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Types of Retailers

Types of Retailers. Chapter 2 . The World of Retailing. Increasing Industry Concentration. Growing Diversity of Formats. Globalization. General Trends in Retailing. New Types of Retailers Increased Concentration Globalization Growth In Services Retailer

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Types of Retailers

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  1. Types of Retailers Chapter 2

  2. The World of Retailing Increasing Industry Concentration Growing Diversity of Formats Globalization

  3. General Trends in Retailing • New Types of Retailers • Increased Concentration • Globalization • Growth In Services Retailer • Demise of Pure Electronic Retailers (Webvan, eToys, etc) • Growth in Use of Multi-Channel Retailing by Traditional Retailers • Increase Use of Technology to Reduce Cost, Increase Value Delivered

  4. Merchandise Offering • Variety(breadth of merchandise) The number of merchandise categories • Assortment(depth of merchandise) The number of items in a category (SKUs) Jack Star/PhotoLink/Getty Images C Squared Studios/Getty Images Stockbyte/Punchstock Images Royalty-Free/CORBIS Royalty-Free/CORBIS Royalty-Free/CORBIS Royalty-Free/CORBIS

  5. Variety and Assortment of Bicycles

  6. Types of Retailers Food Retailers Mom and Pop Stores Convenience Stores Supermarkets Supercenters General Merchandise Retailers Department Stores Specialty Stores Discount Stores Category Specialists Off-Price Retailers Warehouse Clubs

  7. NAICS Codes for Retailers

  8. Food Retailers Primary Shopping Format for Food Sales Growth Rates by Retail Format

  9. Globalization of Wal-Mart

  10. Characteristics of Food Retailers

  11. Limited Assortment Supermarkets Save-A-Lot’s limited assortment format means that stores carry the most frequently purchased grocery items in the most popular size and variety The company carries high quality exclusive brands – many produced by the same manufacturers of leading name brands – and an assortment of nationally branded items. This allows Save-A-Lot to offer savings of up to 40% compared to conventional grocery stores – without asking shoppers to sacrifice quality. Used by permission of Save-A-Lot

  12. Conventional Supermarket Survival Pack Emphasize Fresh Perishables Target health conscious and ethnic consumers Provide a better in-store experience Offer more private label brands

  13. Food Retailers Supermarkets -Cars, highways and TV to build brands -Knowledgeable customers – self service -Perishable vs. packaged goods Big Box Retailers -Warehouse Clubs -Supercenters -Hypermarkets Convenience Stores

  14. Convenience Stores Fight Competition • Tailors associates to local market • Stores are more convenient to shop • Offers fresh food • Fast, casual restaurants • Financial services available • Opening smaller stores closer to consumers – like airports

  15. Issues in Food Retailing Competition from Discount Stores Changing Consumption Patterns Efficient Distribution Lower Costs Lower Prices Time Pressure Eating Out More Meal Solutions

  16. Types of General Merchandise Retailers • Department Stores • Specialty Stores • Category Specialists • Home Improvement Centers • Discount Stores • Drugstores • Off-Price retailers • Extreme Value Retailers

  17. Characteristics of General Merchandise Retailers

  18. Competition -Discount Stores on Price -Specialty Stores on Service, Depth of Assortment Lower Cost by Reducing Services (?) -Centralized Cash Wraps More Sales (?) -Customers Wait for Sale Focus on Apparel and Soft Home Develop Private Labels and Exclusive Brands Issues in Department Store Retailing

  19. Three Tiers of Department Stores First Tier: upscale, high fashion chains with exclusive designer merchandise and excellent customer service. Example: Nordstrom, Neiman Marcus, Bloomingdales, Saks Second Tier: Retailers sell more modestly priced merchandise with less customer service: Example: Macy’s Third Tier: Value oriented caters to more price conscious customer Example: JCPenney, Sears, Kohl’s Rob Melnychuk/Getty Images

  20. What To Do With an Eroding Market • To deal with an eroding market Department stores are: • attempting to increase the amount of exclusive merchandise • they sell • undertaking marketing campaigns to develop strong images • for their stores and brands • building better relationships with • their key customers Royalty-Free/CORBIS

  21. Issues in Discount Store Retailing • Only Big Three Left Wal-Mart, Kmart, Target • Wal-Mart’s Dominance • Differentiate Strategy Wal-Mart = Low Price and Good value Target = More Fashionable Apparel • Competition from Category Specialists Toys-R-Us, Circuit City, Sports Authority McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc./Gary He, photographer

  22. Mall-Based Apparel Retailers Decline in Mall Shopping and Apparel Sales -Lack of New Fashions -Less Interest in Fashion -Increase Price Consciousness Lifestyle Formats – Abercrombie and Fitch and Hot Topics Issues in Specialty Store Retailing McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc./Gary He, photographer

  23. Consolidation – Walgreens, CVS, Rite-Aid Competition from Supermarkets, discount Stores and mail-in orders Evolution to a New Format -Stand Alone Sites with Drive Thru Windows -offering more frequent purchase food items Improvedsystems provide personalized service in the pharmacy Issues in Drug Store Retailing Keith Brofsky/Getty Images

  24. Deep and Narrow Assortments Destination Stores Low Price and Service Wholesaling to Business Customers and Retailing to Consumers Incredible Growth Category Specialists Ryan McVay/Getty Images

  25. Issues in Home Improvement Centers Home Depot and Lowes act as both: Retailer and Wholesaler ConsumerBusiness

  26. Home Improvement Centers Displays are warehoused Customer Service: How to select and how to use merchandise Competition focuses on price, effort to differentiate and services provided Ryan McVay/Getty Images

  27. Focuses on Lower Income Consumers Names mostly imply good value not $1 price points Low Cost Location Limited Services One of the Fastest Growing Retail Segments Dollar Tree Family Dollar Dollar General 99 Cents Only Store Issues in Extreme Value Retailing Stockbyte/Punchstock Images

  28. Electronic Retailing Catalog and Direct Mail Direct Selling Television Home Shopping Vending Machines Non-store Retail Formats Royalty-Free/CORBIS Ryan McVay/Getty Images

  29. Electronic Retailing • History of frenzied investments and false predictions of retail dominance • Primarily used by traditional retailers to compliment store and catalog offerings • Exclusive e-tailers target small and dispersed niche markets Randy Allbritton/Getty Images

  30. What are Amazon and eBay? • Amazon.com – Merchandise to consumers. Provides website development and fulfillment services to other retailers • eBay – Acts as a mall or other shopping center providing a “place” for buyers and sellers to meet Don Farrall/Getty Images

  31. Low Start Up Cost Evolution of Multi-Channel Offering Hard to compete with large well established firms Increasing Mail Costs Clutter from other Catalogs General merchandise catalogs like JC Penney Specialty Catalogs like JC Whitney, Victoria Secret Issues in Catalog Retailing

  32. Issues in Direct Selling • Providing information and demonstrations is costly • Party plan system: merchandise is demonstrated in a party atmosphere • Multi-level network: Master distributors sell to distributors who sell merchandise • Pyramid schemes: Firm sells to other distributors and little if any merchandise goes to end users

  33. Issues in Television Home Shopping • Consumers watch cable stations, infomercials or direct response ads • Few consumers watch regularly • Most purchases made by small proportion of viewers • Customers can’t examine merchandise • Customers must wait for merchandise to come on • Sells mostly jewelry, apparel, cosmetics, kitchenware, exercise equipment Royalty-Free/CORBIS

  34. Issues in Vending Machine Retailing • Sales growth has been declining due to higher prices and healthier eating habits • New technology may help sales growth • Vending machines are beginning to accept credit • Trend of placing machines in captive consumer locations Ryan McVay/Getty Images

  35. Types of Nonstore Retailers

  36. Sales by Catalog Retailers

  37. Services vs. Merchandise Retailers Intangibility -Problems in Evaluating Service Quality -Performance of Service Provider Simultaneous Production and Delivery -Importance of Service Provider Perishability -No Inventory, Must Fill Capacity Inconsistency of the Offering -Importance of HR Management

  38. Type of ServiceService Retail Firms Airlines American, Delta, British Airways, Singapore Airways Automobile maint/repair Jiffy Lube, Midas, AAMCO Automobile rental Hertz, Avis, Budget, Alamo Banks Citibank, NCNB, Bank of America Child care centers Kindercare, Gymboree Credit cards American Express, VISA, Mastercard Education University of Florida, Babson College Entertainment parks Disney, Universal Studios, Six Flags Express package delivery Federal Express, UPS, US Postal Service Financial services Merrill Lynch, Dean Witter Fitness Jazzercise, Bally’s, Gold’s Gym Health Care Humana, HCA Home maintenance Chemlawn, MiniMaid, Roto-Rooter Examples of Service Retailers

  39. Type of Service Service Retail Firms Hotels and motels Hyatt, Sheraton, Marriott, Days Inn Income tax preparation H & R Block Insurance Allstate, State Farm Internet access/Elec info. American On-Line, CompuServe Movie theaters AMC, Loews/Sony, Universal Real estate Century 21, Coldwell Banker Restaurants TGI Friday’s, Wendy’s, Pizza Hut Truck rentals U-Haul, Ryder Weight loss Weight Watchers, Jenny Craig Video rental Blockbuster, Hollywood Video Vision centers Lenscrafter, Pearle Examples of Service Retailers

  40. Merchandise/Service Continuum

  41. Types of Retail Ownership • Independent, Single Store Establishments • Wholesaler Owned Cooperatives • Corporate Chains • Franchises (c) Brand X Pictures/PunchStock

  42. Retailers Using Franchise Business Model

  43. Franchising 30 – 40% of US Retail Sales Franchisee Pays Fixed Fee Plus % of Sales Franchisee Implements Program Why is This Ownership Format Efficient? The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc./Jill Braaten, photographer

  44. Technological advances Profitable utilization of capital resources Attainment of the “American Dream” Demographic expansion Product/service consistency Reasons for Franchising Growth

  45. Territorial Operating Mobile Distributorship Co-ownership Co-management Leasing/Licensing Manufacturing Service Types of Franchise Systems

  46. Inept management Fraudulent activities Market saturation Reasons for Franchising Failure

  47. Manufacturer - retailer Manufacturer - wholesaler Wholesaler - retailer Service sponsor - retailer Franchisor Positions in the Marketing Channel

  48. Continuous market Market information Money Royalty fees • Sales of products Rental and lease fees • License fees Management fees Franchisor Benefits

  49. Initial Services Market survey and site selection, facility design and layout, lease negotiation advice, financing advice, operating manuals, management training programs, and employee training. Continuous Services Field supervision, merchandising and promotional materials, management and employee retraining, quality inspection, national advertising, centralized purchasing, market data and guidance, auditing and record keeping, management reports, and group insurance plans. Franchisee Benefits

  50. Advantages Rapid expansion, highly motivated franchisees do a good job, additional profits by selling franchisees products and services. Disadvantages Company-owned units may be more profitable, less control then independent retailers over advertising, pricing, personnel practices, etc. Franchisor Advantages/Disadvantages

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