Bmgt 411 chapter_13

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BMGT 411: Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels

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bmgt_411_marketing_managment fall 2014 chris lovett

Transcript of Bmgt 411 chapter_13

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BMGT 411: Chapter 13

Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels

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Chapter Questions

• What is a marketing channel system and value network?

• What work do marketing channels perform?

• What decisions do companies face in designing, managing, and integrating their channels?

• What key issues do marketers face with e-commerce and m-commerce?

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What is a Marketing Channel?

• A marketing channel system is the particular set of interdependent organizations involved in the process of making a product or service available for use or consumption.

• The set of pathways a product or service follows after production, culminating in purchase and consumption of the final end user

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Path to Supermarket

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CAbFLBM6uHM

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Channels and Marketing Decisions

• A push strategy uses the manufacturer’s sales force, trade promotion money, and other means to induce intermediaries to carry, promote, and sell the product to end users

• A pull strategy uses advertising, promotion, and other forms of communication to persuade consumers to demand the product from intermediaries

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Push Strategy Example: Paying for Shelf Space

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pDxSX-BAs0U

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Pull Strategy Example: Advertising and Branding

Apple iPhone and Carriers

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Multi-Channel Marketing

• When a single firm uses two or more marketing channels to reach customer segments

• Ability to order a product online and pick it up at a convenient retail location

• Ability to return an online-ordered product to a nearby store

• Right to receive discounts based on total online and offline purchases

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Table 13.1 Channel Member Functions

• Gather information

• Develop and disseminate persuasive communications

• Reach agreements on price and terms

• Acquire funds to finance inventories

• Assume risks

• Provide for storage

• Provide for buyers’ payment of their bills

• Oversee actual transfer of ownership

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Figure 13.1 Marketing Flows

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Figure 13.2 Consumer Markets

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Figure 13.2 Consumer Markets

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Figure 13.2 Consumer Markets

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Figure 13.2 Consumer Markets

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Figure 13.2 Consumer Markets

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Figure 13.2 Industrial Markets

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Reverse-Flow Channels

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Designing a Marketing Channel System

• Analyze customer needs: based on price, product assortment, and convenience, as well as shopping goals

• Establish channel objectives: Maximizing the desired level of output while also reducing costs

• Identify major channel alternatives: The types of intermediaries, the number needed, and terms and responsibilities of each

• Evaluate major channel alternatives: Comparing the costs of each channel and customer expectations to decide on the best one

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Identifying Channel Alternatives

! Types of intermediaries: ! Merchants or Retailers: Buy take title of goods and resell

! Example: Mass Market Stores, Grocery Stores, etc ! Agents, Brokers, Sales Agents: Negotiating on the producers behalf,

but not taking ownership of the product ! Travel agencies, Financial Consultants

! Facilitators: Assist in getting the product to market, but do not take ownership nor assist in the sales ! Trains, Trucking, Warehousing, etc !

! Number of intermediaries ! Terms and responsibilities

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Identifying Channel Alternatives

! Number of intermediaries: ! Exclusive: Severely limiting the intermediaries, controlling the service

levels and outputs ! Ex. Product’s like Tiffany, sold only in their stores

! Selective: Gaining adequate market coverage by being selective about who carries your product ! Ex. Whole Foods Vendors

! Intensive Distribution: Offering product in as many places as possible, often in convenience goods ! Ex. Soft Drinks

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Figure 13.3 The Value-Adds versus

Costs of Different Channels

C

B

A

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Channel-Management Decisions

• Selecting channel members: Negative experience at intermediary can cause a negative reaction at the company

• Training channel members: The power has shifted in most cases from producers to intermediaries

• Evaluating channel members: Constant evaluation of most profitable intermediaries, reducing and adding intermediaries by Modifying channel members over time

• Consolidation of stores

• Shifting to direct selling

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P&G eStore

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Different Types of Companies and Intermediaries

• Wal Mart

• Starbucks

• Amazon

• Giant Eagle

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Channel Conflict (Page 208)

• What types of conflict arise in channels?

• What causes conflict?

• Goal incompatibility

• Unclear roles and rights

• Differences in perception

• Intermediaries’ dependence on manufacturer

• What can marketers do to resolve it?

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E-Commerce

• Pure Click: No Physical Stores

• Brick and Click: Existing companies adding an online component

• M-Commerce: Selling directly to customers on smartphones and tablets

• Have any of you purchased something on your smartphone?

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The Limits of Physical Space

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eCommerce