Wednesday, 21 March 2012

Business Administration-Distribution

Distribution
This is the last of the four P's of the marketing mix. 

Logistics is a planning approach that treats moving goods into and
out of an organisation as a complete system; from the stage of
goods and services coming into the organisation as manufacturing
inputs, through to delivery of the organisation’s own goods and
services to the end user. 
 
Factors that should be considered before a distribution channel is
chosen
1.Adequate and appropriate distribution.  A choice of
distribution channels allows the organisation to consider the
various options and choose one or more  that are best
positioned to achieve results.
2.Access to market and the level of coverage required.
3.Cost effectiveness in both access to market and physical
distribution
4.Reseller effort and competitive representation and
motivation
5.Maximisation of revenue returns from resellers
6.Provision of customer service
 
Distribution channel functions
A distribution channel moves goods from producers to consumers.  Members of the marketing channel perform many key functions such as:
Information
Promotion
Contact
Matching
  • Negotiation
Physical distribution
Financing
Risk taking
Communication role
Service role
  • Cost reduction
Control
For overseas sellers, channel members often make contact
with buyers and potential buyers and may be involved in
matching supply with demand.
Number of channel levels
The number of intermediary levels indicates the length of a
channel.
 
Channel 1-this is called direct marketing channel.
This has no intermediary level
It consists of the manufacturer selling directly to consumers.
E.g. dell computer sells personal computers by mail order rather than through dealers or retailers.
The remaining channels are called indirect marketing channels
 Channel 2
This contains one intermediary level.
In consumer markets this is usually the retailer
For example the markers of televisions and cameras sell their
goods directly to large retailers which then sell the goods to
final consumers.
 
Channel 3
This channel contains two intermediaries usually a wholesaler
and a retailer.  This channel is often used by manufacturers of
food, drugs etc. 
Channel 4
This contains three intermediaries.
 
Channel behaviour and organisation
A channel comprises of a group of companies that
distribute products from manufacturers to the final
consumers. 
 
Channel design decisions
Customer service needs:
1.Do customers want blanket distribution(convenience goods) or specialist distribution (luxury goods)
2.How important is  speed of delivery
3.Do customers expect a wide range of products
4.How important are add on services
5.The channel designer must weigh up the cost of
delivering the optimal service level against potential
extra sales and then set that against the cost of
providing the service
 
Channel management decisions
Selection of channel members-companies with
successful products and strong brand names can
easily attract quality distribution.  Lesser known
companies have difficulty in getting listings with good
distributors or retailers and sometimes have to make
deal that give high margins to the channel members.
 
 

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