Sie sind auf Seite 1von 28

Chapter 12- Deliver the Customer

Experience
Saturday, September 29, 2018 12:31 PM

LO1 Retail

Retail…

Retail Defined

• How firms sell products to consumers for


consumers' [end] use.
○ Provide time, place, an ownership
utility.
• 2015 U.S. sales totaled $4.87 trillion.
○ 25% the the economy and 10% of
employment.
○ E-commerce is 6% of this and m-commerce
=1%
• Retailing practices very around the world
○ Good carried/ specialty shops
○ Displays (especially of foods such as
meat)

Wheel of retail evolution


Other evolution factors

• These four factors most often accounts and


innovations in retailing:
○ Economic conditions. Lower economy
(e.g., 2008) leads to price shopping.
Amazon said well, and store-brands grew.
○ Demographic and cultural change. Retail
mix, Open hours and days, Store style
are affected.
○ Technology. Even in physical stores,
Self-checkout, RFID tags, store mapping
with ads, eMenus.
○ Globalization. Looking for new markets,
some retailers move to different market.
Aldi (from Germany) IKEA (Sweden).

"Retailtainment"
some retailers move to different market.
Aldi (from Germany) IKEA (Sweden).

"Retailtainment"

• These marketing strategies and enhance the


shopping experience for consumers seeking
fun.
• Retail experiences that incorporate elements
of surprise, excitement, and novelties lead
to increased purchase likelihood.

Ethics in retail

• Retailers face problems that involve both


customers and employees.
○ Shoplifting- customer stealing
○ Employee theft- employee stealing
○ Retail borrowing- illegitimate returns
○ Ethical treatment of customers- bear and
just treatment
○ Customer profiling- singling out based
on physical characteristics
○ Sale of harmful products- is this the
retailer's job?

Larry goes missing


• In 2013, Air Canada lost Larry, an Italian
Greyhound, who is being shipped to a new
home after his owner died.
• He was in a secured cage with a sign saying
"do not take dog out." Later, it was
discovered, a worker took Larry out, who
been got loose and went missing.
• Air Canada PR I Accidentally sent an
"do not take dog out." Later, it was
discovered, a worker took Larry out, who
been got loose and went missing.
• Air Canada PR I Accidentally sent an
internal email to the press. "I think I
would just ignore, it is local news doing a
story on a lost dog. Their entire government
shutdown and about to default and this is
how the U.S. media spends its time."
• Larry was found, hit by a car, and take into
a vet where he was euthanized.
• Empathy matters!

LO2 Classifying Retail


Merchandise mix
• An important strategic decision a
retailer makes is what to sell: its
merchandise mix
○ Merchandise breadth: Narrow vs. the
broad assortment
○ Merchandise depth: shallow vs. deep
assortment
Levels of service

• There is a trade-off between service and


low-prices.
• Retailers differ along continuum based on
amount of service provided to customers:
○ Self-service retailers (e.g., Sam's
Club)
○ Limited-service retailers(e.g., Walmart,
Target, Kohl's)
○ Full-service retailers (e.g.,
Bloomingdales, Nordstrom's)

Levels of service table


Category killer

• A category killer is a specialty store that


carries a large selection of products within
a given category
○ Best Buy
○ Home Depot
○ Barnes & Noble is considered a category
killer, but as we saw the last chapter,
they are being disinterminated.
○ Home Depot
○ Barnes & Noble is considered a category
killer, but as we saw the last chapter,
they are being disinterminated.

Department stores

• Sell a broad range of items and offer a deep


selection organized into different
"department."
• Full service US department stores have
struggles in recent years (e.g. Sears).
• However, this is not the case globally.
○ Don Quijote ("don-qi") in Japan.
○ El Corte Inglés in Spain.

Pop-up stores
• Stores can be classified by their size.
• Pop-up stores are temporary retail spaces a
company direct to help build buzz for its
product.

LO3 non-store retail

Non-store retail defined


• Any method of firm uses to complete an
exchange that does not require a customer to
visit a store.
Direct selling
• Direct selling occurs when a sales person
presents a product to one individual or a
small group, takes orders, and delivers the
merchandise.
○ Door to door. Not as popular in the US
(both Adults work), but popular in
China.
○ Party in networks. Host a small group in
a home.
○ Multilevel marketing. Hey Master
distributor recruits other distributors,
buy the product. Amway has 3 million
distributors.

Automatic vending

• Offers many benefits to consumers and


distributors.

Automatic vending

• Offers many benefits to consumers and


marketers.
○ Open 24-hours
○ Unattended
○ Can be located near need
○ Many take credit cards
• Usually best suited to low-cost convenience
goods

B2C e-commerce

• B2C e-commerce his online exchange between


companies and individual consumers.
○ Shoppers bought $373 billion in good
online in 2016.
○ Estimated that 60% of all US retail
sales involved web and we present $1.8
trillion (≈ 10% of the economy)
• M-commerce is any 4P activity on mobile
devices, expected to be 15% of e-commerce by
2020.

Future of retailing

• Does growth of B2C e-commerce mean the death


of brick-and-mortar stores as we know them?
○ Virtual distribution channels unlikely
to replace traditional ones; most goods
need to be physical rather than digital.
○ Amazon is experimenting with stores and
purchased Whole Foods in August 2017.
Just opened a second "4-star" store.
to replace traditional ones; most goods
need to be physical rather than digital.
○ Amazon is experimenting with stores and
purchased Whole Foods in August 2017.
Just opened a second "4-star" store.
• Stores must evolve to lure customers away
from the computer.
○ Consumers will visit destination retail
more for the fun they receive from total
experience.

LO4 service and intangible


Services defined

• Acts, efforts, or performances exchanged


from producer to user without ownership
rights.
• Account for four out of every five jobs in
the US and nearly 80% of GDP.
• Targeted towards both consumers and
organizations.
• Services are:
○ Intangible(can't see, touch, smell)
○ Perishable (Seats, or snakes, on a
plane)
○ Variable (not always the same show)
○ Inseparable from consumption (can't be
produced ahead of time)
Service encounter

• When the customer comes into contact with


the organization. Includes:
○ Servicescape, includes the interior and
exterior of the service local (if there
is one) and represents the physical
portion of the encounter.
○ There is a social dimension to the
encounter, where the customer plays a
role (e.g., crowded theater.
• Of course, not all service encounters happen
in a physical location.
role (e.g., crowded theater.
• Of course, not all service encounters happen
in a physical location.

Quality service

• Quality service means that the customers are


satisfied with what they have purchased.
• Satisfaction is based on customer
expectations.
○ Different customers expect different
levels of service.
○ Not all customers can be satisfied and
it's not your job to. Selecting
customers you can serve well is one goal
of segmentation.

Measuring service quality

• The SERVQUAL scale is a [very] popular


instrument to measure customer service
quality and identifies perceptions of
service quality on five dimensions:
○ Tangibles-appearance of the
servicescape.
○ Reliability- service is consistent and
accurate.
○ Responsiveness- Service is prompt.
○ Empathy-caring, individualized
attention.
○ Assurance-knowledge and courtesy of
employees.

Marketing people
employees.

Marketing people

• Politicians, athletes, and celebrities are


commonly marketed.
• Agents target and sell into project based on
strengths.
• Clients are "repackaged" and improved.
○ Name changes, still improvements (e.g.,
Voice lessons)
• Fill unmet needs

Q score

• Developed buy Marketing Evaluations, Inc. In


1963.
• Rate familiarity and appeal of celebrities,
brands, companies in the US.

Marketing places

• Place marketing treats the city, State,


country, or other locale as a brand.

Marketing ideas

• Gaining market share for a concept,


philosophy, belief, or issue (e.g.,
religious institution market ideas about
faith)
• Consumers often do not perceive the value
they receive when they conform with an idea
or fail to believe an idea is worth its
ultimate cost.
faith)
• Consumers often do not perceive the value
they receive when they conform with an idea
or fail to believe an idea is worth its
ultimate cost.

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen