Management
12.1 The nature of distribution channels
Why are marketing intermediaries used?
Why use intermediaries? Means giving up some control over how and to whom products are sold
– They are used because they have greater efficiency in making goods available to target markets
– Contacts, experience, specialization, scale of operation
– N-to-M direct selling, N-to-1 + 1-to-M through channel
– Producers make narrow assortments in large quantities, consumers want broad assortments in small quantities – intermediaries break down the quantities, thus matching supply and demand
Intermediaries not restricted to tangible products – also for service production
Distribution channel – moves goods and services from producers to consumers
(a.k.a. marketing channel)
Distribution channel functions Helping to complete transactions
– Information – gathering and distributing marketing research and intelligence information about actors and forces in the marketing environment needed for planning and aiding exchange
– Promotion – developing and spreading persuasive communications about an offer
– Contact – finding and communicating with prospective buyers
– Matching – shaping and fitting the offer to the buyer's needs, including activities such as manufacturing, grading, assembling, and packaging
– Negotiation – reaching an agreement on price and other terms of the offer so that ownership or possession can be transferred
Help fulfill completed transactions
– Physical distribution – transporting and storing goods
– Financing – acquiring and using funds to cover the costs of the channel work
– Risk taking – assuming the risks of carrying out the channel work
All functions must be performed – question is who performs them
– If producer does them, its costs and product price go up
– If intermediaries do, they need to add markup so that final price goes up
– => In dividing the work, each function should be