1 / 12

Welcome to class of International Distribution by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Welcome to class of International Distribution by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada. International Distribution. Distribution Structure Traditional Modern Retail Giants Distribution Patterns General Retail. Distribution Structure….

libitha
Download Presentation

Welcome to class of International Distribution by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

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

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Welcome to class of International DistributionbyDr. Satyendra SinghUniversity of WinnipegCanada

  2. International Distribution • Distribution Structure • Traditional • Modern • Retail Giants • Distribution Patterns • General • Retail

  3. Distribution Structure… • Difference Between Domestic and Foreign Structure • PEST • Super-efficient system in the USA vs. highly complex in Japan • Traditional Distribution Structure • Import-oriented structure • High price, small no of affluent customers • Sellers market  demand exceed supply • Absence of cars and telephones • Local monopoly of small stores • Buy daily in developing country vs bi-weekly in Canada • Intermediaries do not perform specific activities • Import-wholesalers perform marketing function • Advertising, marketing research, warehousing, financing, storage

  4. Distribution Structure…

  5. Distribution Structure… • Japanese Channel Structure • Small intermediaries and dealers • Manufacturers control the channel • Business philosophy is rooted in the unique culture • Laws protect small retailers

  6. Distribution Structure…

  7. Distribution Structure… • Modern Channel Structure • Change in discounting, self-service, mass merchandizing, return policy… • Change in direct marketing • Door-to-door selling, hypermarkets, shopping malls, catalogue, Internet • Wal-Mart, Carrefour (France), Praktikar (Germany), Ikea (Sweden) • Higher margin in EU than US • Internet-based system for ordering and delivering (low cost, efficient) • GM, Ford, Nissan, Renault and DaimlerChrysler www.covisint.com • Roebuck and Carrefour www.gnx.com • Brick-mortar eg. Dell, Brick-click eg Amazon, DHL, UPS • Convenience store as a pickup points for web-orders

  8. Distribution Structure • Retail Giants Structure • Retailers cannot export except by Internet • Wal-Mart, McDonald’s, Home Depot take risk in foreign markets • Europeans: quick to enter foreign market, emphasis on being first, retail strategy, local needs and taste • Americans: exploit domestic market first, emphasis on efficiency, standardization and value to customers • International retailers have advantages over local retailers • World-class business processes • Technology • Financing • Organizational capabilities • Greater buying power • Superior service…

  9. World’s 10 Largest Retailers

  10. Distribution Pattern… • General Pattern • Foreign channels are not the same as domestic channels • Intermediary services are different • Storage and wait for customers to come and see them, India, Egypt • Line breadth • Dealing-only narrow lines • Requires government license • Cost and margin • Shorter channel for industrial or expensive goods • Inverse relationship b/w length of channel and size of purchases • Non-existent channels – selling on the roads! • Blocked channels – competitors or relationships • Power and competition – large whole sellers finance downstream • Limited stocking – pickup from factory/distributor, if possible

  11. Distribution Pattern • Retail Pattern • Product lines: narrow (Italy,Morocco) vs. broad (Japan) • Size pattern • No of person served per retailer– higher in developed countries • May be difficult to reach so many small retailers across a country • Depends of economic development – single cigarette • Direct marketing – mail, tel, door-to-door • Usually best for developed economy, but Eastern European gaining popularity; e.g., Amway • Resistance to change • Government attitude • Local retailers need to compete • Product selection • Greater convenience • Customer service • Liberal store hours • Retailers cannot close/open stores at their wish

  12. Retail Structure in Selected Countries

More Related