Exclusivity of products – specialty stores
 Mostly private labels – Westside
 Feature, big, specially planned merchandising events
 – Kemp Fashion sows
 Introduce new products before competition - -again
 unlikely
Retail Performance Measures
 Gross margin return on inventory investment – GMROI
  Gross margin multiplied by ratio of sales to inventory (50%*4=
  200%)
 Gross margin per full time equivalent employee
 Gross margin per square foot
Franchising
 Franchisor is the firm which wants to sell its goods or
 services
 Franchisee is the firm or group that are willing to sell the
 products or services on behalf of the franchisor
   The first party gives advice and help to the second to find good
   locations, blue prints for a store, financial, marketing and
   management assistance
Benefits to Franchisor
 Faster expansion
 Local franchisee pays lower advertising rates than a
 national firm
 Owners motivated to work more hours than mere
 employees
 Local taxes and licenses are responsibility of franchisees
Benefits to Franchisee
 Quick recognition among potential customers
 Management training provided by principal
 Principal may buy ingredients and supplies and sell to
 franchisee at lower prices
 Financial assistance
 Promotional aids, in-store displays etc
Retailing on the Internet
 Unlimited assortment
 Items may not be on hold – someone has to deliver
 the product – delays
 No product touch or feel
 More info makes the customer a better shopper
 Comparison shopping possible
 Consumer has to plan purchases ahead
 No need to handle cash – payment can be on-line
 Shopping is 24X7
E-tailing Issues
 Logistics support to selling
 Payment gateway
 Customer product returns
 Conflicts with Brick &Mortar – overcome by selling
 separate products
Designing Distribution Channels

         Sales and Distribution Management
Channel Design Factors
 Product mix and nature of the product
 Width and depth of market / outlet coverage planned
 Long term commitments to channel partners
 Level of customer service planned
 Cost affordable on the channel system
 Channel control requirements of the company
Channel Design Steps
 Define customer needs
 Clarify channel objectives
 Look at alternative systems which can meet these
 objectives
 Estimate cost of operating the channel system
 Evaluate available alternatives
 Finalise the ‘ideal’ system
Customer Needs
 Lot size – most convenient pack size which the
 consumer can buy at a time
 Waiting time – time elapsed between the desire to
 buy the product and the time when he can actually
 buy it – should be almost zero
 Variety – choice of products, brands, packs
 Place utility – choice of buying where he wants. For a
 consumer product it has to be at a location closest to
 his residence
Channel Design Components
 Revenue generation or the commercial part
 Physical delivery of the goods or services – the logistics
 part
 The ‘service’ part to take care of after-sales support
 Each part of the system is likely to be handled by a
 different entity.
Channel Design Issues
 Activities required and who will perform
 Activities relationship to service levels
 Number of channel members required and the
 relationship between categories
 Roles, responsibilities, remuneration and appraisal of
 performance of channel members
Channel Design Process

               Segmentation

                Positioning

                  Focus

               Development
Segmentation
 Putting customers in similar clusters based on their
 needs
  Doctors who prescribe medicines
  Chemists who dispense medicines
  Hospitals and nursing homes who use them
 Each segment has a different need to be serviced by
 the channel
 Gives an idea to the sales manager as to the kind of
 channel members he should be planning for.
Positioning
 Defines the channel element required to service each
 of the segments
  The sales manager decides the channel partner who is
  ‘ideal’ to meet the expectations of the segments.
  The number of each category of intermediary is also decided
  based on the number of customers to be serviced in each
  segment.
  The service objectives and flows for each channel partner
  are also frozen
Focus
 It may not be possible to meet the needs of all segments
 – cost and practicality considerations (the managerial
 talent available for instance)
 The sales manager has to firmly decide which of the
 segments he will service
 The competitive scenario also helps in this decision
Development
 At this stage the channel system is being put in place
 to achieve the objectives
 Select the best of the alternatives
  Comparison with the most successful competitor could be a
  good benchmark
 Channel partners of competitors may be willing to
 share best practices of their principals
 For modifying an existing channel, the gap between
 the ideal and the existing is to be identified for
 remedial action.
Channel Objectives
Defines what the channel system is supposed to do to
support customer service.
Customer needs could include:
 Lot size convenience
 Minimum waiting time
 Variety and assortment
 Place utility
The product characteristics and the market profile
also impact the objectives.
Competition could also affect the objectives
Channel Alternatives
 Are planned after deciding the customer segments to
 be serviced and the levels of service
  Business intermediaries currently available like C&FAs,
  distributors, dealers, agents wholesalers and retailers.
  The number and type of intermediaries required
  Developing new channel types
  Roles of each channel member
Evaluation of Major Alternatives

      Cost of operations

               Ability to manage
                  and control
                           Adaptability
                                   Range and volume
                                     to be handled
Evaluation Critieria
 Cost:
   If existing sales force can be expanded cost effectively, this is
   the best alternative
   Cost of alternatives at different volumes can only be
   estimated for comparison
   System with the lowest cost is preferred
 Adaptability – the channel should be flexible to
 handle different types of markets and changes in the
 market conditions
 Volume and range to be handled – Capable even
 when business grows or expands
Evaluation Criteria
 Ability to manage and control:
   Distribution network being an extended arm of the company,
   the channel partners have some obligations
   Operating guidelines specify these rules
   The channel system should help the company enforce these
   rules fairly to all channel partners
   Some of the operating rules are……
 Company trains channel personnel and provides proper
 product literature
Selecting Channel Partners
 Getting good channel partners is a difficult part of
 doing business
 Some of the methods employed to select channel
 partners are:
  Sales people identify prospects and talk to them
  Press advertising (industrial goods)
  Existing channel partners can give good references
  Competitors’ channel members for reference, not poaching
Selection Criteria
 Qualitative: willingness, confidence in company products,
 willingness to abide by company rules, building company
 image, innovativeness etc
 Quantitative: financial status, infrastructure, location,
 present businesses, customer relationships, market
 standing etc
Training Channel Members
 Starts from the time of recruitment
 Channel member owner and his staff
 Market views channel member as part of the
 company – he has to behave in a like manner – hence
 training assumes significance
 Training could be on the job field training or
 classroom training
 Training is an ongoing process.
Subjects for Training
 Field training on how the markets are to be worked to
 achieve sales, collect payments and ensure the right
 kind of merchandising
 Class room training on company products,
 competition and how to tackle it to gain market
 shares
 Special meetings for new product launches
 Submitting reports and maintaining records
 Statutory compliance
Subjects for Training
 Care of company products
 Technical specifications and answering FAQs of
 customers
 For technical and industrial products – recognition of
 specs, installation procedure, repair and maintenance
 and effective demonstrations
 Servicing of automobiles and other engineering
 products
Motivating Channel Members
 Ambitious volume and growth targets – continuous
 motivation required to achieve
 Motivation includes:
  Capacity building programs
  Training
  Promotions support
  Marketing research support
  Working with company personnel
  Incentives
“Power” of Motivation
 Reward – positive support
 Coercion- threat of punitive action
 Referent – positive effects of association
 Legitimate – enforcing a contract
 Expert – support of special knowledge
 Support – additional benefits for performers
 Competition – pitting against peers
                                            French & Raven
Channel Members Evaluation
 Effectiveness of the distribution channel determines
 the success of the company
 Company would like its channel partners to perform
 at the highest standards possible
 Need to constantly evaluate performance on sales
 targets, coverage, productivity, inventory holdings,
 attending to servicing requests etc
ROI as a Measure
 Leading FMCG companies feel that an ROI of 30% for
 a distributor is healthy and is a fair indication that he
 is performing well.
   If the ROI is more, additional tasks are given
   If the ROI is less, the company may provide additional
   support
 Post evaluation tasks include counseling, retraining
 and motivating. In extreme cases it may result in
 termination.
Performance Evaluation
 On pre-agreed tasks only. No surprises.
 Specific targets on periodical basis are set.
   Targets on volume and outlet productivity could be for a
   week or a month
   Targets relating to increasing market shares or total outlet
   coverage could be for 6 months
   Different weightages could be given for each of the
   parameters for evaluation
 The performance appraisal is open and transparent
Steps for Modifying Networks
 Service level desired and willing to deliver
 Activities required to deliver service level, who will do
 it and at what cost
 Derive ideal channel structure and compare with
 existing to know gaps by evaluating based on
 standard parameters relating to effectiveness and
 efficiency
 Action to bridge the gaps and put modified channel
 system into place
 Define key performance indicators
Channel Comparison Factors
                Efficiency
               Effectiveness
                Scalability
                Flexibility
               Consistency
                Reliability
                 Integrity
Non-store Retailing
 Selling door-to-door
 Vending machines
 Tele-shopping networks
 Selling through catalogs
 Other forms of direct selling
 Electronic channels
Retailing on the Internet
Unlimited assortment
Items may not be on hold
No product touch or feel
More information makes the customer a better
shopper
Comparison shopping possible
Consumer has to plan purchases ahead
No need to handle cash – payment can be on-line
Shopping is 24X7
Vertical Integration
This means owning the channel. The company does the
work of production, branding and distribution.
Downstream integration means the producer of the
goods also does the distribution – Eureka Forbes, Bata
Vertical Integration
Upstream integration means the seller also produces the
goods – private labels of modern retailers.
If the organization does the work of production, branding
and distribution, it is said to be vertically integrated.
Vertical Integration provides better control over the
distribution function
Outsourcing Distribution
Is the most prevalent situation as:
 The ‘reach’ is better
 The cost may be lower
 The company can exploit the ‘core competence’ of its
 channel partners, which is distribution
Vertical integration is a choice which will become
long term and cannot be easily changed once the
resources have been committed.
However, direct distribution (owning the channel) is
still the best solution for ‘intensive’ distribution.
Channel (Conflict) Management

        Sales and Distribution Management
Channel Management
 Channel system has a set of players:
    Not equally motivated to implement the ideal channel
    design
    Whose expectations from the system differ
 Is in three broad phases:
    Use of power bases
    Identifying and resolving channel conflicts
    Channel co-ordination
Use of Channel Power
 Channel members are dependent on each other.
 The power equations between them keep them
 working together.
 There are basically 5 types of power bases – reward,
 coercion, expert, reference and legitimacy.
 2 more can be considered in Indian context as
 support and competition.
 Extent of dependence defines the power base which
 is appropriate.
“Power” (Bases) of Motivation
  Reward – incentives for good performance
  Coercion – threat of punishment for non-performance
  Referent – benefit of sheer association with a strong
 company
 Legitimate – arising out of a contract
 Expert – specialized knowledge
 Support – additional benefits for better performers only
 Competition – created between channel partners
Countervailing Power
Balances the power exerted by one channel member.
It is not a one-sided equation.
Both the channel member and the principal can have
influence on each other.
Results from interdependence within the channel
system.
 Company exerts power on the distributor to get its
 coverage and revenues
 Distributor has enough influence on his customers and this
 is critical for the company also
 Weaker partners do get exploited – ancillary units
Channel Coordination
 Channel system is well coordinated if each member
 understands his role correctly and performs it to help
 the system achieve its customer service objectives.
 In a coordinated channel:
   Interests of all channel members are protected
   Actions of all are in line with overall objectives
   Flows are streamlined to desired customer service
   objectives
 Channel co-ordination is an on-going effort
Channel Conflict
 Situation of discord or disagreement between
 partners in the same channel system – has negative
 connotations and is driven more by feelings than
 facts
 Conflict is part of any social system – getting
 disparate entities to work together as in a channel
 system is also one such social unit
 If any member feels that another is working in a
 manner as to affect him, conflict results
Channel Conflict
                     CHANNEL CONFLICT



      GOAL               DOMAIN             PERCEPTION


 Goal conflict – rising out of mismatch in understanding of
 objectives by various channel members
 Domain conflict – resulting due to mismatch of understanding
 of responsibilities and authority
 Perception conflict – due to mismatch in reading of the
 market place and thus proposed actions
Conflicts Result From…
 Each channel member wanting to pursue his own
 goals
 Each wants to retain his independence
 There are limited resources which all of them want to
 utilize in achieving their goals
 Features of conflicts:
   Initially latent and does not affect the working
   Is not normally possible to detect till it becomes disruptive
Each stage is progressively
                           more severe than the earlier
                                       one
Four Stages of Conflict



                                   PERCEIVED




                                                          MANIFEST
                          LATENT




                                               FELT
Types of Conflicts
 Latent Conflict:
   Some amount of discord exists but does not affect the
   working or delivery of customer service objectives.
   Disagreement could be on roles, expectations, perceptions,
   communication.
 Perceived Conflict:
   Discords become noticeable – channel partners are aware of
   the opposition.
   Channel members take the situation in their stride and go
   about their normal business
   No cause for worry but the opposition has to be recognized
Types of Conflicts
 Felt Conflict:
   Reaching the stage of worry, concern and alarm. Also known as
   ‘affective’ conflict.
   Parties are trying to outsmart each other.
   Causes could be economical or personal
   Needs to be managed effectively and not allowed to escalate.
 Manifest Conflict:
   Reflects open antagonistic behavior of channel partners.
   Confrontation results.
   Initiatives taken are openly opposed affecting the performance of
   the channel system.
   May require outside intervention to resolve
Root Causes for Channel Conflict
 Roles not defined properly
 Allocation of scarce resources between members seem unfair
 to some
 Differences in perception of the business environment
 Future expectations not likely to materialize
 Decision domain disagreements – who has to decide on what
 (key account pricing)
 Channel members do not agree on objectives
 Misunderstanding or misinterpretation of routine business
 communication
Resolving Conflicts

          Understanding nature and intensity


            Tracing the source of the conflict


          Understand the impact of the conflict


        Strategy and plan of action for resolution
Conflict Resolution Styles
        Avoidance                            Styles are a combination
                                        of assertiveness and co-operation.
                    Aggression

                            Accommodation

                                       Compromise

                                                        Collaboration



Least effort and results                       Maximum effort and Best results

                                                            Kenneth W Thomas
Avoidance
 Used by weak channel members.
 Problem is postponed or discussion avoided.
 Relationships are not of much importance.
 As there is no serious effort on getting anything done,
 conflict is avoided.
Aggression
 Also known as a competitive or selfish style.
 It means being concerned about one’s own goals
 without any thought for the others.
 The dominating channel partner (may be the
 principal) dictates terms to the others. Long term
 could be detrimental to the system.
Accommodation
 A situation of complete surrender.
 One party helps the other achieve its goals without
 being worried about its own goals.
 Emphasis is on full co-operation and flexibility in
 approach. May generate matching feelings in the
 receiver.
 If not handled properly, can result in exploitation
Compromise
 Obviously both sides have to give up something to meet
 mid way.
 Can only work with small and not so serious conflicts.
 Used often in the earlier two stages.
Collaboration
 Also known as a problem solving approach
 Tries to maximize the benefit to both parties while
 solving the dispute.
 Most ideal style of conflict resolution – a win-win
 approach
 Requires a lot of time and effort to succeed.
 Sensitive information may have to be shared
Channel Policies
 Defines how the channel is required to operate.
 Normally framed by the channel principal to guide
 the operations of the channel system
 If not framed properly could prove the starting point
 of channel conflicts.
 Some subjects of channel policies could be as seen in
 the next slide:
Channel Policies
 Markets to be covered
 Customer coverage
 Pricing
 Product portfolio to be handled
 Selection, termination of channel members
 Ownership of the channel
The Services Sector
 Twice the size of the manufacturing sector
 Services offered are to be in line with customer
 demand
 Services have to be presented in an appealing
 manner to sustain customers.
 Needs specialized channels which understand the
 characteristics of service delivery
5 Characteristics of Services
They are intangible – can only be felt. No visual
features like size, style.
They are inseparable from their service providers – a
3P cannot deliver
They cannot be standardized – custom made and
delivered
Customers are involved to a great degree – define the
services
They are perishable – cannot be stored for delivery
later. Salvage value of an unsold service is zero.
Channels Used
 Shorter channels than for products
 Some channels used are:
  Direct from service provider to user
  Agents or brokers to bring buyer and seller together
  Franchisees or contractors
  Electronic channels
 High degree of customization is provided
Channel Information Systems

      Sales and Distribution Management
CIS Purpose
 CIS is Channel Information Systems

 CIS is the orderly flow of pertinent operational data
 both internally and between channel members, for
 use as a basis of decision making in specified
 responsibility areas of channel management

 CIS is of primary use of sales managers.
Information - Advantages
 Useful in marketing planning – helps improve quality of
 marketing decisions
 Can help tap market opportunities
 Provides an alert against competition
 Helps spot trends – favourable or otherwise
 Helps develop action plans for growth
 Gives feedback on consumer needs
Classification of Information
 Based on the use made of it by marketing – planning,
 operations, decision making or control
 Based on subjects – consumers, products,
 competition, channels, promotions, pricing, sales
 volume, value etc
 Operations data – facts and figures
 Also based on assumptions, anticipated occurrences
 – forecasts relating to the channel system
Information Process

                COLLECTION



                PROCESSING



                 STORAGE



                   USE
Information Process
 Collection: acquiring and placing raw data – monthly
 sales by each territory
 Processing: analyzing data to get meaning out of it –
 arranging, modifying and interpreting the data by the
 user – comparison of sales between periods
 Storage: keeping the information intact till it is
 needed
 Use: application of information for management
 decision making – sales data of the last 6 months to
 forecast the sales of the next month.
Developing a Channel MIS

         Decide what information is required



      Organize information in a manner suitable
            for interpretation and action


         Decide who will use the information
             when and for what purpose
Use of Information
 Planning: sales forecasts or distributor indents
 Control: expenses against budget
 There is always a cost of collecting information.
 If data collected is not used properly, the data
 provider will hesitate to give the information.
 The channel MIS works at the sales operational level.
 It has very little strategic intent.
Sources of Data
 Reports (oral and written) and records of channel
 members, sales people
 Letters, statements and market research
 Any other info collected by the sales people and the
 channel members from the market
 External sources like business publications, magazines,
 newspapers, trade journals.
 In a dedicated channel system the collection of info is
 well streamlined – in the JC meeting
 With use of IT enabled systems collection and processing
 has become simpler.
A Good Channel MIS…
 Integrated system to handle all regular data
 Useful decision support system
 Reflects the style of the marketing organization
 User friendly and user oriented
 Convincing to the providers of the info as to its
 purpose
 Be cost effective
 Not need for verification from other sources
 Be fast and totally reliable
Element Importance
 In a good channel MIS, it is necessary to define upfront
 for each element of the MIS, the following:
   Purpose of the info
   Source of the info
   Action possible
   Impact on customer service
Competition Tracking
Purpose     Plan day to day corrective action to protect
            market shares and shelf space

Source      Trade, channel partners and sales people

Action      Spot action while in the market and taken by
possible    channel partners or sales people

Impact on   Timely action to provide better support to the
service     trade and retain their goodwill
Market Logistics and SCM

   Sales and Distribution Management
Materials Management
 Materials forms the largest single cost item in most
 manufacturing companies – needs to be carefully
 managed
 Materials management function includes planning
 and control, purchasing and stores and inventory
 control
 Materials management is the precursor to logistics
 and supply chain management
Logistics Defined
 Logistics means having the right thing, at the right
 place, at the right time
 The procurement, maintenance, distribution and
 replacement of personnel and materials – Webster’s
 Dictionary
 The science of planning, organizing and managing
 activities that provide goods or services – Logistics
 World, 1997
Logistics
 Functions: planning, procurement, transportation,
 supply and maintenance
 Processes: requirements determination, acquisition,
 distribution and conservation
 Business: science of planning, design and support of
 business operations of procurement, purchasing,
 inventory, warehousing, distribution, transportation,
 customer support, financial and human resources
Scope of Logistics
 Choice of markets
 Procurement
 Plant location and layout
 Inventory management
 Location and management of warehouses
 Choices of carriers, mode of transport
 Packaging decisions
 Relevant to all enterprises: manufacturing,
 Government, Institutions, service organizations
Components of Logistics Management
             Logistics Activities
                      Customer service
                     Demand forecasting
                                                     Output
                          Distribution
    Input              Communications           • Marketing
                      Inventory control           Orientation
•Natural              Materials handling          (competitive
 Resources             Order processing
                                                  Advantage)
•HR               Parts and service support
               Plants and warehouse selection   • Time and Place
•Finance
                         Procurement              utility
•Information               Packaging            • Efficient move
                    Return goods handling
                                                  to customer
                  Salvage and scrap disposal
                  Traffic and transportation
                   Warehouse and storage
Links and Flows

                        General material flow/ service flow
                                               Information flow
         Information flow
Customer’s                                                        Supplier’s
                Customer      Lead Firm           Supplier
 customer                                                          supplier

                                                 General cash flow

  Outbound / Downstream logistics         Inbound / Upstream logistics
Logistics and Marketing
 Interface on:
  Product design and pricing
  Customer service policies
  Sales forecasts and order processing
  Inventory policies and location of warehouses
  Channels of distribution and dispatch planning
  Transportation to reach products to customers
 Production wants larger production runs to minimize
 time spent on set up changes on the machines.
 Marketing wants smaller runs of a variety of
 products.
Value Chain (Michael Porter)
                                        Firm’s Infrastructure
Activities
Support




             Human Resources (Organization, people, methods)
                                       Systems and Technology
                                            Procurement
                          Operations




                                                        Marketing
                                           Outbound
              Inbound
              Logistics




                                            Logistics




                                                                    Service
                                                         & Sales

                                Primary Activities
Logistics Plan Outline
 Internal analysis (current position)
   Organization
   Human resources
   Transportation
   Relations with internal customers
   Quality of product
   Quality of Service
 External / situation analysis
   Competitor logistics performance
   Trends
   External environment / economy
   Public, private and contract warehouse
   Public, private and contract carriage
Principles of Logistics Excellence
           Strategic                  Operational
 Link logistics to corporate   Focus on financial
 strategy                      performance
 Organize comprehensively      Target optimum service levels
 Use the power of              Manage the details
 information                   Leveraging logistics volumes
 Emphasize human resources     Measure and react to
 Form strategic alliances      performance

                                                Alling & Tyndall
Logistics Focus Areas
    Customer service related                  Operations related
 Packaging                             Plant and warehouse site
 Order processing                      location
 Spare parts and service support       Procurement
 After sales Customer service          Inventory control
 support                               Materials handling
 Demand forecasting                    Salvage and scrap disposal
 Distribution communications           Traffic and transportation
 Return goods handling                 Warehousing and storage


         Logistics may be confined to the company whereas SCM extends beyond
Supply Chain Management
 Business context:
  Globalization of the market place
  Advances in technology
  Increasingly demanding, informed customer base
  Purchase decisions on dimensions of quality, price and time
 Innovative supply chain:
  To meet customer driven challenges
  To reduce costs
  Improve service levels
  Enhance speed to market
Supply Chain Integration
 Optimizing the supply chain requires
  supplier and customer involvement
  to integrate
    processes,
    policies,
    systems,
    database and
    strategies
  between diverse trading partners
Supply Chain Integration
                         Customer Analysis

     Order Fulfillment                       Purchasing/Supplier
                                                 Partnering



                           Integrated              Inventory Management
 Storage &                Supply Chain                     and control
 Transportation
                          Management


      Manufacturing/                           Demand & Lead Time
     Re-manufacturing/                            Management
         Assembly
                             Materials
                            Management
Why Carry Inventory?
 Support production requirements
 Support operational requirements
 Maximize customer service – ensure availability when
 needed – protect against uncertainty
 Hedge against marketplace uncertainty
 Take advantage of order quantity discounts
Functions of Inventory
 Inventory serves as a buffer between:
   Supply and demand
   Customer demand and finished goods
   Requirements for an operation and the output from the
   previous operation
   Parts and materials to begin an operation and the suppliers of
   the materials
Factors Which Drive Inventory
 Target service level parameters
 Lot sizing practices
 Safety stock and safety time conventions
 Volume discounts and purchase arrangements
 Seasonal build up needs
Categories of Inventory
 Anticipation – built in anticipation of future demand
 – peak season, strike, promotion
 Fluctuation (safety) – to cover random, unpredictable
 fluctuations in supply and demand and lead time – to
 prevent disruption in operations, deliveries etc
 Lot-size – to take advantage of quantity discounts,
 reduce shipping, set up and clerical costs – also called
 cycle stock
Categories of Inventory
 Transportation – pipeline or movement inventories –
 to cover the time needed to move from one point to
 another – factory to distribution point for example
 Hedge – for materials where prices are volatile
 Maintenance, repair and operating supplies (MRO) –
 to support M and O – spare parts, lubricants,
 consumables etc
Types of Inventory
 Obvious….
  Raw materials
  Work-in-process
  Finished goods – of primary concern to marketing
  Maintenance, repair and operating (MRO) supplies
  In-transit, pipeline
Performance Measures
 Inventory turns = Annual cost of goods sold /average
 inventory in value
 Days of sales = inventory on hand / average daily sales
Types of Inventory Systems
 Pure Inventory – when and how much to order. RM
 procurement. Simple manufacturing operations
 Production Inventory – finite production rates.
 Demand fluctuation. Products compete for
 manufacturing capacity
 Production – distribution Inventory – compete for
 production capacity. Geographic placement of
 inventory for best service of demand
Types of Classification
 ABC category – most common for all
 HML - high, medium, low - similar
 FSND – fast moving, slow moving, non-moving, dead –
 spare parts / FG
 SDE – scarce, difficult, easy to obtain – procurement /
 Spares
 GOLF – govt, ordinary, local, foreign source –
 procurement / Spares
 VED – vital, essential, desirable – spare parts / FG
 SOS – seasonal, off-seasonal - commodity
ABC Inventory Analysis
 Based on Pareto’s law:
  A – 20% items worth 80% of value
  B – 30% items worth 15% of value
  C – about 50% items account for 5% of the usage
 Classify items based on the above criteria
 Apply degree of control in proportion to the
 importance of the group
Inventory Related Costs
 Unit costs – basic value of the item carried
 Ordering costs – generating and sending a material
 release, transport, any other acquisition costs
 Carrying costs – capital, storage, obsolescence
 Stock-out costs
 Quality costs – non-conforming goods
 Other costs – duties, tooling, exchange rate
 differences etc
Approaches for Controlling Inventory
 Continuous review:
   Safety stocks and forecasting methods
   Excess and obsolete inventory
 Part simplification and re-design
 On-site supplier managed inventory
 Use of supply chain inventory management systems,
 Materials Requirement Planning, Distribution
 Requirement Planning etc
 Automated inventory tracking systems
 Supplier – buyer cycle-time reduction
Stores Management Objectives
 Providing efficient service to users
 Reduce cost of carrying goods
 Providing correct, updated stock figures
 Controlling inventory
 Preventing damage to or obsolescence of materials
 Achieve all of the above with good housekeeping
Functions
                                   Warehouses


Material handling     Customer Service   Information Transfer   Storage Function


                 Receive goods
                 Identify goods
                   Sort goods                           Temporary      Permanent
              Dispatch to storage
                 Hold inventory
              Recall, select goods
             Marshal the shipment
             Dispatch the shipment
          Prepare records and advices
Purpose of Warehousing
 To provide desired level of customer service at the
 lowest possible total cost
 It is that part of the firm’s logistics system that stores
 products (RM, Packing Materials, WIP, FG) at and
 between point of origin and point of consumption
 and provides info to management on the status,
 condition and disposition of items being stored
 Distribution warehousing relates mainly to FG
Reasons for Warehousing
        Service related                       Cost related
 Maintain source of supply           Achieve production economies
 Support customer service policies   Achieve transportation economies
 Meet changing market conditions     Take advantage of Quantity
 Overcome time and space             Purchase discounts and forward
 differentials                       buys
 Support JIT programs of suppliers   Least Logistics cost for a desired
 and customers                       level of customer service
 Provide customers with the right
 mix of products at all times
 Temporary storage of materials to
 be disposed or re-cycled
Warehouses
 Support manufacturing
 Mix products from multiple facilities for shipment to a
 single customer
 Break-bulk
 Aggregate
 Used more as a ‘flow-thru’ point than as a ‘hoarding’
 point
Distribution Warehousing
 The objective is to set up a network of warehouses
 closest to the customer locations to service markets
 better and minimise cost
 Could be C&FA s, depots or distribution centers
 Macro location strategies:
  Market positioned
  Production positioned
  Intermediately positioned
Distribution Center
 Warehouse designed to speed the flow of goods and
 avoid unnecessary costs
 Speeds bulk-breaking to avoid inventory carrying costs
 Helps to centralise control and co-ordination of logistics
 activities
 Products can also be cross-docked (one vehicle to
 another)
Market Positioned
 Warehouses located nearest to the final customer
 Factors influencing are:
   Order cycle time
   Transportation costs
   Sensitivity of the product
   Order size
   Levels of customer service offered
Production Positioned
 Warehouses located close to the production facilities
 or supply sources
 Not the same level of customer service as the earlier
 one
 Serve as points of aggregation / collection for
 products made in a number of plants
 Factors influencing are:
   Perishability of raw materials
   Number of products in the product mix
   Assortments ordered by customers
   Transport consolidation rates ex; FTL
Intermediate Positioned
 Mid point locations between the final customer and
 the producer
 High customer service levels possible even if products
 made in number of units
 Other macro approaches look at cost minimisation or
 cost and demand elements to maximise profitability
Transportation
 Very important in the Logistics function:
  Movement across space or distance adds value to products
  Transportation provides time and place utility
 Role of transportation includes:
  Provides opportunity for growth under competitive
  conditions
  Deeper penetration into markets
  Wider distribution means greater demand
  Can influence product prices favourably
Transportation Principles
 Continuous flow
 Optimise unit of cargo - stackability
 Maximum vehicle unit – capacity utilization
 Adaptation of vehicle unit to volume and nature of
 traffic
 Standardisation
 Compatibility of unit load equipment
 Minimum of dead weight to total weight
 Maximum utilization of capital, equipment and
 personnel
The Selection Criteria
 Environmental analysis: shipper, carrier, government
 regulations, public influence
 Deciding objectives
 Selecting mode
 Select transport type within the mode
 Define functions of transport
 Evaluation and control – customer perception /
 satisfaction, best practice benchmarking
Cost Factors
 Can be product related or market related.
 Product related: density, stowability, ease or difficulty
 of handling and liability
 Market related: competition, location of markets,
 Government regulations, traffic in and out of the
 market, seasonality of movements and impact on
 customer service
 Five prominent modes:
   Road, rail, air, water and pipeline.
   Sixth one is use of Ropeways
Customer Service Factors
 Consistency, dependability
 Transit time
 Coverage – door-to-door for example
 Flexibility in handling a range of products
 Loss and damage performance
 Additional services provided
Reverse Logistics
 Movement of goods from the market or customer
 back to the company
 The need:
  Increased awareness of the environment
  Stringent legislation
  For some it is part of the business
  Profitability of dealing with scrap, surplus
 Surplus, obsolescence can result due to:
  Over optimistic sales forecasts, change in product specs,
  errors in estimating material usage, losses in processing or
  overbuying based on incentives
Advantages of Rail
 Economy – more so for goods over long distances
 Efficiency of energy
 Reliability – not affected by weather conditions
Disadvantages
 Uneconomical for small shipments and short distances
 Not suitable for remote stations
 Costly terminal handling facilities
 Inflexible time schedules
Road Freight Advantages
 Through movement – direct from consignor to
 consignee, no transshipment
 Flexibility – routes and loading routines can be easily
 altered, operate day and night
 Less capital costs – for own fleet + immunity from
 industrial action
 Fast turn-around – if articulated units like tractors
 and trailers are used
 Minimum delays
Disadvantages
 Susceptibility to weather and road conditions – in
 spite of the best protection
 Unsuitability for heavy loads – rail transport more
 economical for bulk loads
 Unsuitability for long distances – again the rail
 telescopic rates are more favourable
Air Transport Advantages
 Faster mode
 Reduction in cost particularly inventory
 Broad service range
 Increasing capabilities
 Disadvantages:
   High cost
   Weather affects flight conditions
   Limitations on heavy consignments
Water Transport
 Advantages:
  Mass movement of bulk
  Lowest freight cost
  Preferred for long haul of low value commodities
 Disadvantages:
  Not for quick transit
  Suitable for certain types on commodities only
Pipeline Movement
 Advantages:
  Reliable, continuous, all weather transport
  Low energy consumption – hence low cost
  Low maintenance and operating costs
  Underground, no space problem
  Can traverse difficult terrain
  Minimal transit losses
  Operation round the clock, safe
  Economies of scale – double the throughput for only 30%
  additional cost
 Disadvantage is in the investment cost
Ropeways
 Advantages:
  In hilly or inaccessible areas
  Long and circuitous routes with streams / deep valleys
  For commodities capable of movement in ropeway buckets
  Short haulages of less than 50 kms
  Areas where other carriers are uneconomical
 Disadvantages:
  Heavy investments
  Limitations on size and quantity of haul
Carrier Selection
    Traffic Related           Shipper related            Service related
 Length of haul              Size of firm            Speed (transit time)
 Consignment weight          Investment priorities   Reliability
 Dimensions                  Marketing strategy      Cost
 Value                       Network of production   Customer relationship
 Urgency                     and distribution        Geographical coverage
 Regularity of shipment      Availability of rail    Accessibility
 Fragility                   sidings                 Availability of special
 Toxicity                    Stockholding policy     vehicles / equipment
 Perishability               Management structure    Monitoring of goods
 Type of packing             System of carrier       Unitisation
                             evaluation              Ancillary services – bulk
 Special handling required
                                                     breaking, storage
Chart of Relative Merits
    Parameter       Weightage   Rail   Road   Air   Water   Pipe   Rope
                                                            line   way
Speed                  30        5      6     8      4       3      3

Versatility            10        6      8     5      6       3      2

Reliability            20        6      8     5      5       7      4

Availability           10        7      8     5      6       3      2

Continuity of          10        6      7     5      5       8      3
service
Distribution cost      20        4      5     6      6       7      8

Total score            10       5.4    6.7    5.1    5.1    5.1    4.0

Overall ranking        10        2      1     4      5       5      6
International Sales & Distribution

           Sales and Distribution Management
Why International?
 The WTO agreement has resulted in opening up of new areas
 for freer trade (Textiles, Services & Agricultural products)
 China, Russia, India & the East European countries have
 embraced free market policies resulting in huge opening up of
 underserved populations.
 Domestic competition has increased especially from imports.
 Outsourcing in manufacturing and services has increased due
 to cost pressures & improvement in infrastructure.
Choosing the Market
 Factors to be borne in mind while choosing markets:
 Size of the market
 Language & Culture of the market
 Competition in the market
 Proximity of the market
 Political and Financial stability of the country
 Ease of doing business
Culture and International Business
 Culture influences everything from taste &
 preferences to consumption patterns and attitude to
 foreigners.
 Culture influences communication modes
 Culture influences dress and behavior
 Culture influences usage of a product
 Language is very important in international business
 to communicate effectively.
Legal Aspects of International Business
 Laws vary from country to country – there is no “international
 law”
 Important to know the local laws to do business – on
 investment, management, employment, marketing, pricing,
 royalties, profit repatriation, taxation etc
 Developed countries have stringent laws on safety, pollution,
 intellectual property rights etc.
 In times of disputes, which law will prevail – this needs to be
 spelt out in contracts
Risks in International Business
 Two main risks in international business:
 Political risks – involve disruption of contracts or
 payments due to sudden political changes,
 expropriation of businesses etc
 Commercial & Financial risks – failure of the buyer to
 pay due to bankruptcy or sudden changes in the
 exchange availability or rate.
Risks in International Business
 Risks can be insured with agencies like the export
 credit guarantee corporation(ECGC) for a premium
 based on the country’s risk.
 Letters of credit may be guaranteed by international
 banks located in major financial centers like London,
 New York, Singapore etc.
Trade Between Countries
 Reasons for trade between countries include:
 Non availability of a product or resource
 Cost advantages in buying rather than making a
 product locally
 Differentiated products-Luxury products or better
 designed products in the same category may be
 available from different countries (cars, electronics,
 textiles and garments etc)
International Trade-Company Perspective
 Companies may choose to sell internationally for the
 reasons given below:
 Limited growth in home market
 Overseas markets offer large profitable opportunities
 Excess capacity which cannot be absorbed locally
 Cost advantage over international competitors
 Mitigating risk of increased domestic competition
Entry Strategy
 Exporting through local agent
 Exporting through foreign agent
 Exporting to foreign importer / distributor
 Setting up local office / representative
 Licensing / Franchising
 Setting up Joint ventures for distribution /
 manufacture
 Setting up wholly owned manufacturing facilities
Organizing for International Sales
 Structure depends on volume of sales and nature of
 the product.
 In situations of low volumes, exporting through local
 or foreign agents is cost effective
 As volume grows and in complex products or large
 value deals, using own sales personnel is preferable.
 To be effective, it is preferable to have local personnel
 in the sales force
Distribution
 Distribution is a vital aspect of marketing – ensuring
 availability of the product in the right quantity, at the right
 time and right place.
 More important in international markets due to distance and
 transportation time.
 Importers, manufacturers and retailers are increasingly asking
 for Just in Time deliveries.
 Distribution strategy varies from market to market depending
 on size and local conditions.
 Multiple channels may be used in countries.
Distribution Options
 Depends on the volume of the business
 Positioning of the product
 Infrastructure of distribution in the country
 Local laws – some countries insist on local companies
 in the distribution business
 Internet as a channel of sales and distribution
Role of Logistics
 Very important aspect of international selling
 Logistics can make up over 15% of the cost of the product
 Involves multiple modes of transport – land, sea and air
 Considerable paperwork and formalities to be completed
 in international trade
 Logistics providers now offer complete one stop solution
 including distribution, invoicing and collection of payment
Profile of International Salespersons
 Pleasant and amiable personality
 Ability to adapt to foreign culture – especially food, drink etc
 Conversant in one or more foreign languages
 Ability to act independently and decisively
 Ability to understand complexities of financing, foreign
 exchange etc
 Some local sales persons in the force will be useful to
 overcome some barriers and leverage local networks for
 business development
Pricing and Payment Terms
Common pricing terms are:
 Ex Works – at the mfrs factory gate
 FOT, FOR – free on truck / rail –loaded on truck/rail
 FAS – free along side – at port next to ship
 FOB – free on board – loaded on ship
 C&F – cost and freight – inclusive of to destination
 CIF – cost, insurance and freight – inclusive to
 destination
Pricing and Payment Terms
Payment terms can include:
  Cash in advance
  Cash on delivery – cash against documents
  Consignment basis – payable after sale
  Usance – payment … days after acceptance of documents
  Letter of credit
  Long term credit financing – for machinery / projects
  Each method has risks for the buyer or seller. The LC offers
  safety and comfort for both
Currency of Pricing
 The US Dollar is the most widely used currency for pricing
 international sales
 Importers in some countries may prefer invoicing in local
 currencies like Japanese Yen or Euro or Pound Sterling,
 Singapore Dollars or UAE Dirhams Saudi riyals etc.
 This reduces the risk of exchange rate fluctuations for the
 buyer
 Exchange fluctuation is a major risk for sellers and can be
 managed by hedging the currency.
Packing and Shipping
 Packing is of two types:
   Industrial packing – bulk for protection during shipping &
   transport
   Consumer packing – to enhance sales appeal
 Packing could makeup up to 5% of product costs
 Countries have laws or practices in packing which must be
 understood and adhered to.
 Packing depends on the product and must be suitable for
 containerized shipping and mechanical handling.
Market Intelligence
 Secondary data is very easy to gather from various
 publications, agencies like chambers of commerce, trade
 bodies, embassies, trade shows, internet, banks etc
 Usually secondary data is sufficient to establish the feasibility
 of the market.
 Care must be taken to understand the data and the measures
 used before drawing conclusions.

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Channels and distribution

  • 1. Distribution Management & Marketing Mix Sales and Distribution Management
  • 2. The Marketing Mix Product Price Promotion Place Distribution channels help in the ‘place’ aspect of the marketing mix Distribution provides place, time and possession utility to the consumer
  • 3. 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
  • 4. Players Involved The company and its distribution network Direct company to consumer Company to a C&FA / distribution center to distributors to retailers Distributor to wholesaler to retailer All these intermediaries help the process of ‘exchange’ of the product or service.
  • 5. Distribution Management Management of all activities which facilitate movement and co-ordination of supply and demand in the creation of time and place utility in goods The art and science of determining requirements, acquiring them, distributing them and finally maintaining them in an operationally ready condition for their entire life.
  • 6. Distribution Channels Defined Are sets of interdependent organizations involved in the process of making a product or service available for use or consumption – Stern & Ansary Whether selling products or services, marketing channel decisions play a role of strategic importance in the overall presence and success a company enjoys in the marketplace.
  • 7. 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, specialization and scales of operation
  • 8. Types of Channels Sales channel motivates buyers, shares information between company and its consumers, negotiates fair bargains for consumers and finances the transactions Delivery channel meant only for physical part of the distribution Service channel – performs after sales service
  • 9. Listing of Channel Members Company own sales team C&FAs and CSAs Distributors, dealers, stockists, value-added re-sellers Agents and brokers Franchisees Electronic channels Wholesalers Retailers
  • 10. C&FAs / C&SAs C&FA: carrying and forwarding agent 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 dispatch 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
  • 11. 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
  • 12. 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
  • 13. 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 personalized services to their customers
  • 14. Industrial Products Producer Producer Agent/middleman Industrial Distributor Industrial Distributor Industrial Customer Industrial Customer Customers may also directly purchase from company sales force
  • 15. Consumer Products Producer Producer Producer Distributor Distributor Wholesaler Retailer Retailer Retailer Customer / Customer/ Customer/ consumer Consumer Consumer Retailers may also direct from company sales force
  • 16. Patterns of Distribution Determines the intensity of the distribution Intensity decides the service level provided Types of distribution intensity: Intensive Selective Exclusive
  • 17. Intensive Distribution Distribution through every reasonable outlet available – FMCG Strategy is to make sure that the product is available in as many outlets as possible Preferred for consumer, pharmaceutical products and automobile spares
  • 18. Selective Distribution Multiple, but not all outlets in the market 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 Tanishq jewelry Keeps distribution costs lower
  • 19. Exclusive Distribution Highly selective choice of outlets – may be even one outlet in an entire market - car dealers Could include outlets set up by companies – Titan, Bata Producer wants a close watch and control on the distribution of his products.
  • 20. 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 Structure of the network required Policy and procedure to be followed Define Key performance indicators State Critical success factors
  • 21. 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
  • 22. 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
  • 23. 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: Periodic Sales forecasts Dispatch 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
  • 24. Distribution Organization Primary aim: determine who will do what Major Decision points: 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.
  • 25. Policy and 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
  • 26. Key Performance Indicators 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
  • 27. Key Performance Indicators 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
  • 28. 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
  • 29. Marketing Channels Sales and Distribution Management
  • 30. Channel Functions Information gathering Consumer motivation Bargaining with suppliers Placing orders Financing Inventory management Risk bearing After sales support
  • 31. Distribution Channels Take care of the following ‘discrepancies’ Spatial Temporal Breaking bulk Assortment and Financial support
  • 32. Spatial Discrepancy The channel system helps reduce the ‘distance’ between the producer and the consumer of his products. Consumers are scattered Have to be reached cost effectively Example: companies produce products in one location even for global needs
  • 33. Temporal Discrepancy The channel system helps in speeding up in meeting the requirement of the consumers Time when the product is made and when it is consumed is different Limited number of production points but hundreds of consumers Maruti plant in Gurgaon – cars and spares are available when the consumer wants
  • 34. Breaking Bulk The channel system reduces large quantities into consumer acceptable lot sizes Production has to be in large quantities to benefit from economies of scale Consumption is necessarily in small lot sizes India is the ultimate example in breaking bulk – you can buy one cigarette, one Anacin, one toffee etc
  • 35. Need for Assortment The channel system helps aggregate a range of products for the benefit of the consumer – it could be made by one company or several of them. For the same product, it could be a variety of brands and pack sizes MICO makes fuel injection equipment, spark plugs etc in different plants but its dealer will sell the entire range.
  • 36. Financial Support The channel system provides critical working capital to its customers by extending credit. Some channel members like stockists and wholesalers finance the business of their customers. Medical diagnostic equipment to hospitals
  • 37. Channel Flows Forward flow – company to its customers – goods and services Backward flow – customers to the company – payment for the goods. Returned goods. Flows both ways - information
  • 38. Three Flows Recognized FORWARD Goods and Services Customers Company BACKWARD Payment for goods / returns BOTH WAYS Information
  • 39. The Five Channel Flows 1. Physical flow of goods 2. Title flow of goods (negotiation, ownership and risk sharing also) 3. Payment flows (financing and payment) 4. Information flow (about goods, orders placed and orders executed) 5. Promotion flows
  • 40. Channel Flows Some channel member/s have to perform them There is a cost associated with each flow If a channel member is discontinued, the flow has to be performed by another All flows and transactions can be effective only with timely, accurate and correct information The channel flow is ideally to be handled by the most competent channel member who can deliver best service at the lowest cost.
  • 41. Direct Distribution Company to consumers or retailers without use of intermediaries. Also includes reaching Institutional buyers. Selling on the Internet If products are technically complex, this system is preferred Cost is a major consideration to adopt this mode
  • 42. Direct Distribution - Examples Banking services Credit cards Petrol / diesel – company own outlets Land line phone connections Health services Utilities – electricity, water Subsidized ration Education
  • 43. Indirect Distribution Goods may move through a set of intermediaries Most FMCG companies follow this route The intermediary has a far better reach than the company The cost of operations of an intermediary like a wholesaler / retailer is shared with many businesses.
  • 44. Role of Intermediaries Company 1 Company 2 Company 3 Intermediary Large number of CONSUMERS
  • 45. Indirect Distribution - Examples All FMCG, consumer durables and pharmaceutical Petrol / diesel / cooking gas - franchisees Insurance Mobile phones All kinds of passenger transport
  • 46. Degree of Involvement Manufacturer C&FA or Distributor, Wholesaler or Distribution Center dealers retailer • Physical • Physical • Physical • Physical • Title / • Title • Title / ownership • Title / ownership ownership • Information • Information • Information • Information • Payment • Payment • Payment • Risk sharing • Order processing • Order placement • Order • Promotions • Negotiation placement • Risk sharing • Negotiation • Promotions • Risk sharing • Promotions
  • 47. Channel Formats Is decided by who ‘drives’ the channel system: Producer driven Seller driven Service driven Others
  • 48. Producer Driven This is the effort of the manufacturer to reach the product to his consumers. Examples: Company owned retail outlets – petrol, Bata, Reliance mobiles Licensed outlets – KMF Consignment selling agents Franchisees Brokers Vending machines Company contracted distributors
  • 49. Seller Driven Use of existing channels to reach the largest number of end users Existing wholesalers and retailers Modern retail formats Specialty stores – Shoppers’ Stop Discount stores – Subhiksha Pheriwalas
  • 50. Service Driven These are the people who facilitate the distribution Transporters and freight forwarders Providers of warehouse space C&F agents 3P Logistics service providers Couriers
  • 51. Other formats Multi-level marketing systems – Amway, Modicare, Tupperware, Herbalife Co-operative societies Telephone kiosks TV home shopping Catalogue marketing The internet Exhibitions, fairs and trade shows Database marketing
  • 52. Channel Levels Zero level – if the product or service is provided to the end user directly by the company. Used mostly by companies delivering service like health, education, banking (also known as service channels) One level – consists of one intermediary Two level – consists of two intermediaries and is the most common for FMCG products
  • 53. Channel Levels Producer Producer Producer Wholesaler Retailer Retailer Customer / Customer/ Customer/ consumer Consumer Consumer Zero level One level Two level
  • 54. Marketing Channel Systems Vertical: Corporate Administered Contractual Horizontal Multi-channel
  • 55. Vertical Marketing System Various parties like producers, wholesalers and retailers act as a unified system to avoid conflicts Improves operating efficiency and marketing effectiveness 3 types: Corporate Administered Contractual
  • 56. Corporate VMS Combines successive stages of production and distribution under single ownership Examples: Bata, Bombay Dyeing, Raymond Sears, Goodyear Suppliers of food items could be also their own supplying firms - like Nilgiris
  • 57. Administered VMS Co-ordinates distribution activities Gains market power by dominating a channel Usually true of dominant brands like GE, Kodak, Pepsi, Gillette, Coke and HLL in certain locations Command high level of co-operation in shelf space, displays, pricing policies and promotion strategies
  • 58. Contractual VMS Independent producers, wholesalers and retailers operate on a contract Could take the forms of: Wholesaler sponsored voluntary chains Retailer co-operatives Manufacturer sponsored retail or wholesale franchise Franchise organizations Service firm sponsored retail franchise
  • 59. Horizontal MS Two or more unrelated companies join together to pool resources and exploit an emerging market opportunity In-store banking in hotels, big stores Retail outlets in petrol bunks Coffee Day outlets in airports
  • 60. Multi-channel Distribution Company uses different channels to reach / same or different market segments Most FMCG companies have separate networks for retail market and institutions Pharmacy companies may use different channels to reach doctors, chemists and hospitals
  • 61. Multi-channel Distribution Used in situations where: Same product but different market segments Unrelated products in same market – detergents and ice creams (HLL) Size of buyers varies Geographic concentration of potential consumers varies Reach is difficult
  • 62. Expectations from Channel Variety and assortment at one location Bulk Breaking Close to customer location Speed of Delivery Additional services Support Installation After-sales Financial
  • 64. Need for Wholesalers Widespread economy – consumers can only reached by thousands of retailers (except for consumer durables and industrial products) Reaching these retailers by a company directly is not possible (except for consumer durables and industrial products) Hence the need for wholesalers in two forms: Well established free-lance wholesalers Contracted distributors, stockists and agents
  • 65. Characteristics of Wholesalers Operate on large volumes but with chosen group of products Food, grocery, pharma or automobile spares etc The company itself, contracted parties or free lancers, can operate as wholesalers Mostly B2B business – trade and institutions Wholesaler could also be a retailer – in rural markets – W/s sells to other retailers and also to consumers
  • 66. Characteristics of Wholesalers Sell physical inputs or products – tangible goods ( Ws in some service industries) Optimise results, maximise service (effectiveness) and minimise operating costs (efficiency) Buy goods for resale, keep inventory, take risks of price changes, negotiate terms, procure orders, deliver and extend credit.
  • 67. Definition Wholesaling is concerned with the activities of those persons or establishments that sell to retailers and other merchants and / or industrial, institutional and commercial users but do not sell in large amounts to consumers US Bureau of Census
  • 68. Delivering Value Keep goods accessible to customers instantly At times, get together to bargain for better terms Pass on benefits or incentives to their customers Have a wide trading area
  • 69. Difference with Retailers Not too worried about location, ambience or promotions – prefer to be in the main market Deal with other businessmen and not consumers Deal with a specific group of products only Much larger trading area Much larger transactions with suppliers and customers Believe in low margins but high volumes.
  • 70. Functions of Wholesalers Varies in degree between free-lance, company distributors and stockists / agents Sales and promotion of chosen company products Buying the assortment of goods Breaking bulk to suit customer requirements Storage and protection of goods till sold
  • 71. Functions of Wholesalers Grading and packing of commodities Transportation of goods to customers Financing the buying of customers Bearing the risks associated with the business Collecting and disseminating market information to both suppliers and customers
  • 72. Types of Wholesalers Full service: stocking, selling, offering credit, delivery and business assistance (company distributors, wholesale merchants) Limited service: range of service is limited (examples include Metro C&C, mail order) Merchant w/s: independent businesses Brokers and agents: bring buyer and seller together – do not take possession of goods Others: agri business, auction companies etc
  • 73. Limitations of Wholesalers Some of them do not give complete information to suppliers for selfish reasons Cannot be relied on to do equitable distribution At times, do not want company and customers to meet Tend to hoard goods and influence pricing Consumers have no say in pricing or quality in a w/s dominated system
  • 74. Major Wholesaling Decisions Which markets to operate in Manpower to employ What products to sell Pricing decisions / Promotional support Credit and collections Image and customer perception Warehouse location and design Inventory Control
  • 75. Favourable Factors Companies have limitations in market / outlet coverage. Wholesalers are required to fill the gaps Hundreds of small companies who cannot afford to set up distribution networks – need to depend on wholesalers In food grains, fruits and vegetables – hardly any organised distribution network. Wholesalers help move goods from farm gate to consumers
  • 76. Favorable Factors Big companies also need wholesalers to get big volumes W/s extend credit to customers. Companies cannot match this Retailers have to visit w/s markets to buy food grains, cereals and pulses – buy a lot more.
  • 77. Unfavorable Factors Companies coverage focus on retailers and institutions through their distributors Using modern retail formats as wholesalers More outlets like Metro C&C being encouraged Enforcing strict price control so that w/s do not sell below company prices.
  • 78. Distributor Is a wholesaler nominated by a company to exclusively re-distribute the company products to its customers in a designated territory. He does not deal in competitor’s products. Does not sell from his premises. Extends credit selectively. A redistribution stockist for HLL A distributor for Philips lighting division A distributor for L&T engineering division
  • 79. Dealer Role similar to a distributor but May not have a clearly defined territory and may sell both in the market and from his shop May deal with competitive products also Extends credit selectively. Dealers in industrial products may have better defined roles. Examples: Dealer for an edible oil company A dealer for garment brands
  • 80. Stockist May be working for a company with a designated territory but does not re-distribute the stocks. Sells from his premises. Extends credit selectively. A stockist for paper products A stockist for automobile spares Re-distribution is visiting customer premises to sell products
  • 81. Managing Distributors The principles are similar across industry verticals. FMCG is the most complex. Has the capacity to maximize sales and market shares. Has to ensure buying goods from the company and re- distribution to the trade
  • 82. Managing Distributors Distributor responsibilities include: Buying adequate quantities by Stock Keeping Unit (SKU) for redistribution Ensuring full market coverage of all customers in the territory assigned to him Help finance the operations – pays for the goods upfront but extends credit to his customers Maintaining inventory of company products adequate at all times to service the market Assist company in its promotional efforts
  • 83. Need for Distributors Under three circumstances: For entering a new town For additional coverage in the same town For replacing an existing distributor For entering a new town, assess the potential for business to decide: If the town can sustain a full fledged distributor The number of distributors required Starts with a town profile of potential, number of customers to be serviced and the competition.
  • 84. Cost of Servicing Cost benefit of using distributors to be assessed Logistics cost of serving the market The number of customers to be covered by category – wholesalers, retailers, institutions Frequency of visits to markets and outlets Sales revenue estimate from each visit Markets to be covered with ready stocks or order booking for later delivery Likely collections during each visit – gives an idea of the credit requirements
  • 85. Expectations from a Distributor To be stated at the start of the relationship Helps get the right kind of distributor also Achieving sales targets – volume, value and packs Financial commitment on inventory and credit Investment in infrastructure – space, vehicles Manpower – front line and back office Distribution effort – market and outlet coverage as per a beat plan with productive calls Developing new markets and new accounts Managing key accounts and institutional business
  • 86. Expectations from a Distributor Merchandising and displays in the market Secondary sales efforts and tracking – critical for fmcg and pharma (secondary sales is sales from the distributor to the outlets in the market) Effectively handling promotions and schemes initiated by the company Managing damaged stocks
  • 87. Expectations from a Distributor Organising and participation in promotional events Assist company in making a success of launching new products and packs Handling consumer quality complaints Handling statutory requirements on behalf of the company Payments and remittances promptly to the company
  • 89. What is Retailing? Any business entity selling to consumers directly is retailing – in a shop, in person, by mail, on the internet, telephone or a vending machine Retail also has a life cycle – newer forms of retail come to replace the older ones – the corner grocer may change to a supermarket Includes all activities involved in selling or renting products or services to consumers for their home or personal consumption
  • 90. Retailing Term retail derived from French word ‘retaillier’ meaning ‘to break bulk’ Characteristics: Order sizes tend to be small but many Caters to a wide variety of customers. Keeps a large assortment of goods Lot of buying in the outlet is ‘impulse’- inventory management is critical Selling personnel and displays are important elements of the selling process Strengths in ‘availability’ and ‘visibility’ Targeted customer mix decides the marketing mix of the retailer
  • 91. Retailing Retail stores are independent of the producers – not attached to any of them A survey shows that only 35% of purchases are pre- planned. The rest are ‘impulse’- greatly influenced by quality of the merchandising efforts
  • 92. Functions of Retailers Marketing functions to provide consumers a wide variety Helps create time, place and possession utilities May add form utility (alteration of a trouser bought by a customer) Helps create an ‘image’ for the products he sells
  • 93. Functions of Retailers Add value through: Additional services – extended store timings, credit, home delivery Personnel to identify and solve customer problems Location in a bazaar to facilitate comparison shopping
  • 94. How do Customers Decide on a Retailer? Price Location Product selection Fairness in dealings Friendly sales people Specialized services provided
  • 95. Kinds of Retailers Type of Characteristics retailer Specialty store Narrow product line with deep assortment – apparel, furniture, books Department Several product line in different departments – Shoppers store Stop, Big Bazaar Supermarket Large, low-cost, low-margin, high volume, self-service operation with a wide offering Convenience Small stores in residential areas, open long hours all days of store the week – limited variety of fast moving products like groceries, food Discount store Standard merchandise sold at lower prices for low margins - Subhiksha
  • 96. Kinds of Retailers Type of Characteristics retailer Corporate More outlets owned and controlled by one firm – Globus chains Voluntary chain Wholesaler sponsored group of independent retailers Retailer co-ops Independent retailers with centralized buying operations and common promotions Consumer co- Co-op societies of groups of consumers operating their own ops stores – farmers, industrial workers etc Franchise Contractual arrangement between the producer and organisation retailers – selling products exclusively – Kemp Toys
  • 97. Retailers’ Strengths Choice of merchandise is their prerogative – put pressure on producer suppliers Many new products on offer. Can charge penalty if products do not do well New developments in IT help them run operations optimally and keep track of loyal customers. Also helps them identify profitable store locations.
  • 98. Trade / Retail Format Range of goods and customer service dimensions determine the ‘format’. Elements distinguish between stores and include: Store ambience. (Kemp Fort) Saving in time for shopping – interiors of practical design – reduce time for search and pick-up of goods Location Physical characteristics – external appearance, arrangement of goods All these are parts of the positioning strategy and influence the ‘footfalls’ to the store.
  • 99. Categories of Shoppers (1) Identified by Cook & Walters Task focused shopper – visits the store to buy specific things he has planned for Convenience, minimum time, easily accessible goods, pleasing store format Grocery shopping is an example Leisure shopper – more interested in the ambience and environment Has plenty of time, wants to have a good time while shopping Lifestyle stores are examples
  • 100. Category of Shoppers (2) Convenience goods (low value): probable gain from shopping and making comparisons is small compared to the time, effort and mental discomfort required in the search -toothpaste Shopping goods (high value): gain is large - refrigerator Specialty goods: clearly distinguished by brand preferences – Maruti Zen car or Tag-Heuer watch
  • 101. Trading Area Catchment area from where most of the customers of a retail store come Corner grocery store caters to the locality in which it is situated Discount stores have a wider area. Subhiksha locations for consumers in 2 km radius Specialty stores have a much wider trading area – MTR, Shoppers’ Stop etc Trading area increases with the size of the store and the variety it offers
  • 102. Retail Strategy Positioning of the retailer Merchandising Customer service Customer communication
  • 103. Positioning Strategy Wide range with a high value add – Lifestyle brand of stores Limited range but a high value add – Tanishque jewelry store Limited range with a limited value add – Bata stores Wide range of goods but a limited value add – a Food World outlet
  • 104. Merchandising A set of activities involved in acquiring goods and services and making them available at the places, times and prices and the quantity that enable a retailer to reach his goals The most critical function in retail Directly effects the revenue and profitability of the store Also takes into account the assortment of goods and their quality
  • 105. Customer Service Strategy Developed to create ‘stickiness’ in customers Personal data collected using IT – including purchasing practices and preferences Customer loyalty programs planned Create ‘customer’ delight Location strategy to give competitive advantage Understanding the buying profile of the customers
  • 106. Customer Communication The manner in which the retailer makes himself known to his customers. Has two parts to it: The messages which the retailer sends to his customers and prospects The word of mouth support which satisfied customers give to the retailer by talking to others Retailer communicates about: Announcing the opening of a store Promotions running in the store Additional facilities introduced by the stores
  • 107. Pricing Strategy Premium and indicating high value Reasonable pricing with good value Low pricing but high value for money All strategies are focused on giving value to the customer
  • 108. Product Differentiation Feature exclusive national brands not available in competing retailers – unlikely Exclusivity of products – specialty stores Mostly private labels – Westside Feature, big, specially planned merchandising events – Kemp Fashion sows Introduce new products before competition - -again unlikely
  • 109. Retail Performance Measures Gross margin return on inventory investment – GMROI Gross margin multiplied by ratio of sales to inventory (50%*4= 200%) Gross margin per full time equivalent employee Gross margin per square foot
  • 110. Franchising Franchisor is the firm which wants to sell its goods or services Franchisee is the firm or group that are willing to sell the products or services on behalf of the franchisor The first party gives advice and help to the second to find good locations, blue prints for a store, financial, marketing and management assistance
  • 111. Benefits to Franchisor Faster expansion Local franchisee pays lower advertising rates than a national firm Owners motivated to work more hours than mere employees Local taxes and licenses are responsibility of franchisees
  • 112. Benefits to Franchisee Quick recognition among potential customers Management training provided by principal Principal may buy ingredients and supplies and sell to franchisee at lower prices Financial assistance Promotional aids, in-store displays etc
  • 113. Retailing on the Internet Unlimited assortment Items may not be on hold – someone has to deliver the product – delays No product touch or feel More info makes the customer a better shopper Comparison shopping possible Consumer has to plan purchases ahead No need to handle cash – payment can be on-line Shopping is 24X7
  • 114. E-tailing Issues Logistics support to selling Payment gateway Customer product returns Conflicts with Brick &Mortar – overcome by selling separate products
  • 115. Designing Distribution Channels Sales and Distribution Management
  • 116. Channel Design Factors Product mix and nature of the product Width and depth of market / outlet coverage planned Long term commitments to channel partners Level of customer service planned Cost affordable on the channel system Channel control requirements of the company
  • 117. Channel Design Steps Define customer needs Clarify channel objectives Look at alternative systems which can meet these objectives Estimate cost of operating the channel system Evaluate available alternatives Finalise the ‘ideal’ system
  • 118. Customer Needs Lot size – most convenient pack size which the consumer can buy at a time Waiting time – time elapsed between the desire to buy the product and the time when he can actually buy it – should be almost zero Variety – choice of products, brands, packs Place utility – choice of buying where he wants. For a consumer product it has to be at a location closest to his residence
  • 119. Channel Design Components Revenue generation or the commercial part Physical delivery of the goods or services – the logistics part The ‘service’ part to take care of after-sales support Each part of the system is likely to be handled by a different entity.
  • 120. Channel Design Issues Activities required and who will perform Activities relationship to service levels Number of channel members required and the relationship between categories Roles, responsibilities, remuneration and appraisal of performance of channel members
  • 121. Channel Design Process Segmentation Positioning Focus Development
  • 122. Segmentation Putting customers in similar clusters based on their needs Doctors who prescribe medicines Chemists who dispense medicines Hospitals and nursing homes who use them Each segment has a different need to be serviced by the channel Gives an idea to the sales manager as to the kind of channel members he should be planning for.
  • 123. Positioning Defines the channel element required to service each of the segments The sales manager decides the channel partner who is ‘ideal’ to meet the expectations of the segments. The number of each category of intermediary is also decided based on the number of customers to be serviced in each segment. The service objectives and flows for each channel partner are also frozen
  • 124. Focus It may not be possible to meet the needs of all segments – cost and practicality considerations (the managerial talent available for instance) The sales manager has to firmly decide which of the segments he will service The competitive scenario also helps in this decision
  • 125. Development At this stage the channel system is being put in place to achieve the objectives Select the best of the alternatives Comparison with the most successful competitor could be a good benchmark Channel partners of competitors may be willing to share best practices of their principals For modifying an existing channel, the gap between the ideal and the existing is to be identified for remedial action.
  • 126. Channel Objectives Defines what the channel system is supposed to do to support customer service. Customer needs could include: Lot size convenience Minimum waiting time Variety and assortment Place utility The product characteristics and the market profile also impact the objectives. Competition could also affect the objectives
  • 127. Channel Alternatives Are planned after deciding the customer segments to be serviced and the levels of service Business intermediaries currently available like C&FAs, distributors, dealers, agents wholesalers and retailers. The number and type of intermediaries required Developing new channel types Roles of each channel member
  • 128. Evaluation of Major Alternatives Cost of operations Ability to manage and control Adaptability Range and volume to be handled
  • 129. Evaluation Critieria Cost: If existing sales force can be expanded cost effectively, this is the best alternative Cost of alternatives at different volumes can only be estimated for comparison System with the lowest cost is preferred Adaptability – the channel should be flexible to handle different types of markets and changes in the market conditions Volume and range to be handled – Capable even when business grows or expands
  • 130. Evaluation Criteria Ability to manage and control: Distribution network being an extended arm of the company, the channel partners have some obligations Operating guidelines specify these rules The channel system should help the company enforce these rules fairly to all channel partners Some of the operating rules are…… Company trains channel personnel and provides proper product literature
  • 131. Selecting Channel Partners Getting good channel partners is a difficult part of doing business Some of the methods employed to select channel partners are: Sales people identify prospects and talk to them Press advertising (industrial goods) Existing channel partners can give good references Competitors’ channel members for reference, not poaching
  • 132. Selection Criteria Qualitative: willingness, confidence in company products, willingness to abide by company rules, building company image, innovativeness etc Quantitative: financial status, infrastructure, location, present businesses, customer relationships, market standing etc
  • 133. Training Channel Members Starts from the time of recruitment Channel member owner and his staff Market views channel member as part of the company – he has to behave in a like manner – hence training assumes significance Training could be on the job field training or classroom training Training is an ongoing process.
  • 134. Subjects for Training Field training on how the markets are to be worked to achieve sales, collect payments and ensure the right kind of merchandising Class room training on company products, competition and how to tackle it to gain market shares Special meetings for new product launches Submitting reports and maintaining records Statutory compliance
  • 135. Subjects for Training Care of company products Technical specifications and answering FAQs of customers For technical and industrial products – recognition of specs, installation procedure, repair and maintenance and effective demonstrations Servicing of automobiles and other engineering products
  • 136. Motivating Channel Members Ambitious volume and growth targets – continuous motivation required to achieve Motivation includes: Capacity building programs Training Promotions support Marketing research support Working with company personnel Incentives
  • 137. “Power” of Motivation Reward – positive support Coercion- threat of punitive action Referent – positive effects of association Legitimate – enforcing a contract Expert – support of special knowledge Support – additional benefits for performers Competition – pitting against peers French & Raven
  • 138. Channel Members Evaluation Effectiveness of the distribution channel determines the success of the company Company would like its channel partners to perform at the highest standards possible Need to constantly evaluate performance on sales targets, coverage, productivity, inventory holdings, attending to servicing requests etc
  • 139. ROI as a Measure Leading FMCG companies feel that an ROI of 30% for a distributor is healthy and is a fair indication that he is performing well. If the ROI is more, additional tasks are given If the ROI is less, the company may provide additional support Post evaluation tasks include counseling, retraining and motivating. In extreme cases it may result in termination.
  • 140. Performance Evaluation On pre-agreed tasks only. No surprises. Specific targets on periodical basis are set. Targets on volume and outlet productivity could be for a week or a month Targets relating to increasing market shares or total outlet coverage could be for 6 months Different weightages could be given for each of the parameters for evaluation The performance appraisal is open and transparent
  • 141. Steps for Modifying Networks Service level desired and willing to deliver Activities required to deliver service level, who will do it and at what cost Derive ideal channel structure and compare with existing to know gaps by evaluating based on standard parameters relating to effectiveness and efficiency Action to bridge the gaps and put modified channel system into place Define key performance indicators
  • 142. Channel Comparison Factors Efficiency Effectiveness Scalability Flexibility Consistency Reliability Integrity
  • 143. Non-store Retailing Selling door-to-door Vending machines Tele-shopping networks Selling through catalogs Other forms of direct selling Electronic channels
  • 144. Retailing on the Internet Unlimited assortment Items may not be on hold No product touch or feel More information makes the customer a better shopper Comparison shopping possible Consumer has to plan purchases ahead No need to handle cash – payment can be on-line Shopping is 24X7
  • 145. Vertical Integration This means owning the channel. The company does the work of production, branding and distribution. Downstream integration means the producer of the goods also does the distribution – Eureka Forbes, Bata
  • 146. Vertical Integration Upstream integration means the seller also produces the goods – private labels of modern retailers. If the organization does the work of production, branding and distribution, it is said to be vertically integrated. Vertical Integration provides better control over the distribution function
  • 147. Outsourcing Distribution Is the most prevalent situation as: The ‘reach’ is better The cost may be lower The company can exploit the ‘core competence’ of its channel partners, which is distribution Vertical integration is a choice which will become long term and cannot be easily changed once the resources have been committed. However, direct distribution (owning the channel) is still the best solution for ‘intensive’ distribution.
  • 148. Channel (Conflict) Management Sales and Distribution Management
  • 149. Channel Management Channel system has a set of players: Not equally motivated to implement the ideal channel design Whose expectations from the system differ Is in three broad phases: Use of power bases Identifying and resolving channel conflicts Channel co-ordination
  • 150. Use of Channel Power Channel members are dependent on each other. The power equations between them keep them working together. There are basically 5 types of power bases – reward, coercion, expert, reference and legitimacy. 2 more can be considered in Indian context as support and competition. Extent of dependence defines the power base which is appropriate.
  • 151. “Power” (Bases) of Motivation Reward – incentives for good performance Coercion – threat of punishment for non-performance Referent – benefit of sheer association with a strong company Legitimate – arising out of a contract Expert – specialized knowledge Support – additional benefits for better performers only Competition – created between channel partners
  • 152. Countervailing Power Balances the power exerted by one channel member. It is not a one-sided equation. Both the channel member and the principal can have influence on each other. Results from interdependence within the channel system. Company exerts power on the distributor to get its coverage and revenues Distributor has enough influence on his customers and this is critical for the company also Weaker partners do get exploited – ancillary units
  • 153. Channel Coordination Channel system is well coordinated if each member understands his role correctly and performs it to help the system achieve its customer service objectives. In a coordinated channel: Interests of all channel members are protected Actions of all are in line with overall objectives Flows are streamlined to desired customer service objectives Channel co-ordination is an on-going effort
  • 154. Channel Conflict Situation of discord or disagreement between partners in the same channel system – has negative connotations and is driven more by feelings than facts Conflict is part of any social system – getting disparate entities to work together as in a channel system is also one such social unit If any member feels that another is working in a manner as to affect him, conflict results
  • 155. Channel Conflict CHANNEL CONFLICT GOAL DOMAIN PERCEPTION Goal conflict – rising out of mismatch in understanding of objectives by various channel members Domain conflict – resulting due to mismatch of understanding of responsibilities and authority Perception conflict – due to mismatch in reading of the market place and thus proposed actions
  • 156. Conflicts Result From… Each channel member wanting to pursue his own goals Each wants to retain his independence There are limited resources which all of them want to utilize in achieving their goals Features of conflicts: Initially latent and does not affect the working Is not normally possible to detect till it becomes disruptive
  • 157. Each stage is progressively more severe than the earlier one Four Stages of Conflict PERCEIVED MANIFEST LATENT FELT
  • 158. Types of Conflicts Latent Conflict: Some amount of discord exists but does not affect the working or delivery of customer service objectives. Disagreement could be on roles, expectations, perceptions, communication. Perceived Conflict: Discords become noticeable – channel partners are aware of the opposition. Channel members take the situation in their stride and go about their normal business No cause for worry but the opposition has to be recognized
  • 159. Types of Conflicts Felt Conflict: Reaching the stage of worry, concern and alarm. Also known as ‘affective’ conflict. Parties are trying to outsmart each other. Causes could be economical or personal Needs to be managed effectively and not allowed to escalate. Manifest Conflict: Reflects open antagonistic behavior of channel partners. Confrontation results. Initiatives taken are openly opposed affecting the performance of the channel system. May require outside intervention to resolve
  • 160. Root Causes for Channel Conflict Roles not defined properly Allocation of scarce resources between members seem unfair to some Differences in perception of the business environment Future expectations not likely to materialize Decision domain disagreements – who has to decide on what (key account pricing) Channel members do not agree on objectives Misunderstanding or misinterpretation of routine business communication
  • 161. Resolving Conflicts Understanding nature and intensity Tracing the source of the conflict Understand the impact of the conflict Strategy and plan of action for resolution
  • 162. Conflict Resolution Styles Avoidance Styles are a combination of assertiveness and co-operation. Aggression Accommodation Compromise Collaboration Least effort and results Maximum effort and Best results Kenneth W Thomas
  • 163. Avoidance Used by weak channel members. Problem is postponed or discussion avoided. Relationships are not of much importance. As there is no serious effort on getting anything done, conflict is avoided.
  • 164. Aggression Also known as a competitive or selfish style. It means being concerned about one’s own goals without any thought for the others. The dominating channel partner (may be the principal) dictates terms to the others. Long term could be detrimental to the system.
  • 165. Accommodation A situation of complete surrender. One party helps the other achieve its goals without being worried about its own goals. Emphasis is on full co-operation and flexibility in approach. May generate matching feelings in the receiver. If not handled properly, can result in exploitation
  • 166. Compromise Obviously both sides have to give up something to meet mid way. Can only work with small and not so serious conflicts. Used often in the earlier two stages.
  • 167. Collaboration Also known as a problem solving approach Tries to maximize the benefit to both parties while solving the dispute. Most ideal style of conflict resolution – a win-win approach Requires a lot of time and effort to succeed. Sensitive information may have to be shared
  • 168. Channel Policies Defines how the channel is required to operate. Normally framed by the channel principal to guide the operations of the channel system If not framed properly could prove the starting point of channel conflicts. Some subjects of channel policies could be as seen in the next slide:
  • 169. Channel Policies Markets to be covered Customer coverage Pricing Product portfolio to be handled Selection, termination of channel members Ownership of the channel
  • 170. The Services Sector Twice the size of the manufacturing sector Services offered are to be in line with customer demand Services have to be presented in an appealing manner to sustain customers. Needs specialized channels which understand the characteristics of service delivery
  • 171. 5 Characteristics of Services They are intangible – can only be felt. No visual features like size, style. They are inseparable from their service providers – a 3P cannot deliver They cannot be standardized – custom made and delivered Customers are involved to a great degree – define the services They are perishable – cannot be stored for delivery later. Salvage value of an unsold service is zero.
  • 172. Channels Used Shorter channels than for products Some channels used are: Direct from service provider to user Agents or brokers to bring buyer and seller together Franchisees or contractors Electronic channels High degree of customization is provided
  • 173. Channel Information Systems Sales and Distribution Management
  • 174. CIS Purpose CIS is Channel Information Systems CIS is the orderly flow of pertinent operational data both internally and between channel members, for use as a basis of decision making in specified responsibility areas of channel management CIS is of primary use of sales managers.
  • 175. Information - Advantages Useful in marketing planning – helps improve quality of marketing decisions Can help tap market opportunities Provides an alert against competition Helps spot trends – favourable or otherwise Helps develop action plans for growth Gives feedback on consumer needs
  • 176. Classification of Information Based on the use made of it by marketing – planning, operations, decision making or control Based on subjects – consumers, products, competition, channels, promotions, pricing, sales volume, value etc Operations data – facts and figures Also based on assumptions, anticipated occurrences – forecasts relating to the channel system
  • 177. Information Process COLLECTION PROCESSING STORAGE USE
  • 178. Information Process Collection: acquiring and placing raw data – monthly sales by each territory Processing: analyzing data to get meaning out of it – arranging, modifying and interpreting the data by the user – comparison of sales between periods Storage: keeping the information intact till it is needed Use: application of information for management decision making – sales data of the last 6 months to forecast the sales of the next month.
  • 179. Developing a Channel MIS Decide what information is required Organize information in a manner suitable for interpretation and action Decide who will use the information when and for what purpose
  • 180. Use of Information Planning: sales forecasts or distributor indents Control: expenses against budget There is always a cost of collecting information. If data collected is not used properly, the data provider will hesitate to give the information. The channel MIS works at the sales operational level. It has very little strategic intent.
  • 181. Sources of Data Reports (oral and written) and records of channel members, sales people Letters, statements and market research Any other info collected by the sales people and the channel members from the market External sources like business publications, magazines, newspapers, trade journals. In a dedicated channel system the collection of info is well streamlined – in the JC meeting With use of IT enabled systems collection and processing has become simpler.
  • 182. A Good Channel MIS… Integrated system to handle all regular data Useful decision support system Reflects the style of the marketing organization User friendly and user oriented Convincing to the providers of the info as to its purpose Be cost effective Not need for verification from other sources Be fast and totally reliable
  • 183. Element Importance In a good channel MIS, it is necessary to define upfront for each element of the MIS, the following: Purpose of the info Source of the info Action possible Impact on customer service
  • 184. Competition Tracking Purpose Plan day to day corrective action to protect market shares and shelf space Source Trade, channel partners and sales people Action Spot action while in the market and taken by possible channel partners or sales people Impact on Timely action to provide better support to the service trade and retain their goodwill
  • 185. Market Logistics and SCM Sales and Distribution Management
  • 186. Materials Management Materials forms the largest single cost item in most manufacturing companies – needs to be carefully managed Materials management function includes planning and control, purchasing and stores and inventory control Materials management is the precursor to logistics and supply chain management
  • 187. Logistics Defined Logistics means having the right thing, at the right place, at the right time The procurement, maintenance, distribution and replacement of personnel and materials – Webster’s Dictionary The science of planning, organizing and managing activities that provide goods or services – Logistics World, 1997
  • 188. Logistics Functions: planning, procurement, transportation, supply and maintenance Processes: requirements determination, acquisition, distribution and conservation Business: science of planning, design and support of business operations of procurement, purchasing, inventory, warehousing, distribution, transportation, customer support, financial and human resources
  • 189. Scope of Logistics Choice of markets Procurement Plant location and layout Inventory management Location and management of warehouses Choices of carriers, mode of transport Packaging decisions Relevant to all enterprises: manufacturing, Government, Institutions, service organizations
  • 190. Components of Logistics Management Logistics Activities Customer service Demand forecasting Output Distribution Input Communications • Marketing Inventory control Orientation •Natural Materials handling (competitive Resources Order processing Advantage) •HR Parts and service support Plants and warehouse selection • Time and Place •Finance Procurement utility •Information Packaging • Efficient move Return goods handling to customer Salvage and scrap disposal Traffic and transportation Warehouse and storage
  • 191. Links and Flows General material flow/ service flow Information flow Information flow Customer’s Supplier’s Customer Lead Firm Supplier customer supplier General cash flow Outbound / Downstream logistics Inbound / Upstream logistics
  • 192. Logistics and Marketing Interface on: Product design and pricing Customer service policies Sales forecasts and order processing Inventory policies and location of warehouses Channels of distribution and dispatch planning Transportation to reach products to customers Production wants larger production runs to minimize time spent on set up changes on the machines. Marketing wants smaller runs of a variety of products.
  • 193. Value Chain (Michael Porter) Firm’s Infrastructure Activities Support Human Resources (Organization, people, methods) Systems and Technology Procurement Operations Marketing Outbound Inbound Logistics Logistics Service & Sales Primary Activities
  • 194. Logistics Plan Outline Internal analysis (current position) Organization Human resources Transportation Relations with internal customers Quality of product Quality of Service External / situation analysis Competitor logistics performance Trends External environment / economy Public, private and contract warehouse Public, private and contract carriage
  • 195. Principles of Logistics Excellence Strategic Operational Link logistics to corporate Focus on financial strategy performance Organize comprehensively Target optimum service levels Use the power of Manage the details information Leveraging logistics volumes Emphasize human resources Measure and react to Form strategic alliances performance Alling & Tyndall
  • 196. Logistics Focus Areas Customer service related Operations related Packaging Plant and warehouse site Order processing location Spare parts and service support Procurement After sales Customer service Inventory control support Materials handling Demand forecasting Salvage and scrap disposal Distribution communications Traffic and transportation Return goods handling Warehousing and storage Logistics may be confined to the company whereas SCM extends beyond
  • 197. Supply Chain Management Business context: Globalization of the market place Advances in technology Increasingly demanding, informed customer base Purchase decisions on dimensions of quality, price and time Innovative supply chain: To meet customer driven challenges To reduce costs Improve service levels Enhance speed to market
  • 198. Supply Chain Integration Optimizing the supply chain requires supplier and customer involvement to integrate processes, policies, systems, database and strategies between diverse trading partners
  • 199. Supply Chain Integration Customer Analysis Order Fulfillment Purchasing/Supplier Partnering Integrated Inventory Management Storage & Supply Chain and control Transportation Management Manufacturing/ Demand & Lead Time Re-manufacturing/ Management Assembly Materials Management
  • 200. Why Carry Inventory? Support production requirements Support operational requirements Maximize customer service – ensure availability when needed – protect against uncertainty Hedge against marketplace uncertainty Take advantage of order quantity discounts
  • 201. Functions of Inventory Inventory serves as a buffer between: Supply and demand Customer demand and finished goods Requirements for an operation and the output from the previous operation Parts and materials to begin an operation and the suppliers of the materials
  • 202. Factors Which Drive Inventory Target service level parameters Lot sizing practices Safety stock and safety time conventions Volume discounts and purchase arrangements Seasonal build up needs
  • 203. Categories of Inventory Anticipation – built in anticipation of future demand – peak season, strike, promotion Fluctuation (safety) – to cover random, unpredictable fluctuations in supply and demand and lead time – to prevent disruption in operations, deliveries etc Lot-size – to take advantage of quantity discounts, reduce shipping, set up and clerical costs – also called cycle stock
  • 204. Categories of Inventory Transportation – pipeline or movement inventories – to cover the time needed to move from one point to another – factory to distribution point for example Hedge – for materials where prices are volatile Maintenance, repair and operating supplies (MRO) – to support M and O – spare parts, lubricants, consumables etc
  • 205. Types of Inventory Obvious…. Raw materials Work-in-process Finished goods – of primary concern to marketing Maintenance, repair and operating (MRO) supplies In-transit, pipeline
  • 206. Performance Measures Inventory turns = Annual cost of goods sold /average inventory in value Days of sales = inventory on hand / average daily sales
  • 207. Types of Inventory Systems Pure Inventory – when and how much to order. RM procurement. Simple manufacturing operations Production Inventory – finite production rates. Demand fluctuation. Products compete for manufacturing capacity Production – distribution Inventory – compete for production capacity. Geographic placement of inventory for best service of demand
  • 208. Types of Classification ABC category – most common for all HML - high, medium, low - similar FSND – fast moving, slow moving, non-moving, dead – spare parts / FG SDE – scarce, difficult, easy to obtain – procurement / Spares GOLF – govt, ordinary, local, foreign source – procurement / Spares VED – vital, essential, desirable – spare parts / FG SOS – seasonal, off-seasonal - commodity
  • 209. ABC Inventory Analysis Based on Pareto’s law: A – 20% items worth 80% of value B – 30% items worth 15% of value C – about 50% items account for 5% of the usage Classify items based on the above criteria Apply degree of control in proportion to the importance of the group
  • 210. Inventory Related Costs Unit costs – basic value of the item carried Ordering costs – generating and sending a material release, transport, any other acquisition costs Carrying costs – capital, storage, obsolescence Stock-out costs Quality costs – non-conforming goods Other costs – duties, tooling, exchange rate differences etc
  • 211. Approaches for Controlling Inventory Continuous review: Safety stocks and forecasting methods Excess and obsolete inventory Part simplification and re-design On-site supplier managed inventory Use of supply chain inventory management systems, Materials Requirement Planning, Distribution Requirement Planning etc Automated inventory tracking systems Supplier – buyer cycle-time reduction
  • 212. Stores Management Objectives Providing efficient service to users Reduce cost of carrying goods Providing correct, updated stock figures Controlling inventory Preventing damage to or obsolescence of materials Achieve all of the above with good housekeeping
  • 213. Functions Warehouses Material handling Customer Service Information Transfer Storage Function Receive goods Identify goods Sort goods Temporary Permanent Dispatch to storage Hold inventory Recall, select goods Marshal the shipment Dispatch the shipment Prepare records and advices
  • 214. Purpose of Warehousing To provide desired level of customer service at the lowest possible total cost It is that part of the firm’s logistics system that stores products (RM, Packing Materials, WIP, FG) at and between point of origin and point of consumption and provides info to management on the status, condition and disposition of items being stored Distribution warehousing relates mainly to FG
  • 215. Reasons for Warehousing Service related Cost related Maintain source of supply Achieve production economies Support customer service policies Achieve transportation economies Meet changing market conditions Take advantage of Quantity Overcome time and space Purchase discounts and forward differentials buys Support JIT programs of suppliers Least Logistics cost for a desired and customers level of customer service Provide customers with the right mix of products at all times Temporary storage of materials to be disposed or re-cycled
  • 216. Warehouses Support manufacturing Mix products from multiple facilities for shipment to a single customer Break-bulk Aggregate Used more as a ‘flow-thru’ point than as a ‘hoarding’ point
  • 217. Distribution Warehousing The objective is to set up a network of warehouses closest to the customer locations to service markets better and minimise cost Could be C&FA s, depots or distribution centers Macro location strategies: Market positioned Production positioned Intermediately positioned
  • 218. Distribution Center Warehouse designed to speed the flow of goods and avoid unnecessary costs Speeds bulk-breaking to avoid inventory carrying costs Helps to centralise control and co-ordination of logistics activities Products can also be cross-docked (one vehicle to another)
  • 219. Market Positioned Warehouses located nearest to the final customer Factors influencing are: Order cycle time Transportation costs Sensitivity of the product Order size Levels of customer service offered
  • 220. Production Positioned Warehouses located close to the production facilities or supply sources Not the same level of customer service as the earlier one Serve as points of aggregation / collection for products made in a number of plants Factors influencing are: Perishability of raw materials Number of products in the product mix Assortments ordered by customers Transport consolidation rates ex; FTL
  • 221. Intermediate Positioned Mid point locations between the final customer and the producer High customer service levels possible even if products made in number of units Other macro approaches look at cost minimisation or cost and demand elements to maximise profitability
  • 222. Transportation Very important in the Logistics function: Movement across space or distance adds value to products Transportation provides time and place utility Role of transportation includes: Provides opportunity for growth under competitive conditions Deeper penetration into markets Wider distribution means greater demand Can influence product prices favourably
  • 223. Transportation Principles Continuous flow Optimise unit of cargo - stackability Maximum vehicle unit – capacity utilization Adaptation of vehicle unit to volume and nature of traffic Standardisation Compatibility of unit load equipment Minimum of dead weight to total weight Maximum utilization of capital, equipment and personnel
  • 224. The Selection Criteria Environmental analysis: shipper, carrier, government regulations, public influence Deciding objectives Selecting mode Select transport type within the mode Define functions of transport Evaluation and control – customer perception / satisfaction, best practice benchmarking
  • 225. Cost Factors Can be product related or market related. Product related: density, stowability, ease or difficulty of handling and liability Market related: competition, location of markets, Government regulations, traffic in and out of the market, seasonality of movements and impact on customer service Five prominent modes: Road, rail, air, water and pipeline. Sixth one is use of Ropeways
  • 226. Customer Service Factors Consistency, dependability Transit time Coverage – door-to-door for example Flexibility in handling a range of products Loss and damage performance Additional services provided
  • 227. Reverse Logistics Movement of goods from the market or customer back to the company The need: Increased awareness of the environment Stringent legislation For some it is part of the business Profitability of dealing with scrap, surplus Surplus, obsolescence can result due to: Over optimistic sales forecasts, change in product specs, errors in estimating material usage, losses in processing or overbuying based on incentives
  • 228. Advantages of Rail Economy – more so for goods over long distances Efficiency of energy Reliability – not affected by weather conditions
  • 229. Disadvantages Uneconomical for small shipments and short distances Not suitable for remote stations Costly terminal handling facilities Inflexible time schedules
  • 230. Road Freight Advantages Through movement – direct from consignor to consignee, no transshipment Flexibility – routes and loading routines can be easily altered, operate day and night Less capital costs – for own fleet + immunity from industrial action Fast turn-around – if articulated units like tractors and trailers are used Minimum delays
  • 231. Disadvantages Susceptibility to weather and road conditions – in spite of the best protection Unsuitability for heavy loads – rail transport more economical for bulk loads Unsuitability for long distances – again the rail telescopic rates are more favourable
  • 232. Air Transport Advantages Faster mode Reduction in cost particularly inventory Broad service range Increasing capabilities Disadvantages: High cost Weather affects flight conditions Limitations on heavy consignments
  • 233. Water Transport Advantages: Mass movement of bulk Lowest freight cost Preferred for long haul of low value commodities Disadvantages: Not for quick transit Suitable for certain types on commodities only
  • 234. Pipeline Movement Advantages: Reliable, continuous, all weather transport Low energy consumption – hence low cost Low maintenance and operating costs Underground, no space problem Can traverse difficult terrain Minimal transit losses Operation round the clock, safe Economies of scale – double the throughput for only 30% additional cost Disadvantage is in the investment cost
  • 235. Ropeways Advantages: In hilly or inaccessible areas Long and circuitous routes with streams / deep valleys For commodities capable of movement in ropeway buckets Short haulages of less than 50 kms Areas where other carriers are uneconomical Disadvantages: Heavy investments Limitations on size and quantity of haul
  • 236. Carrier Selection Traffic Related Shipper related Service related Length of haul Size of firm Speed (transit time) Consignment weight Investment priorities Reliability Dimensions Marketing strategy Cost Value Network of production Customer relationship Urgency and distribution Geographical coverage Regularity of shipment Availability of rail Accessibility Fragility sidings Availability of special Toxicity Stockholding policy vehicles / equipment Perishability Management structure Monitoring of goods Type of packing System of carrier Unitisation evaluation Ancillary services – bulk Special handling required breaking, storage
  • 237. Chart of Relative Merits Parameter Weightage Rail Road Air Water Pipe Rope line way Speed 30 5 6 8 4 3 3 Versatility 10 6 8 5 6 3 2 Reliability 20 6 8 5 5 7 4 Availability 10 7 8 5 6 3 2 Continuity of 10 6 7 5 5 8 3 service Distribution cost 20 4 5 6 6 7 8 Total score 10 5.4 6.7 5.1 5.1 5.1 4.0 Overall ranking 10 2 1 4 5 5 6
  • 238. International Sales & Distribution Sales and Distribution Management
  • 239. Why International? The WTO agreement has resulted in opening up of new areas for freer trade (Textiles, Services & Agricultural products) China, Russia, India & the East European countries have embraced free market policies resulting in huge opening up of underserved populations. Domestic competition has increased especially from imports. Outsourcing in manufacturing and services has increased due to cost pressures & improvement in infrastructure.
  • 240. Choosing the Market Factors to be borne in mind while choosing markets: Size of the market Language & Culture of the market Competition in the market Proximity of the market Political and Financial stability of the country Ease of doing business
  • 241. Culture and International Business Culture influences everything from taste & preferences to consumption patterns and attitude to foreigners. Culture influences communication modes Culture influences dress and behavior Culture influences usage of a product Language is very important in international business to communicate effectively.
  • 242. Legal Aspects of International Business Laws vary from country to country – there is no “international law” Important to know the local laws to do business – on investment, management, employment, marketing, pricing, royalties, profit repatriation, taxation etc Developed countries have stringent laws on safety, pollution, intellectual property rights etc. In times of disputes, which law will prevail – this needs to be spelt out in contracts
  • 243. Risks in International Business Two main risks in international business: Political risks – involve disruption of contracts or payments due to sudden political changes, expropriation of businesses etc Commercial & Financial risks – failure of the buyer to pay due to bankruptcy or sudden changes in the exchange availability or rate.
  • 244. Risks in International Business Risks can be insured with agencies like the export credit guarantee corporation(ECGC) for a premium based on the country’s risk. Letters of credit may be guaranteed by international banks located in major financial centers like London, New York, Singapore etc.
  • 245. Trade Between Countries Reasons for trade between countries include: Non availability of a product or resource Cost advantages in buying rather than making a product locally Differentiated products-Luxury products or better designed products in the same category may be available from different countries (cars, electronics, textiles and garments etc)
  • 246. International Trade-Company Perspective Companies may choose to sell internationally for the reasons given below: Limited growth in home market Overseas markets offer large profitable opportunities Excess capacity which cannot be absorbed locally Cost advantage over international competitors Mitigating risk of increased domestic competition
  • 247. Entry Strategy Exporting through local agent Exporting through foreign agent Exporting to foreign importer / distributor Setting up local office / representative Licensing / Franchising Setting up Joint ventures for distribution / manufacture Setting up wholly owned manufacturing facilities
  • 248. Organizing for International Sales Structure depends on volume of sales and nature of the product. In situations of low volumes, exporting through local or foreign agents is cost effective As volume grows and in complex products or large value deals, using own sales personnel is preferable. To be effective, it is preferable to have local personnel in the sales force
  • 249. Distribution Distribution is a vital aspect of marketing – ensuring availability of the product in the right quantity, at the right time and right place. More important in international markets due to distance and transportation time. Importers, manufacturers and retailers are increasingly asking for Just in Time deliveries. Distribution strategy varies from market to market depending on size and local conditions. Multiple channels may be used in countries.
  • 250. Distribution Options Depends on the volume of the business Positioning of the product Infrastructure of distribution in the country Local laws – some countries insist on local companies in the distribution business Internet as a channel of sales and distribution
  • 251. Role of Logistics Very important aspect of international selling Logistics can make up over 15% of the cost of the product Involves multiple modes of transport – land, sea and air Considerable paperwork and formalities to be completed in international trade Logistics providers now offer complete one stop solution including distribution, invoicing and collection of payment
  • 252. Profile of International Salespersons Pleasant and amiable personality Ability to adapt to foreign culture – especially food, drink etc Conversant in one or more foreign languages Ability to act independently and decisively Ability to understand complexities of financing, foreign exchange etc Some local sales persons in the force will be useful to overcome some barriers and leverage local networks for business development
  • 253. Pricing and Payment Terms Common pricing terms are: Ex Works – at the mfrs factory gate FOT, FOR – free on truck / rail –loaded on truck/rail FAS – free along side – at port next to ship FOB – free on board – loaded on ship C&F – cost and freight – inclusive of to destination CIF – cost, insurance and freight – inclusive to destination
  • 254. Pricing and Payment Terms Payment terms can include: Cash in advance Cash on delivery – cash against documents Consignment basis – payable after sale Usance – payment … days after acceptance of documents Letter of credit Long term credit financing – for machinery / projects Each method has risks for the buyer or seller. The LC offers safety and comfort for both
  • 255. Currency of Pricing The US Dollar is the most widely used currency for pricing international sales Importers in some countries may prefer invoicing in local currencies like Japanese Yen or Euro or Pound Sterling, Singapore Dollars or UAE Dirhams Saudi riyals etc. This reduces the risk of exchange rate fluctuations for the buyer Exchange fluctuation is a major risk for sellers and can be managed by hedging the currency.
  • 256. Packing and Shipping Packing is of two types: Industrial packing – bulk for protection during shipping & transport Consumer packing – to enhance sales appeal Packing could makeup up to 5% of product costs Countries have laws or practices in packing which must be understood and adhered to. Packing depends on the product and must be suitable for containerized shipping and mechanical handling.
  • 257. Market Intelligence Secondary data is very easy to gather from various publications, agencies like chambers of commerce, trade bodies, embassies, trade shows, internet, banks etc Usually secondary data is sufficient to establish the feasibility of the market. Care must be taken to understand the data and the measures used before drawing conclusions.