Description
Royal Philips Electronics of the Netherlands is one of the world's biggest electronics companies and Europe's largest, with annual sales of over $36 billion. The company offers a broad range of products, from flat screen TVs and electric razors for consumers to medical imaging equipment and professional lighting systems for hospitals and businesses.
230
In this chapter, we will address the following questions:
1. What are marketing channel systems and value networks?
2. What functions do marketing channels perform?
3. What decisions do companies face in designing, managing, and integrating their chan-
nels?
4. What key issues do companies face in e-commerce?
C H A P T E R 1 3
Designing and
Managing Integrated
Marketing Channels
PART V Delivering Value
MARKETING MANAGEMENT AT ROYAL
PHILIPS ELECTRONICS
Royal Philips Electronics of the Netherlands is one of the world’s biggest electronics companies
and Europe’s largest, with annual sales of over $36 billion. The company offers a broad range
of products, from flat screen TVs and electric razors for consumers to medical imaging
equipment and professional lighting systems for hospitals and businesses. Philips uses local dis-
tributors in some countries but relies mainly on its company sales force and its own Web sites to
handle orders from institutional and industrial buyers. A hospital purchasing agent can log on,
compare product specifications, enter a purchase order, check the delivery status of a previous
order, or access service and support databases.
On the consumer side, Philips products reach buyers worldwide through a diverse distri-
bution model that includes mass merchants, retail chains, independent stores, and small specialty
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 231
stores. Philips has created an organization designed around these retail customers, with dedi-
cated Global Key Account Managers serving leading retailers such as Best Buy, Carrefour,
Costco, Dixons, and Tesco. The company also sells to consumers via its own online store as well
as through other online retailers.
1
S
uccessful value creation needs successful value delivery. Holistic marketers are
increasingly taking a value network viewof their businesses, examining the whole supply
chain that links rawmaterials, components, and manufactured goods and shows howthey
move toward the final consumers. This chapter discusses the strategic and tactical issues
of marketing channels and value networks; Chapter 14 will examine marketing channel
issues fromthe perspective of retailers, wholesalers, and physical-distribution agencies.
MARKETING CHANNELS AND VALUE NETWORKS
Most producers don’t sell their goods directly to the final users; between them stands
a set of intermediaries performing a variety of functions. These intermediaries consti-
tute marketing channels (also called trade channels or distribution channels), sets of
interdependent organizations involved in the process of making a product or service
available for use or consumption. They’re the set of pathways a product or service fol-
lows after production, culminating in purchase and use by the final end user.
2
The Importance of Channels
A marketing channel systemis the particular set of marketing channels employed by
a firm. Decisions about the marketing channel system are among the most critical fac-
ing management. In the United States, channel members collectively earn margins
that account for 30% to 50% of the ultimate selling price, whereas advertising typi-
cally accounts for less than 7% of the final price.
3
Marketing channels also represent a
substantial opportunity cost because they don’t just serve markets, they must also make
markets.
4
The channels chosen affect all other marketing decisions. The company’s pric-
ing depends on whether it uses mass merchandisers or high-quality boutiques. The
firm’s sales force and advertising decisions depend on how much training and motiva-
tion dealers need. In addition, channel decisions involve relatively long-term commit-
ments to other firms. When an automaker signs up independent dealers to sell its
automobiles, it can’t buy them out the next day and replace them with company-
owned outlets. Holistic marketers ensure that marketing decisions in all these
different areas are made to collectively maximize value.
Today’s successful companies are also multiplying the number of “go-to-market”
or hybrid channels in any one area. For example, Hewlett-Packard uses its sales force
to sell to large accounts, outbound telemarketing to sell to medium-sized accounts,
direct mail with an inbound number for small accounts, retailers for still smaller
accounts and consumers, and the Internet to sell specialty items. Consumers may
choose their preferred channels based on price, product assortment, and convenience,
as well as their economic, social, or experiential shopping goals.
5
The firm must decide how much effort to devote to push versus pull marketing.
A push strategy uses the manufacturer’s sales force and trade promotion to induce inter-
mediaries to carry, promote, and sell the product to end users. This is appropriate where
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232 Part V Delivering Value
there is low brand loyalty in a category, brand choice is made in the store, the product is
an impulse item, and product benefits are well understood. In a pull strategy, the manu-
facturer uses advertising and promotion to persuade consumers to ask intermediaries for
the product, thus inducing the intermediaries to order it. This is appropriate when there
is high brand loyalty and high involvement in the category, people perceive differences
between brands, and people choose the brand before they shop. Top marketing firms
such as Nike and Intel skillfully employ both push and pull strategies.
Value Networks
The company should first think of the target market and then design the supply chain
backward from that point, a view called demand-chain planning. Northwestern’s
Don Schultz says: “A demand chain management approach doesn’t just push things
through the system. It emphasizes what solutions consumers are looking for, not what
products we are trying to sell them.” He suggests replacing the marketing “four Ps”
with a new acronym, SIVA, which stands for solutions, information, value, and access.
6
The concept of a value network—a system of partnerships and alliances that a
firm creates to source, augment, and deliver its offerings—takes an even broader view.
A value network includes a firm’s suppliers and its suppliers’ suppliers, and its immedi-
ate customers and their end customers. The value network includes valued relations
with others such as university researchers and regulatory agencies.
Demand chain planning yields several insights. First, the firm can estimate
whether more money is made upstream or downstream, in case it might want to
integrate backward or forward. Second, the company is more aware of disturbances
anywhere in the supply chain that might cause costs, prices, or supplies to change
suddenly. Third, companies can go online with business partners for faster, more
accurate, and less costly communications, transactions, and payments.
THE ROLE OF MARKETING CHANNELS
Why would a producer delegate some of the selling job to intermediaries? Delegation
means relinquishing some control over how and to whom the products are sold. But
producers can often gain effectiveness and efficiency by using intermediaries. It’s
impractical for the William Wrigley Jr. Company to establish small retail gum shops
throughout the world or to sell gum by mail order. It would have to sell gum along
with many other small products and would end up in the drugstore and grocery store
business. Wrigley finds it easier to work through the extensive network of privately
owned distribution organizations. Even General Motors would be hard-pressed to
replace all the tasks handled by its 8,000 dealers.
Channel Functions and Flows
A marketing channel performs the work of moving products from producers to con-
sumers, overcoming the time, place, and possession gaps that separate goods and servi-
ces from those who need or want them. Members of the marketing channel perform a
number of key functions (see Table 13.1). Some functions (physical, title, and promo-
tion) constitute a forward flow of activity from the company to the customer; other func-
tions (ordering and payment) constitute a backward flow from customers to the company.
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 233
Still others (information, negotiation, finance, and risk taking) occur in both directions.
If the flows for forklift trucks shown in Figure 13.1 were superimposed in one diagram,
the complexity of even simple marketing channels would be apparent.
The question is not whether these channel functions need to be performed—they
must be—but rather who is to perform them. All channel functions have three things in
common: They use up scarce resources; they can often be performed better through
specialization; and they can be shifted among channel members. If a manufacturer
shifts some functions to intermediaries, its costs and prices go down, but the interme-
diaries must add a charge to cover their work. Still, if the intermediaries are more
efficient than the manufacturer, prices to consumers should be lower. If consumers
Suppliers Manufacturer Dealers Customers
Suppliers
Suppliers
Suppliers
Advertising
agency
Advertising
agency
Manufacturer Customers Dealers
1. Physical Flow
2. Title Flow
3. Payment Flow
4. Information Flow
5. Promotion Flow
Suppliers
Transporters,
warehouses
Manufacturer Dealers Transporters Customers
Banks Banks Manufacturer Dealers
Customers
Transporters,
warehouses,
banks
Transporters,
warehouses,
banks
Manufacturer Dealers
Transporters,
banks
Customers
Banks
Transporters,
warehouses
FIGURE 13.1 Five Marketing Flows in the Marketing Channel for Forklift Trucks
TABLE 13.1 Channel Member Functions
? Gather information about potential and current customers, competitors, and other actors
and forces in the marketing environment.
? Develop and disseminate persuasive communications to stimulate purchasing.
? Reach agreements on price and other terms so that transfer of ownership or possession can
be effected.
? Place orders with manufacturers.
? Acquire the funds to finance inventories at different levels in the marketing channel.
? Assume risks connected with carrying out channel work.
? Provide for the successive storage and movement of physical products.
? Provide for buyers’ payment of their bills through banks and other financial institutions.
? Oversee actual transfer of ownership from one organization or person to another.
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234 Part V Delivering Value
(a) Consumer Marketing Channels
Retailer Retailer Retailer
Wholesaler Wholesaler
Jobber
0-level 0-level 1-level 1-level 2-level 2-level 3-level 3-level
Manufacturer Manufacturer Manufacturer Manufacturer
Consumer Consumer Consumer Consumer
(b) Industrial Marketing Channels
Manufacturer Manufacturer Manufacturer Manufacturer
Industrial
distributors
Industrial
customer
Industrial
customer
Industrial
customer
Industrial
customer
Manufacturer's
representative
Manufacturer's
sales branch
FIGURE 13.2 Consumer and Industrial Marketing Channels
perform some functions themselves, they should enjoy still lower prices. Changes
in channel institutions thus reflect the discovery of more efficient ways to combine or
separate the economic functions that provide assortments of products to target
customers.
Channel Levels
The producer and the final customer are part of every channel. We’ll use the number
of intermediary levels to designate the length of a channel. Figure 13.2a illustrates
consumer-goods marketing channels of different lengths, while Figure 13.2b illus-
trates industrial marketing channels.
A zero-level channel (also called a direct-marketing channel) consists of a pro-
ducer selling directly to final customers through door-to-door sales, Internet selling,
mail order, telemarketing, home parties, TV selling, manufacturer-owned stores, and
other methods. A one-level channel contains one intermediary, such as a retailer.
A two-level channel contains two intermediaries; a three-level channel contains three inter-
mediaries. From the producer’s perspective, obtaining information about end users and
exercising control becomes more difficult as the number of channel levels increases.
Channels normally describe a forward movement of products, but there are also
reverse-flow channels, important for bringing products back for reuse (such as refillable
bottles); refurbishing items for resale; recycling products; and disposing of products
and packaging. Several intermediaries play a role in these channels, including manu-
facturers’ redemption centers, community groups, traditional intermediaries such as
trash-collection specialists, recycling centers, trash-recycling brokers, and central-
processing warehousing.
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 235
Service Sector Channels
Producers of services and ideas also face the problem of making their output available
and accessible to target populations. Schools develop “educational-dissemination sys-
tems” and hospitals develop “health-delivery systems.” These institutions must deter-
mine agencies and locations for reaching a population that is spread out over an area.
Marketing channels are also changing in “person” marketing. Besides live and pro-
grammed entertainment, entertainers can reach fans online in many ways—via their
own Web sites, social community sites such as MySpace, and third-party Web sites.
And as Internet technology advances, service industries such as banking, travel, and
insurance are operating through new channels. Kodak offers its customers four ways
to print their digital photos—minilabs in retail outlets, home printers, the Kodak
Gallery Web site, and self-service kiosks.
8
CHANNEL-DESIGN DECISIONS
Designing a marketing channel system involves analyzing customer needs, establish-
ing channel objectives, identifying major channel alternatives, and evaluating major
channel alternatives.
Analyzing Customers’ Desired Service Output Levels
The marketer must understand the service output levels its target customers want.
Channels produce five service outputs:
1. Lot size.The number of units the channel permits a typical customer to purchase on
one occasion. In buying for its fleet, Hertz wants a channel from which it can buy a
large lot size; a household wants a channel that permits buying a lot size of one.
2. Waiting and delivery time.The average time customers of that channel wait for
receipt of the goods. Customers normally prefer fast delivery channels.
3. Spatial convenience.The degree to which the marketing channel makes it easy for
customers to purchase the product.
4. Product variety.The assortment breadth provided by the channel. Normally, cus-
tomers prefer a greater assortment, which increases the chance of finding what they
need.
5. Service backup.The add-on services (credit, delivery, installation, repairs) provided
by the channel.
Providing greater service outputs means increased channel costs and higher
prices for customers. The success of discount resellers (online and offline) indicates
that many consumers will accept lower outputs if they can save money.
Establishing Objectives and Constraints
Marketers should state their channel objectives in terms of targeted service output lev-
els. Under competitive conditions, channel institutions should arrange their func-
tional tasks to minimize total channel costs and still provide desired levels of service
outputs.
9
Usually, planners can identify several market segments that want different
service levels. Effective planning requires determining which market segments to
serve and the best channels for each.
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236 Part V Delivering Value
Channel objectives vary with product characteristics. Perishable products require
more direct marketing. Bulky products, such as building materials, require channels that
minimize the shipping distance and the amount of handling. Nonstandard products, such
as custom-built machinery, are sold directly by company sales representatives. Products
requiring installation or maintenance services, such as heating systems, are usually sold
and maintained by the company or franchised dealers. High-unit-value products such as
turbines are often sold through a company sales force rather than intermediaries.
Channel design is also influenced by such environmental factors as competitors’
channels, economic conditions, and legal regulations and restrictions. U.S. law looks
unfavorably on channel arrangements that substantially lessen competition or create a
monopoly.
Identifying Major Channel Alternatives
Companies can choose from a wide variety of channels for reaching customers, each
of which has unique strengths as well as weaknesses. Each channel alternative is
described by (1) the types of available intermediaries; (2) the number of intermediaries
needed; and (3) the terms and responsibilities of each channel member.
Types of Intermediaries A firm needs to identify the types of intermediaries available
to carry on its channel work. Some intermediaries—merchants such as wholesalers and
retailers—buy, take title to, and resell the merchandise. Agents such as brokers, manufac-
turers’ representatives, and sales agents search for customers and may negotiate on the
producer’s behalf but don’t take title to the goods. Facilitators, including transportation
companies, independent warehouses, banks, and advertising agencies, assist in the distri-
bution process but neither take title to goods nor negotiate purchases or sales. Companies
should identify innovative marketing channels. For instance, seeing its printed catalog as
out of date, commercial lighting company Display Supply & Lighting developed an inter-
active online catalog that cost less, sped up the sales process, and increased revenue.
10
Number of Intermediaries In deciding how many intermediaries to use, compa-
nies can use one of three strategies: exclusive, selective, or intensive distribution.
Exclusive distribution means severely limiting the number of intermediaries. Firms
such as automakers use this approach to maintain control over the service level and
service outputs offered by the resellers. Often it involves exclusive dealing arrange-
ments, in which resellers agree not to carry competing brands.
Selective distribution relies on more than a few but less than all of the inter-
mediaries willing to carry a particular product. The company doesn’t have to worry
about too many outlets; it can gain adequate market coverage with more control and
less cost than intensive distribution. In intensive distribution, the manufacturer
places the goods or services in as many outlets as possible. This strategy is generally
used for items such as snack foods, newspapers, and gum, products the consumer seeks
to buy frequently or in a variety of locations.
Terms and Responsibilities of Channel Members Each channel member must
be treated respectfully and given the opportunity to be profitable.
11
The main ele-
ments in the “trade-relations mix” are price policy, conditions of sale, territorial
rights, and specific services to be performed by each party.
Price policy calls for the producer to establish a price list and schedule of dis-
counts and allowances that intermediaries see as equitable and sufficient. Conditions of
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 237
sale are payment terms and producer guarantees. Most producers grant cash discounts
to distributors for early payment. Producers might also provide distributors a guaran-
tee against defective merchandise or price declines. A guarantee against price declines
gives distributors an incentive to buy more.
Distributors’ territorial rights define the distributors’ territories and the terms
under which the producer will enfranchise other distributors. Distributors normally
expect to receive full credit for all sales in their territory, whether or not they did the
selling. Mutual services and responsibilities must be carefully spelled out, especially in
franchised and exclusive-agency channels. McDonald’s provides franchisees with a
building, promotional support, a recordkeeping system, training, and general admin-
istrative and technical assistance. In turn, franchisees must satisfy company standards
for the physical facilities, cooperate with promotional programs, furnish requested
information, and buy supplies from specified vendors.
Evaluating the Major Alternatives
The company must evaluate each alternative against appropriate economic, control,
and adaptive criteria. Figure 13.3 shows the value added per sale and cost per transac-
tion of six different sales channels. The firm should determine whether its own sales
force or a sales agency will produce more sales; next, it estimates the costs of selling
different volumes through each channel.
Value-added
partners
Telemarketing
Internet
High
Low
Low High
Direct marketing
channels
"Indirect" channels
Direct sales
channels
Cost per Transaction
V
a
l
u
e
-
a
d
d
o
f
S
a
l
e
Retail stores
Distributors
Sales force
FIGURE 13.3 The Value-Adds versus Costs of Different Channels
Source: Oxford Associates, adapted from Dr. Rowland T. Moriarity, Cubex Corp.
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238 Part V Delivering Value
Using a sales agency poses a control problem because the agency is an inde-
pendent firm seeking to maximize its profits. Agents may concentrate on customers
who buy the most, but not necessarily of the producer’s goods. Furthermore, agents
might not master the details of every product they carry or handle all promotion
materials effectively. To develop a channel, the members must make some mutual
commitments for a specified period; this reduces the producer’s ability to respond to a
changing marketplace. In dynamic, volatile, or uncertain environments, producers
need channels and policies that provide high adaptability.
CHANNEL-MANAGEMENT DECISIONS
After a firm has chosen a channel system, it must select, train, motivate, and evaluate
individual intermediaries for each channel. It must also modify channel design and
arrangements over time.
Selecting Channel Members
Companies need to select their channel members carefully because to customers, the
channels are the company. Producers should determine what characteristics distin-
guish the better intermediaries and examine the number of years in business, other
lines carried, growth and profit record, financial strength, cooperativeness, and ser-
vice reputation of potential channel members. If the intermediaries are sales agents,
producers should evaluate the number and character of other lines carried and the size
and quality of the sales force. If the intermediaries want exclusive distribution, the
producer should evaluate locations, future growth potential, and type of clientele.
Training and Motivating Channel Members
A company needs to view its intermediaries in the same way it views its end users. It
needs to determine intermediaries’ needs and construct a channel positioning such that
its channel offering is tailored to provide superior value to these intermediaries. To
improve intermediaries’ performance, the company should provide training, market
research, and other capability-building programs. The company must also constantly
reinforce that its intermediaries are partners in the joint effort to satisfy customers.
Producers vary greatly in channel power, the ability to alter channel members’
behavior so that the members take actions they wouldn’t have taken otherwise.
12
Often, gaining intermediaries’ cooperation can be a huge challenge.
13
More sophisti-
cated producers try to forge a long-term partnership with channel members. The
manufacturer communicates clearly what it expects from its distributors in the way of
market coverage and other channel issues and may establish a compensation plan for
adhering to these policies.
Evaluating Channel Members
Producers must periodically evaluate intermediaries’ performance against such stan-
dards as sales-quota attainment, average inventory levels, customer delivery time,
treatment of damaged and lost goods, and cooperation in promotional and training
programs (see “Marketing Skills: Evaluating Intermediaries”). A producer will occa-
sionally discover that it is paying particular intermediaries too much for what they are
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 239
actually doing. One manufacturer compensating a distributor for holding inventories
found that the stock was actually held in a public warehouse at its own expense.
Producers should set up functional discounts in which they pay specified amounts for
the intermediary’s performance of each agreed-upon service. Underperformers need
to be counseled, retrained, remotivated, or terminated.
Modifying Channel Arrangements
Channel arrangements must be reviewed periodically and modified when distribution
isn’t working as planned, consumer buying patterns change, the market expands, new
competition arises, innovative distribution channels emerge, and the product moves
into later stages in the product life cycle. No marketing channel remains effective over
the entire product life cycle. Early buyers might be willing to pay for high-cost value-
added channels, but later buyers will switch to lower-cost channels. In competitive
markets with low entry barriers, the optimal channel structure will change over time;
the firm may add or drop individual channel members, add or drop particular market
channels, or develop a new way to sell goods.
Adding or dropping an individual channel member requires an incremental
analysis to determine what the firm’s profits would look like with and without this
intermediary. Increasingly, marketers are using datamining to analyze customer
shopping data as input for channel decisions.
15
The most difficult decision is whether
to revise the overall channel strategy.
16
Channels can become outmoded as a gap
arises between the existing distribution system and the ideal system to satisfy cus-
tomers’ (and producers’) requirements. This is why Avon’s door-to-door system for
selling cosmetics had to be modified as more women entered the workforce, for
example.
How important is it for marketers to evaluate and manage suppliers, wholesalers,
retailers, and other intermediaries? One company found that unpredictable sup-
plier deliveries were causing it to hold $200 million in excess inventory. By eval-
uating suppliers on standards such as on-time delivery, this company slashed its
costs. To start, determine how suppliers (and their suppliers) as well as distribu-
tors can influence the company’s performance. Also, translate companywide
strategic goals and measurements into specific targets and measures for channel
partners. Finally, continually measure and reward performance to keep channels
efficient, reactive, and reliable.
A key criterion for toymaker Cranium is how well an intermediary can sup-
port the company’s drive for growth. To get an edge in its highly competitive
industry, the company often works with channel members that typically don’t
carry toys and games. Early on, it arranged to sell its Cranium game in Starbucks
outlets, an innovative deal that built Cranium’s brand. Today its games are still
sold in Starbucks but now they’re also in Whole Foods Market, Barnes & Noble,
and thousands of other stores in 30 countries.
14
MARKETING SKILLS: EVALUATING INTERMEDIARIES
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240 Part V Delivering Value
CHANNEL INTEGRATION AND SYSTEMS
Distribution channels don’t stand still. New wholesaling and retailing institutions
emerge, and new channel systems evolve. We look next at the recent growth of verti-
cal, horizontal, and multichannel marketing systems and see how these systems coop-
erate, conflict, and compete.
Vertical Marketing Systems
One of the most significant channel developments is the rise of vertical marketing sys-
tems. A conventional marketing channel comprises an independent producer,
wholesaler(s), and retailer(s). Each is a separate business seeking to maximize its own
profits, even if this goal reduces profit for the system as a whole. No channel member
has complete or substantial control over other members.
A vertical marketing system (VMS), by contrast, comprises the producer,
wholesaler(s), and retailer(s) acting as a unified system. One channel member, the
channel captain, owns the others, franchises them, or has so much power that they all
cooperate. The channel captain can be the producer, the wholesaler, or the retailer.
Channel stewardship is the ability of a given participant (steward) in a distribution chan-
nel to create a go-to-market strategy that simultaneously addresses customers’ best
interests and drives profits for all channel partners. An effective channel steward con-
siders the channel from the customer’s point of view and advocates for change among
all participants, transforming disparate entities into partners with a common
purpose.
17
VMSs arose as a result of strong channel members’ attempts to control channel
behavior and eliminate conflict from independent channel members pursuing their
own objectives. They achieve economies through size, bargaining power, and elimina-
tion of duplicated services. VMSs have become the dominant distribution mode in the
U.S. consumer marketplace, serving between 70% and 80% of the total market.
There are three types of VMSs: corporate, administered, and contractual.
A corporate VMS combines successive stages of production and distribution
under single ownership. Companies that desire a high level of control over their chan-
nels favor vertical integration. Sherwin-Williams, for example, makes paint but also
owns and operates 3,200 retail outlets.
18
An administered VMS coordinates successive
stages of production and distribution through one member’s size and power.
Manufacturers of a dominant brand are able to secure strong trade cooperation and
support from resellers. Thus Campbell Soup can command cooperation from its
resellers in connection with displays, shelf space, promotions, and price policies.
A contractual VMS consists of independent firms at different levels of production
and distribution, integrating their programs on a contractual basis to obtain more
economies or sales impact than they could achieve alone. Johnston and Lawrence call
them “value-adding partnerships” (VAPs).
19
Contractual VMSs are of three types:
1. Wholesaler-sponsored voluntary chains organize groups of independent retailers to better
compete with large chains through standardized selling practices and buying economies.
2. Retailer cooperatives arise when the stores take the initiative and organize a new busi-
ness entity to carry on wholesaling and possibly some production. Members of retail
cooperatives concentrate their purchases through the co-op, jointly plan their adver-
tising, and share in profits in proportion to their purchases.
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 241
3. Franchise organizations are created when a franchisor links several successive stages in
the production–distribution process. Franchises include manufacturer-sponsored
retailer franchises (Honda and its dealers); manufacturer-sponsored wholesaler fran-
chises (Coca-Cola and its bottlers); and service-firm-sponsored retailer franchises
(Ramada Inn and its motel franchisees). Some franchising uses dual distribution: ver-
tical integration (franchisor owns and operates the units) and market governance
(franchisor licenses units to franchisees).
20
The New Competition in Retailing
The new competition in retailing is no longer between independent business units but
between whole systems of centrally programmed networks (corporate, administered, and
contractual) competing against one another to achieve the best cost economies
and customer response. Other developments include horizontal marketing systems
and multichannel marketing systems.
Horizontal Marketing Systems In the horizontal marketing system, two or
more unrelated companies put together resources or programs to exploit an emerging
marketing opportunity. Each company lacks the capital, know-how, production, or
marketing resources to venture alone, or it is afraid of the risk. The companies might
work with each other on a temporary or permanent basis or create a joint venture
company. Many supermarket chains have arrangements with local banks to offer in-
store banking, the way Citizens Bank has placed 500 branches inside New England
supermarkets.
Integrating Multichannel Marketing Systems Most companies have adopted
multichannel marketing, which occurs when a single firm uses two or more market-
ing channels to reach one or more customer segments. An integrated marketing
channel systemis one in which the strategies and tactics of selling through one chan-
nel reflect the strategies and tactics of selling through other channels.
By adding more channels, companies can gain three important benefits. The
first is increased market coverage. Not only are more customers able to shop for the
company’s products in more places, but customers who buy in more than one channel
are often more profitable than single-channel customers.
21
The second is lower chan-
nel cost—selling by phone is cheaper than personal visits to small customers. The
third is more customized selling—such as adding a technical sales force to sell more
complex equipment. However, new channels typically introduce conflict and control
problems. Different channels may end up competing for the same customers, and, as
the new channels become more independent, cooperation becomes more difficult.
Conflict, Cooperation, and Competition
No matter how well channels are designed and managed, there will be some conflict,
if for no other reason than that the interests of independent business entities don’t
always coincide. Channel conflict is generated when one channel member’s actions
prevent another channel from achieving its goal. Channel coordination occurs when
channel members are brought together to advance the goals of the channel, as
opposed to their own potentially incompatible goals.
22
Here we examine three ques-
tions: What types of conflict arise in channels? What causes channel conflict? What
can be done to resolve conflict situations?
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242 Part V Delivering Value
Types of Conflict and Competition Vertical channel conflict means conflict between
different levels within the same channel. General Motors came into conflict with its
dealers in trying to enforce policies on service, pricing, and advertising. Horizontal
channel conflict is conflict between members at the same level within the channel. Some
Pizza Inn franchisees complained that other Pizza Inn franchisees were cheating on
ingredients, maintaining poor service, and hurting the brand image.
Multichannel conflict exists when the manufacturer has established two or more
channels that sell to the same market. It’s likely to be especially intense when the
members of one channel get a lower price (based on larger volume purchases) or work
with a lower margin. Independent dealers were angered when Goodyear began selling
its popular tire brands through Sears, Wal-Mart, and Discount Tire. Goodyear even-
tually placated them by offering exclusive tire models not sold in other retail outlets.
Other strategies to reduce multichannel conflict are creating and enforcing rules of
engagement beforehand and compensating both parties that participate in a sale
regardless of which one books the order.
23
Causes of Channel Conflict One major cause of channel conflict is goal incompatibility.
For example, the manufacturer may want to achieve rapid market penetration through a
low-price policy. Dealers, in contrast, may prefer to work with high margins for short-run
profitability. Sometimes conflict arises from unclear roles and rights. HP may sell PCs to
large accounts through its own sales force, but its licensed dealers may also be trying to
sell to large accounts. Territory boundaries and credit for sales often produce conflict.
Conflict can also stem from differences in perception, as when the producer is opti-
mistic about the short-term economic outlook and wants dealers to carry more inven-
tory, while dealers are more pessimistic. At times, conflict can arise because of the
intermediaries’ dependence on the manufacturer. The fortunes of exclusive dealers,
such as auto dealers, are greatly affected by the manufacturer’s product and pricing
decisions, creating high potential for conflict.
Managing Channel Conflict Some channel conflict can be constructive and
lead to more dynamic adaptation in a changing environment.
24
Too much conflict
can be dysfunctional, however, so the challenge is not to eliminate conflict but to
manage it better. There are several mechanisms for effective conflict management
(see Table 13.2).
25
One is the adoption of superordinate goals, with channel mem-
bers agreeing on the fundamental goal they jointly seek, whether it’s survival,
market share, high quality, or customer satisfaction. Members usually come to
agreement when the channel faces an outside threat such as a more efficient com-
peting channel, an adverse piece of legislation, or a shift in consumer desires.
TABLE 13.2 Strategies for Managing Channel Conflict
? Adoption of superordinate goals
? Exchange of employees
? Joint membership in trade associations
? Co-optation
? Diplomacy, mediation, or arbitration
? Legal recourse
Source: Excerpted from Hallie Mummert, “Multi-Channel Marketers Earn a ‘C+’ on Returns,” Target Marketing,
October 2003, p. 158.
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 243
A useful step is to exchange persons between two or more channel levels. General
Motors executives might work briefly in some dealerships, and some dealership owners
might work in GM’s dealer policy department, to help participants appreciate the
other’s viewpoint. Marketers can accomplish much by encouraging joint membership
in and between trade associations. Co-optation is an effort by one organization to win
the support of another organization’s leaders by including them in advisory councils,
boards of directors, and the like. As long as the initiating organization treats the leaders
and their ideas seriously, co-optation can reduce conflict.
Diplomacy takes place when each side sends a person or group to meet with its coun-
terpart to resolve the conflict. Mediation means having a skilled, neutral third party rec-
oncile the two parties’ interests. Arbitration occurs when the two parties agree to present
their arguments to an arbitrator and accept the arbitration decision. When none of these
methods proves effective, a company or channel partner may choose to file a lawsuit.
Dilution and Cannibalization Marketers must also avoid diluting their brands
through inappropriate channels. This is especially a concern with luxury brands whose
images are built on the basis of exclusivity and personalized service. To reach affluent
shoppers who work long hours and have little time to shop, high-end fashion brands
such as Dior and Louis Vuitton now sell through e-commerce sites. These luxury mak-
ers also see their Web sites as a way for customers to research items before walking
into a store and a means to help combat fakes sold over the Internet.
26
Legal and Ethical Issues in Channel Relations
For the most part, companies are legally free to develop whatever channel arrangements
suit them. In fact, the law seeks to prevent companies from using exclusionary tactics
that might keep competitors from using a channel. Here we briefly consider the legality
of exclusive dealing, exclusive territories, tying agreements, and dealers’ rights.
With exclusive dealing, the seller allows only certain outlets to carry its products
and requires that these dealers not handle competitors’ products. Both parties benefit
from exclusive arrangements: The seller obtains more loyal and dependable outlets,
and the dealers obtain a steady source of supply of special products and stronger seller
support. Exclusive arrangements are legal as long as they don’t substantially lessen
competition or tend to create a monopoly, and both parties have voluntarily entered
into the agreement.
Exclusive dealing often includes exclusive territorial agreements. The producer
may agree not to sell to other dealers in a given area, or the dealer may agree to sell
only in its own territory. The first practice increases dealer enthusiasm and commit-
ment and is perfectly legal—a seller has no legal obligation to sell through more out-
lets than it wishes. The second practice, whereby the producer tries to keep a dealer
from selling outside its territory, is a major legal issue.
The producer of a strong brand sometimes sells it to dealers only if they will
take some or all of the rest of the line, a practice called full-line forcing. Such tying
agreements aren’t necessarily illegal, but they do violate U.S. law if they tend to
lessen competition substantially. Note that a producer’s right to terminate dealers is
somewhat restricted. In general, sellers can drop dealers “for cause,” but not if, for
instance, the dealers refuse to cooperate in a doubtful legal arrangement, such as
exclusive dealing or tying agreements.
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244 Part V Delivering Value
E-COMMERCE MARKETING PRACTICES
E-business describes the use of electronic means and platforms to conduct a com-
pany’s business. E-commerce means that the company or site transacts or facilitates
the online selling of products and services. E-commerce has given rise to
e-purchasing and e-marketing. E-purchasing means companies decide to buy goods,
services, and information from various online suppliers. E-marketing describes com-
pany efforts to inform buyers, communicate, promote, and sell its offerings online.
We can distinguish between pure-click companies, those that have launched a
Web site without any previous existence as a firm, and brick-and-click companies,
existing companies that have added an online site for information and/or e-commerce.
M-commerce (m for mobile) is another emerging trend in e-commerce.
Pure-Click Companies
There are several kinds of pure-click companies: search engines, Internet service
providers (ISPs), commerce sites, transaction sites, content sites, and enabler sites.
Commerce sites sell all types of products and services, notably books, music, toys,
insurance, travel services, clothes, and so on. “Breakthrough Marketing: Amazon”
describes that quintessential commerce site.
Although the popular press has given the most attention to business-to-consumer
(B2C) Web sites, even more activity is being conducted on business-to-business (B2B)
sites, which make markets more efficient. In the past, buyers had to exert a lot of effort
to gather information on worldwide suppliers. With the Internet, buyers have easy
access to information from (1) supplier Web sites; (2) infomediaries, third parties that
add value by aggregating information about alternatives; (3) market makers, third
Amazon started as the “world’s largest bookstore” in July 1995 and has blazed a
trail of e-commerce innovations ever since. It set out to create personalized store-
fronts for each customer by providing more useful information and more choices
than neighborhood stores. Amazon invites readers to review books, evaluate
them on a one- to five-star rating system, and vote on how helpful each review is.
Readers can browse and search pages from thousands of books, receive personal
recommendations based on their buying patterns, and buy with just one click.
And, to overcome the lag between purchase and delivery, Amazon offers fast,
inexpensive shipping.
Today Amazon generates $10 billion in annual revenue from its Web sites
in Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, Austria, France, China, and Japan,
offering everything from clothing and kitchen items to downloadable movies and
music. It also profits from serving as an electronic marketplace, enabling all kinds
of merchants to sell on Amazon.com. Its Amazon Web project opened its data-
bases to more than 65,000 programmers and businesses that, in turn, have cre-
ated moneymaking Web sites, online shopping interfaces, and services for
Amazon’s 800,000 sellers. Recently Amazon began renting excess data storage
capacity to businesses, the first in a new series of technology offerings. What will
Amazon sell next?
27
BREAKTHROUGH MARKETING: AMAZON
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 245
parties that create markets linking buyers and sellers; and (4) customer communities,
sites where buyers can swap stories about suppliers’ offerings.
The net impact of these mechanisms is to make prices more transparent.
28
In the
case of undifferentiated products, price pressure will increase. For highly differentiated
products, buyers will gain a better picture of the items’ true value. Suppliers of superior
products will be able to offset price transparency with value transparency; suppliers of
undifferentiated products will have to drive down their costs to compete.
Brick-and-Click Companies
Many brick-and-mortar companies debated adding an e-commerce channel, fearing
that channel conflict would arise from competing with their offline retailers, agents,
or company-owned stores.
29
Most eventually added the Internet as a distribution
channel after seeing how much business their online competitors were generating.
The question is how to sell both through intermediaries and online. There are
at least three strategies for trying to gain acceptance from intermediaries: (1) offer dif-
ferent brands or products on the Internet; (2) offer offline partners higher commis-
sions to cushion the negative impact on sales; and (3) take orders on the Web site but
have retailers deliver and collect payment. Harley-Davidson asks customers who want
to order accessories online to select a participating dealer. The dealer, in turn, fulfills
the order, adhering to Harley’s standards for prompt shipping.
30
M-Commerce
Consumers and businesspeople no longer need to be near a computer to go online. All
they need is a cellular phone or personal digital assistant to wirelessly connect to the
Internet so they can check the weather, sports scores, and more; send and receive
e-mail messages; and place online orders. Many see a big future in what is now called
m-commerce (m for mobile).
31
M-commerce success will be driven, in part, by conven-
ience, ease of use, trust, and widespread availability.
32
For example, in Japan, millions of teenagers carry DoCoMo phones from NTT
(Nippon Telephone and Telegraph). In addition to voice and text communication,
they can use their phones to order goods or make purchases at participating outlets
like McDonald’s. Subscribers receive a monthly bill from NTT listing the subscriber
fee, usage fee, and cost of all other transactions—and they can pay the bill at any
7-Eleven convenience store.
33
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Most producers don’t sell their goods directly to final users. Between producers
and final users stands one or more marketing channels, a host of marketing interme-
diaries performing a variety of functions. Companies use intermediaries when they
lack the financial resources to carry out direct marketing, when direct marketing isn’t
feasible, and when they can earn more by doing so. The most important functions
performed by intermediaries are information, promotion, negotiation, ordering,
financing, risk taking, physical possession, payment, and title.
Manufacturers can reach a market by selling direct or using one-, two-, or
three-level channels, depending on customer needs, channel objectives, and their
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246 Part V Delivering Value
identification and evaluation of major channel alternatives. Effective channel manage-
ment calls for selecting intermediaries, then training and motivating them to build a
long-term, mutually profitable partnership. Three key channel trends are the growth
of vertical marketing systems, horizontal marketing systems, and multichannel mar-
keting systems. All channels have the potential for conflict and competition.
Marketers have to consider legal and ethical issues relating to practices such as exclu-
sive dealing or territories, tying agreements, and dealers’ rights. As e-commerce has
grown in importance, channel integration must recognize the distinctive strengths of
online and offline selling to maximize their joint contributions.
NOTES
1. Leila Abboud, “New Treatment: Electronics Giant
Seeks a Cure in Health Care,” Wall Street Journal,
July 11, 2007, p. A1; Kerry Capell, “Thinking
Simple at Philips,” BusinessWeek, December 11,
2006, p. 50; “Philips—Unfulfilled,”
brandchannel.com, June 20, 2005; Royal Philips
Electronics Annual Report, 2006; Jennifer L. Schenker,
“Fine-Tuning a Fuzzy Image,” TIMEeurope.com,
Spring 2002.
2. Anne T. Coughlan, Erin Anderson, Louis W. Stern,
and Adel I. El-Ansary, Marketing Channels, 6th ed.
(Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2001).
3. Louis W. Stern and Barton A. Weitz, “The
Revolution in Distribution: Challenges and
Opportunities,” Long Range Planning 30, no. 6
(1997): 823–829.
4. For a summary of academic research, see Erin
Anderson and Anne T. Coughlan, “Channel
Management: Structure, Governance, and
Relationship Management,” in Bart Weitz and
Robin Wensley, eds., Handbook of Marketing
(London: Sage Publications, 2001), pp. 223–247 and
Gary L. Frazier, “Organizing and Managing
Channels of Distribution,” Journal of the Academy
of Marketing Sciences 27, no. 2 (1999): 226–240.
5. Asim Ansari, Carl F. Mela, and Scott A. Neslin,
“Customer Channel Migration,” Journal of
Marketing, 2007, forthcoming; Jacquelyn S. Thomas
and Ursula Y. Sullivan, “Managing Marketing
Communications,” Journal of Marketing 69
(October 2005): 239–251; Edward J. Fox, Alan L.
Montgomery, and Leonard M. Lodish (2004),
“Consumer Shopping and Spending Across Retail
Formats,” The Journal of Business 77 (2): S25–S60;
Sridhar Balasubramanian, Rajagopal Raghunathan,
and Vijay Mahajan (2005), “Consumers in a
Multichannel Environment: Product Utility,
Process Utility, and Channel Choice,” Journal of
Interactive Marketing 19 (2): 12–30.
6. Chekitan S. Dev and Don E. Schultz, “In the Mix:
A Customer-Focused Approach Can Bring the
Current Marketing Mix into the 21st Century,”
Marketing Management 14 (January/February 2005).
7. For additional information on reverse-flow
channels, see Marianne Jahre, “Household Waste
Collection as a Reverse Channel—A Theoretical
Perspective,” International Journal of Physical
Distribution and Logistics 25, no. 2 (1995): 39–55;
and Terrance L. Pohlen and M. Theodore Farris II,
“Reverse Logistics in Plastics Recycling,”
International Journal of Physical Distribution and
Logistics 22, no. 7 (1992): 35–37.
8. Katherine Boehret, “The Mossberg Solution:
How the Big Photo-Sharing Sites Stack Up,”
Wall Street Journal, August 1, 2007, p. D8; William
M. Bulkeley, “Kodak Revamps Wal-Mart Kiosks,”
Wall Street Journal, September 6, 2006; Faith
Keenan, “Big Yellow’s Digital Dilemma,”
BusinessWeek, March 24, 2003, pp. 80–81.
9. Louis P. Bucklin, A Theory of Distribution Channel
Structure (Berkeley: Institute of Business and
Economic Research, University of California, 1966).
10. Allison Enright, “Shed New Light,” Marketing
News, May 1, 2006, pp. 9–10.
11. For more on relationship marketing and the
governance of marketing channels, see Jan B. Heide,
“Interorganizational Governance in Marketing
Channels,” Journal of Marketing (January 1994):
71–85.
12. Anderson and Coughlan, “Channel Management:
Structure, Governance, and Relationship
Management,” pp. 223–247.
13. Bert Rosenbloom, Marketing Channels: A Management
View, 5th ed. (Hinsdale, IL: Dryden, 1995).
14. Bruce Horovitz, “Cranium Guys Have Their Inner
Child on Speed Dial,” USA Today, May 8, 2006, p. 7B;
Christopher Palmeri, “March of the Toys—Out of the
Toy Section,” BusinessWeek, November 29, 2004,
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 247
p. 37; Miles Cook and Rob Tyndall, “Lessons from
the Leaders,” Supply Chain Management Review,
November–December 2001, pp. 22+.
15. Thomas H. Davenport and Jeanne G. Harris,
Competing on Analytics: the New Science of Winning
(Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2007).
16. For an excellent report on this issue, see Howard
Sutton, Rethinking the Company’s Selling and
Distribution Channels, research report no. 885,
Conference Board, 1986, p. 26.
17. V. Kasturi Rangan, Transforming Your Go-to-Market
Strategy: The Three Disciplines of Channel Management
(Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2006).
18. Parker Howell, “Columbia Paint Takeover Set,”
Spokesman-Review (Spokane), August 29, 2007.
19. Russell Johnston and Paul R. Lawrence, “Beyond
Vertical Integration—The Rise of the Value-Adding
Partnership,” Harvard Business Review (July–August
1988): 94–101. See also Judy A. Siguaw, Penny M.
Simpson, and Thomas L. Baker, “Effects of
Supplier Market Orientation on Distributor
Market Orientation and the Channel Relationship:
The Distribution Perspective,” Journal of Marketing
(July 1998): 99–111; Narakesari Narayandas and
Manohar U. Kalwani, “Long-Term
Manufacturer–Supplier Relationships: Do They
Pay Off for Supplier Firms?” Journal of Marketing
(January 1995): 1–16.
20. Raji Srinivasan, “Dual Distribution and Intangible
Firm Value: Franchising in Restaurant Chains,”
Journal of Marketing 70 ( July 2006): 120–135.
21. Rajkumar Venkatesan, V. Kumar, and Nalini
Ravishanker, “Multichannel Shopping: Causes
and Consequences,” Journal of Marketing 71
(April 2007): 114–132.
22. Anne T. Coughlan and Louis W. Stern, “Marketing
Channel Design and Management,” in Dawn
Iacobucci, ed., Kellogg on Marketing (New York:
John Wiley, 2001), pp. 247–269.
23. Alberto Sa Vinhas and Erin Anderson, “How
Potential Conflict Drives Channel Structure:
Concurrent (Direct and Indirect) Channels,” Journal
of Marketing Research 42 (November 2005): 507–515.
24. For an example of when conflict can be viewed as
helpful, see Anil Arya and Brian Mittendorf,
“Benefits of Channel Discord in the Sale of Durable
Goods,” Marketing Science 25 (January-February
2006): 91–96 and Nirmalya Kumar, “Living with
Channel Conflict,” CMO Magazine, October 2004.
25. This section draws on Coughlan, Anderson, Stern,
and El-Ansary, Marketing Channels, ch. 6. See also
Jonathan D. Hibbard, Nirmalya Kumar, and Louis
W. Stern, “Examining the Impact of Destructive
Acts in Marketing Channel Relationships,” Journal
of Marketing Research 38 (February 2001): 45–61;
Kersi D. Antia and Gary L. Frazier, “The Severity
of Contract Enforcement in Interfirm Channel
Relationships,” Journal of Marketing 65 (October
2001): 67–81; James R. Brown, Chekitan S. Dev,
and Dong-Jin Lee, “Managing Marketing Channel
Opportunism: The Efficiency of Alternative
Governance Mechanisms,” Journal of Marketing 64
(April 2001): 51–65.
26. Christina Passriello, “Fashionably Late? Designer
Brands Are Starting to Embrace E-Commerce,”
Wall Street Journal, May 19, 2006, pp. B1, B4.
27. Mylene Mangalindan, “Amazon’s MP3 Store Takes
Aim at Apple,” Wall Street Journal, September 26,
2007, p. B3; Jim Carlton, “Amazon Looks to Keep
Sales Momentum,” Wall Street Journal, July 25,
2007, p. A3; Riva Richmond, “Amazon Offer: Its
Gigabytes Now for Sale,” Wall Street Journal, June
27, 2007, p. B5D; “Click to Download,” The
Economist, August 19, 2006, pp. 57–58; Robert D.
Hof, “Jeff Bezos’ Risky Bet,” BusinessWeek,
November 13, 2006; Erick Schonfield, “The Great
Giveaway,” Business 2.0, April 2005, 80–86.
28. For an in-depth academic examination, see John G.
Lynch, Jr. and Dan Ariely, “Wine Online: Search
Costs and Competition on Price, Quality, and
Distribution,” Marketing Science 19 (Winter 2000):
83–103.
29. Described in Inside 1-to-1, Peppers and Rogers
Group newsletter, May 14, 2001.
30. Bob Tedeshi, “How Harley Revved Online Sales,”
Business 2.0, December 2002/January 2003, p. 44.
31. Douglas Lamont, Conquering the Wireless World: The
Age of M-Commerce (New York: Wiley, 2001); Marc
Weingarten, “The Medium Is the Instant Message,”
Business 2.0, February 2002, pp. 98–99.
32. Gordon Xu and Jairo A. Gutierrez, “An Exploratory
Study of Killer Applications and Critical Success
Factors in M-commerce,” Journal of Electronic
Commerce in Organizations 4.3 (July-September
2006): 63+.
33. Kanako Takahara, “McDonald’s, DoCoMo Team
Up on Marketing,” Japan Times, February 27, 2007.
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doc_655809044.pdf
Royal Philips Electronics of the Netherlands is one of the world's biggest electronics companies and Europe's largest, with annual sales of over $36 billion. The company offers a broad range of products, from flat screen TVs and electric razors for consumers to medical imaging equipment and professional lighting systems for hospitals and businesses.
230
In this chapter, we will address the following questions:
1. What are marketing channel systems and value networks?
2. What functions do marketing channels perform?
3. What decisions do companies face in designing, managing, and integrating their chan-
nels?
4. What key issues do companies face in e-commerce?
C H A P T E R 1 3
Designing and
Managing Integrated
Marketing Channels
PART V Delivering Value
MARKETING MANAGEMENT AT ROYAL
PHILIPS ELECTRONICS
Royal Philips Electronics of the Netherlands is one of the world’s biggest electronics companies
and Europe’s largest, with annual sales of over $36 billion. The company offers a broad range
of products, from flat screen TVs and electric razors for consumers to medical imaging
equipment and professional lighting systems for hospitals and businesses. Philips uses local dis-
tributors in some countries but relies mainly on its company sales force and its own Web sites to
handle orders from institutional and industrial buyers. A hospital purchasing agent can log on,
compare product specifications, enter a purchase order, check the delivery status of a previous
order, or access service and support databases.
On the consumer side, Philips products reach buyers worldwide through a diverse distri-
bution model that includes mass merchants, retail chains, independent stores, and small specialty
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 231
stores. Philips has created an organization designed around these retail customers, with dedi-
cated Global Key Account Managers serving leading retailers such as Best Buy, Carrefour,
Costco, Dixons, and Tesco. The company also sells to consumers via its own online store as well
as through other online retailers.
1
S
uccessful value creation needs successful value delivery. Holistic marketers are
increasingly taking a value network viewof their businesses, examining the whole supply
chain that links rawmaterials, components, and manufactured goods and shows howthey
move toward the final consumers. This chapter discusses the strategic and tactical issues
of marketing channels and value networks; Chapter 14 will examine marketing channel
issues fromthe perspective of retailers, wholesalers, and physical-distribution agencies.
MARKETING CHANNELS AND VALUE NETWORKS
Most producers don’t sell their goods directly to the final users; between them stands
a set of intermediaries performing a variety of functions. These intermediaries consti-
tute marketing channels (also called trade channels or distribution channels), sets of
interdependent organizations involved in the process of making a product or service
available for use or consumption. They’re the set of pathways a product or service fol-
lows after production, culminating in purchase and use by the final end user.
2
The Importance of Channels
A marketing channel systemis the particular set of marketing channels employed by
a firm. Decisions about the marketing channel system are among the most critical fac-
ing management. In the United States, channel members collectively earn margins
that account for 30% to 50% of the ultimate selling price, whereas advertising typi-
cally accounts for less than 7% of the final price.
3
Marketing channels also represent a
substantial opportunity cost because they don’t just serve markets, they must also make
markets.
4
The channels chosen affect all other marketing decisions. The company’s pric-
ing depends on whether it uses mass merchandisers or high-quality boutiques. The
firm’s sales force and advertising decisions depend on how much training and motiva-
tion dealers need. In addition, channel decisions involve relatively long-term commit-
ments to other firms. When an automaker signs up independent dealers to sell its
automobiles, it can’t buy them out the next day and replace them with company-
owned outlets. Holistic marketers ensure that marketing decisions in all these
different areas are made to collectively maximize value.
Today’s successful companies are also multiplying the number of “go-to-market”
or hybrid channels in any one area. For example, Hewlett-Packard uses its sales force
to sell to large accounts, outbound telemarketing to sell to medium-sized accounts,
direct mail with an inbound number for small accounts, retailers for still smaller
accounts and consumers, and the Internet to sell specialty items. Consumers may
choose their preferred channels based on price, product assortment, and convenience,
as well as their economic, social, or experiential shopping goals.
5
The firm must decide how much effort to devote to push versus pull marketing.
A push strategy uses the manufacturer’s sales force and trade promotion to induce inter-
mediaries to carry, promote, and sell the product to end users. This is appropriate where
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232 Part V Delivering Value
there is low brand loyalty in a category, brand choice is made in the store, the product is
an impulse item, and product benefits are well understood. In a pull strategy, the manu-
facturer uses advertising and promotion to persuade consumers to ask intermediaries for
the product, thus inducing the intermediaries to order it. This is appropriate when there
is high brand loyalty and high involvement in the category, people perceive differences
between brands, and people choose the brand before they shop. Top marketing firms
such as Nike and Intel skillfully employ both push and pull strategies.
Value Networks
The company should first think of the target market and then design the supply chain
backward from that point, a view called demand-chain planning. Northwestern’s
Don Schultz says: “A demand chain management approach doesn’t just push things
through the system. It emphasizes what solutions consumers are looking for, not what
products we are trying to sell them.” He suggests replacing the marketing “four Ps”
with a new acronym, SIVA, which stands for solutions, information, value, and access.
6
The concept of a value network—a system of partnerships and alliances that a
firm creates to source, augment, and deliver its offerings—takes an even broader view.
A value network includes a firm’s suppliers and its suppliers’ suppliers, and its immedi-
ate customers and their end customers. The value network includes valued relations
with others such as university researchers and regulatory agencies.
Demand chain planning yields several insights. First, the firm can estimate
whether more money is made upstream or downstream, in case it might want to
integrate backward or forward. Second, the company is more aware of disturbances
anywhere in the supply chain that might cause costs, prices, or supplies to change
suddenly. Third, companies can go online with business partners for faster, more
accurate, and less costly communications, transactions, and payments.
THE ROLE OF MARKETING CHANNELS
Why would a producer delegate some of the selling job to intermediaries? Delegation
means relinquishing some control over how and to whom the products are sold. But
producers can often gain effectiveness and efficiency by using intermediaries. It’s
impractical for the William Wrigley Jr. Company to establish small retail gum shops
throughout the world or to sell gum by mail order. It would have to sell gum along
with many other small products and would end up in the drugstore and grocery store
business. Wrigley finds it easier to work through the extensive network of privately
owned distribution organizations. Even General Motors would be hard-pressed to
replace all the tasks handled by its 8,000 dealers.
Channel Functions and Flows
A marketing channel performs the work of moving products from producers to con-
sumers, overcoming the time, place, and possession gaps that separate goods and servi-
ces from those who need or want them. Members of the marketing channel perform a
number of key functions (see Table 13.1). Some functions (physical, title, and promo-
tion) constitute a forward flow of activity from the company to the customer; other func-
tions (ordering and payment) constitute a backward flow from customers to the company.
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 233
Still others (information, negotiation, finance, and risk taking) occur in both directions.
If the flows for forklift trucks shown in Figure 13.1 were superimposed in one diagram,
the complexity of even simple marketing channels would be apparent.
The question is not whether these channel functions need to be performed—they
must be—but rather who is to perform them. All channel functions have three things in
common: They use up scarce resources; they can often be performed better through
specialization; and they can be shifted among channel members. If a manufacturer
shifts some functions to intermediaries, its costs and prices go down, but the interme-
diaries must add a charge to cover their work. Still, if the intermediaries are more
efficient than the manufacturer, prices to consumers should be lower. If consumers
Suppliers Manufacturer Dealers Customers
Suppliers
Suppliers
Suppliers
Advertising
agency
Advertising
agency
Manufacturer Customers Dealers
1. Physical Flow
2. Title Flow
3. Payment Flow
4. Information Flow
5. Promotion Flow
Suppliers
Transporters,
warehouses
Manufacturer Dealers Transporters Customers
Banks Banks Manufacturer Dealers
Customers
Transporters,
warehouses,
banks
Transporters,
warehouses,
banks
Manufacturer Dealers
Transporters,
banks
Customers
Banks
Transporters,
warehouses
FIGURE 13.1 Five Marketing Flows in the Marketing Channel for Forklift Trucks
TABLE 13.1 Channel Member Functions
? Gather information about potential and current customers, competitors, and other actors
and forces in the marketing environment.
? Develop and disseminate persuasive communications to stimulate purchasing.
? Reach agreements on price and other terms so that transfer of ownership or possession can
be effected.
? Place orders with manufacturers.
? Acquire the funds to finance inventories at different levels in the marketing channel.
? Assume risks connected with carrying out channel work.
? Provide for the successive storage and movement of physical products.
? Provide for buyers’ payment of their bills through banks and other financial institutions.
? Oversee actual transfer of ownership from one organization or person to another.
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234 Part V Delivering Value
(a) Consumer Marketing Channels
Retailer Retailer Retailer
Wholesaler Wholesaler
Jobber
0-level 0-level 1-level 1-level 2-level 2-level 3-level 3-level
Manufacturer Manufacturer Manufacturer Manufacturer
Consumer Consumer Consumer Consumer
(b) Industrial Marketing Channels
Manufacturer Manufacturer Manufacturer Manufacturer
Industrial
distributors
Industrial
customer
Industrial
customer
Industrial
customer
Industrial
customer
Manufacturer's
representative
Manufacturer's
sales branch
FIGURE 13.2 Consumer and Industrial Marketing Channels
perform some functions themselves, they should enjoy still lower prices. Changes
in channel institutions thus reflect the discovery of more efficient ways to combine or
separate the economic functions that provide assortments of products to target
customers.
Channel Levels
The producer and the final customer are part of every channel. We’ll use the number
of intermediary levels to designate the length of a channel. Figure 13.2a illustrates
consumer-goods marketing channels of different lengths, while Figure 13.2b illus-
trates industrial marketing channels.
A zero-level channel (also called a direct-marketing channel) consists of a pro-
ducer selling directly to final customers through door-to-door sales, Internet selling,
mail order, telemarketing, home parties, TV selling, manufacturer-owned stores, and
other methods. A one-level channel contains one intermediary, such as a retailer.
A two-level channel contains two intermediaries; a three-level channel contains three inter-
mediaries. From the producer’s perspective, obtaining information about end users and
exercising control becomes more difficult as the number of channel levels increases.
Channels normally describe a forward movement of products, but there are also
reverse-flow channels, important for bringing products back for reuse (such as refillable
bottles); refurbishing items for resale; recycling products; and disposing of products
and packaging. Several intermediaries play a role in these channels, including manu-
facturers’ redemption centers, community groups, traditional intermediaries such as
trash-collection specialists, recycling centers, trash-recycling brokers, and central-
processing warehousing.
7
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 235
Service Sector Channels
Producers of services and ideas also face the problem of making their output available
and accessible to target populations. Schools develop “educational-dissemination sys-
tems” and hospitals develop “health-delivery systems.” These institutions must deter-
mine agencies and locations for reaching a population that is spread out over an area.
Marketing channels are also changing in “person” marketing. Besides live and pro-
grammed entertainment, entertainers can reach fans online in many ways—via their
own Web sites, social community sites such as MySpace, and third-party Web sites.
And as Internet technology advances, service industries such as banking, travel, and
insurance are operating through new channels. Kodak offers its customers four ways
to print their digital photos—minilabs in retail outlets, home printers, the Kodak
Gallery Web site, and self-service kiosks.
8
CHANNEL-DESIGN DECISIONS
Designing a marketing channel system involves analyzing customer needs, establish-
ing channel objectives, identifying major channel alternatives, and evaluating major
channel alternatives.
Analyzing Customers’ Desired Service Output Levels
The marketer must understand the service output levels its target customers want.
Channels produce five service outputs:
1. Lot size.The number of units the channel permits a typical customer to purchase on
one occasion. In buying for its fleet, Hertz wants a channel from which it can buy a
large lot size; a household wants a channel that permits buying a lot size of one.
2. Waiting and delivery time.The average time customers of that channel wait for
receipt of the goods. Customers normally prefer fast delivery channels.
3. Spatial convenience.The degree to which the marketing channel makes it easy for
customers to purchase the product.
4. Product variety.The assortment breadth provided by the channel. Normally, cus-
tomers prefer a greater assortment, which increases the chance of finding what they
need.
5. Service backup.The add-on services (credit, delivery, installation, repairs) provided
by the channel.
Providing greater service outputs means increased channel costs and higher
prices for customers. The success of discount resellers (online and offline) indicates
that many consumers will accept lower outputs if they can save money.
Establishing Objectives and Constraints
Marketers should state their channel objectives in terms of targeted service output lev-
els. Under competitive conditions, channel institutions should arrange their func-
tional tasks to minimize total channel costs and still provide desired levels of service
outputs.
9
Usually, planners can identify several market segments that want different
service levels. Effective planning requires determining which market segments to
serve and the best channels for each.
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Channel objectives vary with product characteristics. Perishable products require
more direct marketing. Bulky products, such as building materials, require channels that
minimize the shipping distance and the amount of handling. Nonstandard products, such
as custom-built machinery, are sold directly by company sales representatives. Products
requiring installation or maintenance services, such as heating systems, are usually sold
and maintained by the company or franchised dealers. High-unit-value products such as
turbines are often sold through a company sales force rather than intermediaries.
Channel design is also influenced by such environmental factors as competitors’
channels, economic conditions, and legal regulations and restrictions. U.S. law looks
unfavorably on channel arrangements that substantially lessen competition or create a
monopoly.
Identifying Major Channel Alternatives
Companies can choose from a wide variety of channels for reaching customers, each
of which has unique strengths as well as weaknesses. Each channel alternative is
described by (1) the types of available intermediaries; (2) the number of intermediaries
needed; and (3) the terms and responsibilities of each channel member.
Types of Intermediaries A firm needs to identify the types of intermediaries available
to carry on its channel work. Some intermediaries—merchants such as wholesalers and
retailers—buy, take title to, and resell the merchandise. Agents such as brokers, manufac-
turers’ representatives, and sales agents search for customers and may negotiate on the
producer’s behalf but don’t take title to the goods. Facilitators, including transportation
companies, independent warehouses, banks, and advertising agencies, assist in the distri-
bution process but neither take title to goods nor negotiate purchases or sales. Companies
should identify innovative marketing channels. For instance, seeing its printed catalog as
out of date, commercial lighting company Display Supply & Lighting developed an inter-
active online catalog that cost less, sped up the sales process, and increased revenue.
10
Number of Intermediaries In deciding how many intermediaries to use, compa-
nies can use one of three strategies: exclusive, selective, or intensive distribution.
Exclusive distribution means severely limiting the number of intermediaries. Firms
such as automakers use this approach to maintain control over the service level and
service outputs offered by the resellers. Often it involves exclusive dealing arrange-
ments, in which resellers agree not to carry competing brands.
Selective distribution relies on more than a few but less than all of the inter-
mediaries willing to carry a particular product. The company doesn’t have to worry
about too many outlets; it can gain adequate market coverage with more control and
less cost than intensive distribution. In intensive distribution, the manufacturer
places the goods or services in as many outlets as possible. This strategy is generally
used for items such as snack foods, newspapers, and gum, products the consumer seeks
to buy frequently or in a variety of locations.
Terms and Responsibilities of Channel Members Each channel member must
be treated respectfully and given the opportunity to be profitable.
11
The main ele-
ments in the “trade-relations mix” are price policy, conditions of sale, territorial
rights, and specific services to be performed by each party.
Price policy calls for the producer to establish a price list and schedule of dis-
counts and allowances that intermediaries see as equitable and sufficient. Conditions of
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 237
sale are payment terms and producer guarantees. Most producers grant cash discounts
to distributors for early payment. Producers might also provide distributors a guaran-
tee against defective merchandise or price declines. A guarantee against price declines
gives distributors an incentive to buy more.
Distributors’ territorial rights define the distributors’ territories and the terms
under which the producer will enfranchise other distributors. Distributors normally
expect to receive full credit for all sales in their territory, whether or not they did the
selling. Mutual services and responsibilities must be carefully spelled out, especially in
franchised and exclusive-agency channels. McDonald’s provides franchisees with a
building, promotional support, a recordkeeping system, training, and general admin-
istrative and technical assistance. In turn, franchisees must satisfy company standards
for the physical facilities, cooperate with promotional programs, furnish requested
information, and buy supplies from specified vendors.
Evaluating the Major Alternatives
The company must evaluate each alternative against appropriate economic, control,
and adaptive criteria. Figure 13.3 shows the value added per sale and cost per transac-
tion of six different sales channels. The firm should determine whether its own sales
force or a sales agency will produce more sales; next, it estimates the costs of selling
different volumes through each channel.
Value-added
partners
Telemarketing
Internet
High
Low
Low High
Direct marketing
channels
"Indirect" channels
Direct sales
channels
Cost per Transaction
V
a
l
u
e
-
a
d
d
o
f
S
a
l
e
Retail stores
Distributors
Sales force
FIGURE 13.3 The Value-Adds versus Costs of Different Channels
Source: Oxford Associates, adapted from Dr. Rowland T. Moriarity, Cubex Corp.
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238 Part V Delivering Value
Using a sales agency poses a control problem because the agency is an inde-
pendent firm seeking to maximize its profits. Agents may concentrate on customers
who buy the most, but not necessarily of the producer’s goods. Furthermore, agents
might not master the details of every product they carry or handle all promotion
materials effectively. To develop a channel, the members must make some mutual
commitments for a specified period; this reduces the producer’s ability to respond to a
changing marketplace. In dynamic, volatile, or uncertain environments, producers
need channels and policies that provide high adaptability.
CHANNEL-MANAGEMENT DECISIONS
After a firm has chosen a channel system, it must select, train, motivate, and evaluate
individual intermediaries for each channel. It must also modify channel design and
arrangements over time.
Selecting Channel Members
Companies need to select their channel members carefully because to customers, the
channels are the company. Producers should determine what characteristics distin-
guish the better intermediaries and examine the number of years in business, other
lines carried, growth and profit record, financial strength, cooperativeness, and ser-
vice reputation of potential channel members. If the intermediaries are sales agents,
producers should evaluate the number and character of other lines carried and the size
and quality of the sales force. If the intermediaries want exclusive distribution, the
producer should evaluate locations, future growth potential, and type of clientele.
Training and Motivating Channel Members
A company needs to view its intermediaries in the same way it views its end users. It
needs to determine intermediaries’ needs and construct a channel positioning such that
its channel offering is tailored to provide superior value to these intermediaries. To
improve intermediaries’ performance, the company should provide training, market
research, and other capability-building programs. The company must also constantly
reinforce that its intermediaries are partners in the joint effort to satisfy customers.
Producers vary greatly in channel power, the ability to alter channel members’
behavior so that the members take actions they wouldn’t have taken otherwise.
12
Often, gaining intermediaries’ cooperation can be a huge challenge.
13
More sophisti-
cated producers try to forge a long-term partnership with channel members. The
manufacturer communicates clearly what it expects from its distributors in the way of
market coverage and other channel issues and may establish a compensation plan for
adhering to these policies.
Evaluating Channel Members
Producers must periodically evaluate intermediaries’ performance against such stan-
dards as sales-quota attainment, average inventory levels, customer delivery time,
treatment of damaged and lost goods, and cooperation in promotional and training
programs (see “Marketing Skills: Evaluating Intermediaries”). A producer will occa-
sionally discover that it is paying particular intermediaries too much for what they are
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 239
actually doing. One manufacturer compensating a distributor for holding inventories
found that the stock was actually held in a public warehouse at its own expense.
Producers should set up functional discounts in which they pay specified amounts for
the intermediary’s performance of each agreed-upon service. Underperformers need
to be counseled, retrained, remotivated, or terminated.
Modifying Channel Arrangements
Channel arrangements must be reviewed periodically and modified when distribution
isn’t working as planned, consumer buying patterns change, the market expands, new
competition arises, innovative distribution channels emerge, and the product moves
into later stages in the product life cycle. No marketing channel remains effective over
the entire product life cycle. Early buyers might be willing to pay for high-cost value-
added channels, but later buyers will switch to lower-cost channels. In competitive
markets with low entry barriers, the optimal channel structure will change over time;
the firm may add or drop individual channel members, add or drop particular market
channels, or develop a new way to sell goods.
Adding or dropping an individual channel member requires an incremental
analysis to determine what the firm’s profits would look like with and without this
intermediary. Increasingly, marketers are using datamining to analyze customer
shopping data as input for channel decisions.
15
The most difficult decision is whether
to revise the overall channel strategy.
16
Channels can become outmoded as a gap
arises between the existing distribution system and the ideal system to satisfy cus-
tomers’ (and producers’) requirements. This is why Avon’s door-to-door system for
selling cosmetics had to be modified as more women entered the workforce, for
example.
How important is it for marketers to evaluate and manage suppliers, wholesalers,
retailers, and other intermediaries? One company found that unpredictable sup-
plier deliveries were causing it to hold $200 million in excess inventory. By eval-
uating suppliers on standards such as on-time delivery, this company slashed its
costs. To start, determine how suppliers (and their suppliers) as well as distribu-
tors can influence the company’s performance. Also, translate companywide
strategic goals and measurements into specific targets and measures for channel
partners. Finally, continually measure and reward performance to keep channels
efficient, reactive, and reliable.
A key criterion for toymaker Cranium is how well an intermediary can sup-
port the company’s drive for growth. To get an edge in its highly competitive
industry, the company often works with channel members that typically don’t
carry toys and games. Early on, it arranged to sell its Cranium game in Starbucks
outlets, an innovative deal that built Cranium’s brand. Today its games are still
sold in Starbucks but now they’re also in Whole Foods Market, Barnes & Noble,
and thousands of other stores in 30 countries.
14
MARKETING SKILLS: EVALUATING INTERMEDIARIES
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240 Part V Delivering Value
CHANNEL INTEGRATION AND SYSTEMS
Distribution channels don’t stand still. New wholesaling and retailing institutions
emerge, and new channel systems evolve. We look next at the recent growth of verti-
cal, horizontal, and multichannel marketing systems and see how these systems coop-
erate, conflict, and compete.
Vertical Marketing Systems
One of the most significant channel developments is the rise of vertical marketing sys-
tems. A conventional marketing channel comprises an independent producer,
wholesaler(s), and retailer(s). Each is a separate business seeking to maximize its own
profits, even if this goal reduces profit for the system as a whole. No channel member
has complete or substantial control over other members.
A vertical marketing system (VMS), by contrast, comprises the producer,
wholesaler(s), and retailer(s) acting as a unified system. One channel member, the
channel captain, owns the others, franchises them, or has so much power that they all
cooperate. The channel captain can be the producer, the wholesaler, or the retailer.
Channel stewardship is the ability of a given participant (steward) in a distribution chan-
nel to create a go-to-market strategy that simultaneously addresses customers’ best
interests and drives profits for all channel partners. An effective channel steward con-
siders the channel from the customer’s point of view and advocates for change among
all participants, transforming disparate entities into partners with a common
purpose.
17
VMSs arose as a result of strong channel members’ attempts to control channel
behavior and eliminate conflict from independent channel members pursuing their
own objectives. They achieve economies through size, bargaining power, and elimina-
tion of duplicated services. VMSs have become the dominant distribution mode in the
U.S. consumer marketplace, serving between 70% and 80% of the total market.
There are three types of VMSs: corporate, administered, and contractual.
A corporate VMS combines successive stages of production and distribution
under single ownership. Companies that desire a high level of control over their chan-
nels favor vertical integration. Sherwin-Williams, for example, makes paint but also
owns and operates 3,200 retail outlets.
18
An administered VMS coordinates successive
stages of production and distribution through one member’s size and power.
Manufacturers of a dominant brand are able to secure strong trade cooperation and
support from resellers. Thus Campbell Soup can command cooperation from its
resellers in connection with displays, shelf space, promotions, and price policies.
A contractual VMS consists of independent firms at different levels of production
and distribution, integrating their programs on a contractual basis to obtain more
economies or sales impact than they could achieve alone. Johnston and Lawrence call
them “value-adding partnerships” (VAPs).
19
Contractual VMSs are of three types:
1. Wholesaler-sponsored voluntary chains organize groups of independent retailers to better
compete with large chains through standardized selling practices and buying economies.
2. Retailer cooperatives arise when the stores take the initiative and organize a new busi-
ness entity to carry on wholesaling and possibly some production. Members of retail
cooperatives concentrate their purchases through the co-op, jointly plan their adver-
tising, and share in profits in proportion to their purchases.
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 241
3. Franchise organizations are created when a franchisor links several successive stages in
the production–distribution process. Franchises include manufacturer-sponsored
retailer franchises (Honda and its dealers); manufacturer-sponsored wholesaler fran-
chises (Coca-Cola and its bottlers); and service-firm-sponsored retailer franchises
(Ramada Inn and its motel franchisees). Some franchising uses dual distribution: ver-
tical integration (franchisor owns and operates the units) and market governance
(franchisor licenses units to franchisees).
20
The New Competition in Retailing
The new competition in retailing is no longer between independent business units but
between whole systems of centrally programmed networks (corporate, administered, and
contractual) competing against one another to achieve the best cost economies
and customer response. Other developments include horizontal marketing systems
and multichannel marketing systems.
Horizontal Marketing Systems In the horizontal marketing system, two or
more unrelated companies put together resources or programs to exploit an emerging
marketing opportunity. Each company lacks the capital, know-how, production, or
marketing resources to venture alone, or it is afraid of the risk. The companies might
work with each other on a temporary or permanent basis or create a joint venture
company. Many supermarket chains have arrangements with local banks to offer in-
store banking, the way Citizens Bank has placed 500 branches inside New England
supermarkets.
Integrating Multichannel Marketing Systems Most companies have adopted
multichannel marketing, which occurs when a single firm uses two or more market-
ing channels to reach one or more customer segments. An integrated marketing
channel systemis one in which the strategies and tactics of selling through one chan-
nel reflect the strategies and tactics of selling through other channels.
By adding more channels, companies can gain three important benefits. The
first is increased market coverage. Not only are more customers able to shop for the
company’s products in more places, but customers who buy in more than one channel
are often more profitable than single-channel customers.
21
The second is lower chan-
nel cost—selling by phone is cheaper than personal visits to small customers. The
third is more customized selling—such as adding a technical sales force to sell more
complex equipment. However, new channels typically introduce conflict and control
problems. Different channels may end up competing for the same customers, and, as
the new channels become more independent, cooperation becomes more difficult.
Conflict, Cooperation, and Competition
No matter how well channels are designed and managed, there will be some conflict,
if for no other reason than that the interests of independent business entities don’t
always coincide. Channel conflict is generated when one channel member’s actions
prevent another channel from achieving its goal. Channel coordination occurs when
channel members are brought together to advance the goals of the channel, as
opposed to their own potentially incompatible goals.
22
Here we examine three ques-
tions: What types of conflict arise in channels? What causes channel conflict? What
can be done to resolve conflict situations?
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242 Part V Delivering Value
Types of Conflict and Competition Vertical channel conflict means conflict between
different levels within the same channel. General Motors came into conflict with its
dealers in trying to enforce policies on service, pricing, and advertising. Horizontal
channel conflict is conflict between members at the same level within the channel. Some
Pizza Inn franchisees complained that other Pizza Inn franchisees were cheating on
ingredients, maintaining poor service, and hurting the brand image.
Multichannel conflict exists when the manufacturer has established two or more
channels that sell to the same market. It’s likely to be especially intense when the
members of one channel get a lower price (based on larger volume purchases) or work
with a lower margin. Independent dealers were angered when Goodyear began selling
its popular tire brands through Sears, Wal-Mart, and Discount Tire. Goodyear even-
tually placated them by offering exclusive tire models not sold in other retail outlets.
Other strategies to reduce multichannel conflict are creating and enforcing rules of
engagement beforehand and compensating both parties that participate in a sale
regardless of which one books the order.
23
Causes of Channel Conflict One major cause of channel conflict is goal incompatibility.
For example, the manufacturer may want to achieve rapid market penetration through a
low-price policy. Dealers, in contrast, may prefer to work with high margins for short-run
profitability. Sometimes conflict arises from unclear roles and rights. HP may sell PCs to
large accounts through its own sales force, but its licensed dealers may also be trying to
sell to large accounts. Territory boundaries and credit for sales often produce conflict.
Conflict can also stem from differences in perception, as when the producer is opti-
mistic about the short-term economic outlook and wants dealers to carry more inven-
tory, while dealers are more pessimistic. At times, conflict can arise because of the
intermediaries’ dependence on the manufacturer. The fortunes of exclusive dealers,
such as auto dealers, are greatly affected by the manufacturer’s product and pricing
decisions, creating high potential for conflict.
Managing Channel Conflict Some channel conflict can be constructive and
lead to more dynamic adaptation in a changing environment.
24
Too much conflict
can be dysfunctional, however, so the challenge is not to eliminate conflict but to
manage it better. There are several mechanisms for effective conflict management
(see Table 13.2).
25
One is the adoption of superordinate goals, with channel mem-
bers agreeing on the fundamental goal they jointly seek, whether it’s survival,
market share, high quality, or customer satisfaction. Members usually come to
agreement when the channel faces an outside threat such as a more efficient com-
peting channel, an adverse piece of legislation, or a shift in consumer desires.
TABLE 13.2 Strategies for Managing Channel Conflict
? Adoption of superordinate goals
? Exchange of employees
? Joint membership in trade associations
? Co-optation
? Diplomacy, mediation, or arbitration
? Legal recourse
Source: Excerpted from Hallie Mummert, “Multi-Channel Marketers Earn a ‘C+’ on Returns,” Target Marketing,
October 2003, p. 158.
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 243
A useful step is to exchange persons between two or more channel levels. General
Motors executives might work briefly in some dealerships, and some dealership owners
might work in GM’s dealer policy department, to help participants appreciate the
other’s viewpoint. Marketers can accomplish much by encouraging joint membership
in and between trade associations. Co-optation is an effort by one organization to win
the support of another organization’s leaders by including them in advisory councils,
boards of directors, and the like. As long as the initiating organization treats the leaders
and their ideas seriously, co-optation can reduce conflict.
Diplomacy takes place when each side sends a person or group to meet with its coun-
terpart to resolve the conflict. Mediation means having a skilled, neutral third party rec-
oncile the two parties’ interests. Arbitration occurs when the two parties agree to present
their arguments to an arbitrator and accept the arbitration decision. When none of these
methods proves effective, a company or channel partner may choose to file a lawsuit.
Dilution and Cannibalization Marketers must also avoid diluting their brands
through inappropriate channels. This is especially a concern with luxury brands whose
images are built on the basis of exclusivity and personalized service. To reach affluent
shoppers who work long hours and have little time to shop, high-end fashion brands
such as Dior and Louis Vuitton now sell through e-commerce sites. These luxury mak-
ers also see their Web sites as a way for customers to research items before walking
into a store and a means to help combat fakes sold over the Internet.
26
Legal and Ethical Issues in Channel Relations
For the most part, companies are legally free to develop whatever channel arrangements
suit them. In fact, the law seeks to prevent companies from using exclusionary tactics
that might keep competitors from using a channel. Here we briefly consider the legality
of exclusive dealing, exclusive territories, tying agreements, and dealers’ rights.
With exclusive dealing, the seller allows only certain outlets to carry its products
and requires that these dealers not handle competitors’ products. Both parties benefit
from exclusive arrangements: The seller obtains more loyal and dependable outlets,
and the dealers obtain a steady source of supply of special products and stronger seller
support. Exclusive arrangements are legal as long as they don’t substantially lessen
competition or tend to create a monopoly, and both parties have voluntarily entered
into the agreement.
Exclusive dealing often includes exclusive territorial agreements. The producer
may agree not to sell to other dealers in a given area, or the dealer may agree to sell
only in its own territory. The first practice increases dealer enthusiasm and commit-
ment and is perfectly legal—a seller has no legal obligation to sell through more out-
lets than it wishes. The second practice, whereby the producer tries to keep a dealer
from selling outside its territory, is a major legal issue.
The producer of a strong brand sometimes sells it to dealers only if they will
take some or all of the rest of the line, a practice called full-line forcing. Such tying
agreements aren’t necessarily illegal, but they do violate U.S. law if they tend to
lessen competition substantially. Note that a producer’s right to terminate dealers is
somewhat restricted. In general, sellers can drop dealers “for cause,” but not if, for
instance, the dealers refuse to cooperate in a doubtful legal arrangement, such as
exclusive dealing or tying agreements.
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244 Part V Delivering Value
E-COMMERCE MARKETING PRACTICES
E-business describes the use of electronic means and platforms to conduct a com-
pany’s business. E-commerce means that the company or site transacts or facilitates
the online selling of products and services. E-commerce has given rise to
e-purchasing and e-marketing. E-purchasing means companies decide to buy goods,
services, and information from various online suppliers. E-marketing describes com-
pany efforts to inform buyers, communicate, promote, and sell its offerings online.
We can distinguish between pure-click companies, those that have launched a
Web site without any previous existence as a firm, and brick-and-click companies,
existing companies that have added an online site for information and/or e-commerce.
M-commerce (m for mobile) is another emerging trend in e-commerce.
Pure-Click Companies
There are several kinds of pure-click companies: search engines, Internet service
providers (ISPs), commerce sites, transaction sites, content sites, and enabler sites.
Commerce sites sell all types of products and services, notably books, music, toys,
insurance, travel services, clothes, and so on. “Breakthrough Marketing: Amazon”
describes that quintessential commerce site.
Although the popular press has given the most attention to business-to-consumer
(B2C) Web sites, even more activity is being conducted on business-to-business (B2B)
sites, which make markets more efficient. In the past, buyers had to exert a lot of effort
to gather information on worldwide suppliers. With the Internet, buyers have easy
access to information from (1) supplier Web sites; (2) infomediaries, third parties that
add value by aggregating information about alternatives; (3) market makers, third
Amazon started as the “world’s largest bookstore” in July 1995 and has blazed a
trail of e-commerce innovations ever since. It set out to create personalized store-
fronts for each customer by providing more useful information and more choices
than neighborhood stores. Amazon invites readers to review books, evaluate
them on a one- to five-star rating system, and vote on how helpful each review is.
Readers can browse and search pages from thousands of books, receive personal
recommendations based on their buying patterns, and buy with just one click.
And, to overcome the lag between purchase and delivery, Amazon offers fast,
inexpensive shipping.
Today Amazon generates $10 billion in annual revenue from its Web sites
in Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, Austria, France, China, and Japan,
offering everything from clothing and kitchen items to downloadable movies and
music. It also profits from serving as an electronic marketplace, enabling all kinds
of merchants to sell on Amazon.com. Its Amazon Web project opened its data-
bases to more than 65,000 programmers and businesses that, in turn, have cre-
ated moneymaking Web sites, online shopping interfaces, and services for
Amazon’s 800,000 sellers. Recently Amazon began renting excess data storage
capacity to businesses, the first in a new series of technology offerings. What will
Amazon sell next?
27
BREAKTHROUGH MARKETING: AMAZON
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 245
parties that create markets linking buyers and sellers; and (4) customer communities,
sites where buyers can swap stories about suppliers’ offerings.
The net impact of these mechanisms is to make prices more transparent.
28
In the
case of undifferentiated products, price pressure will increase. For highly differentiated
products, buyers will gain a better picture of the items’ true value. Suppliers of superior
products will be able to offset price transparency with value transparency; suppliers of
undifferentiated products will have to drive down their costs to compete.
Brick-and-Click Companies
Many brick-and-mortar companies debated adding an e-commerce channel, fearing
that channel conflict would arise from competing with their offline retailers, agents,
or company-owned stores.
29
Most eventually added the Internet as a distribution
channel after seeing how much business their online competitors were generating.
The question is how to sell both through intermediaries and online. There are
at least three strategies for trying to gain acceptance from intermediaries: (1) offer dif-
ferent brands or products on the Internet; (2) offer offline partners higher commis-
sions to cushion the negative impact on sales; and (3) take orders on the Web site but
have retailers deliver and collect payment. Harley-Davidson asks customers who want
to order accessories online to select a participating dealer. The dealer, in turn, fulfills
the order, adhering to Harley’s standards for prompt shipping.
30
M-Commerce
Consumers and businesspeople no longer need to be near a computer to go online. All
they need is a cellular phone or personal digital assistant to wirelessly connect to the
Internet so they can check the weather, sports scores, and more; send and receive
e-mail messages; and place online orders. Many see a big future in what is now called
m-commerce (m for mobile).
31
M-commerce success will be driven, in part, by conven-
ience, ease of use, trust, and widespread availability.
32
For example, in Japan, millions of teenagers carry DoCoMo phones from NTT
(Nippon Telephone and Telegraph). In addition to voice and text communication,
they can use their phones to order goods or make purchases at participating outlets
like McDonald’s. Subscribers receive a monthly bill from NTT listing the subscriber
fee, usage fee, and cost of all other transactions—and they can pay the bill at any
7-Eleven convenience store.
33
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Most producers don’t sell their goods directly to final users. Between producers
and final users stands one or more marketing channels, a host of marketing interme-
diaries performing a variety of functions. Companies use intermediaries when they
lack the financial resources to carry out direct marketing, when direct marketing isn’t
feasible, and when they can earn more by doing so. The most important functions
performed by intermediaries are information, promotion, negotiation, ordering,
financing, risk taking, physical possession, payment, and title.
Manufacturers can reach a market by selling direct or using one-, two-, or
three-level channels, depending on customer needs, channel objectives, and their
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246 Part V Delivering Value
identification and evaluation of major channel alternatives. Effective channel manage-
ment calls for selecting intermediaries, then training and motivating them to build a
long-term, mutually profitable partnership. Three key channel trends are the growth
of vertical marketing systems, horizontal marketing systems, and multichannel mar-
keting systems. All channels have the potential for conflict and competition.
Marketers have to consider legal and ethical issues relating to practices such as exclu-
sive dealing or territories, tying agreements, and dealers’ rights. As e-commerce has
grown in importance, channel integration must recognize the distinctive strengths of
online and offline selling to maximize their joint contributions.
NOTES
1. Leila Abboud, “New Treatment: Electronics Giant
Seeks a Cure in Health Care,” Wall Street Journal,
July 11, 2007, p. A1; Kerry Capell, “Thinking
Simple at Philips,” BusinessWeek, December 11,
2006, p. 50; “Philips—Unfulfilled,”
brandchannel.com, June 20, 2005; Royal Philips
Electronics Annual Report, 2006; Jennifer L. Schenker,
“Fine-Tuning a Fuzzy Image,” TIMEeurope.com,
Spring 2002.
2. Anne T. Coughlan, Erin Anderson, Louis W. Stern,
and Adel I. El-Ansary, Marketing Channels, 6th ed.
(Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2001).
3. Louis W. Stern and Barton A. Weitz, “The
Revolution in Distribution: Challenges and
Opportunities,” Long Range Planning 30, no. 6
(1997): 823–829.
4. For a summary of academic research, see Erin
Anderson and Anne T. Coughlan, “Channel
Management: Structure, Governance, and
Relationship Management,” in Bart Weitz and
Robin Wensley, eds., Handbook of Marketing
(London: Sage Publications, 2001), pp. 223–247 and
Gary L. Frazier, “Organizing and Managing
Channels of Distribution,” Journal of the Academy
of Marketing Sciences 27, no. 2 (1999): 226–240.
5. Asim Ansari, Carl F. Mela, and Scott A. Neslin,
“Customer Channel Migration,” Journal of
Marketing, 2007, forthcoming; Jacquelyn S. Thomas
and Ursula Y. Sullivan, “Managing Marketing
Communications,” Journal of Marketing 69
(October 2005): 239–251; Edward J. Fox, Alan L.
Montgomery, and Leonard M. Lodish (2004),
“Consumer Shopping and Spending Across Retail
Formats,” The Journal of Business 77 (2): S25–S60;
Sridhar Balasubramanian, Rajagopal Raghunathan,
and Vijay Mahajan (2005), “Consumers in a
Multichannel Environment: Product Utility,
Process Utility, and Channel Choice,” Journal of
Interactive Marketing 19 (2): 12–30.
6. Chekitan S. Dev and Don E. Schultz, “In the Mix:
A Customer-Focused Approach Can Bring the
Current Marketing Mix into the 21st Century,”
Marketing Management 14 (January/February 2005).
7. For additional information on reverse-flow
channels, see Marianne Jahre, “Household Waste
Collection as a Reverse Channel—A Theoretical
Perspective,” International Journal of Physical
Distribution and Logistics 25, no. 2 (1995): 39–55;
and Terrance L. Pohlen and M. Theodore Farris II,
“Reverse Logistics in Plastics Recycling,”
International Journal of Physical Distribution and
Logistics 22, no. 7 (1992): 35–37.
8. Katherine Boehret, “The Mossberg Solution:
How the Big Photo-Sharing Sites Stack Up,”
Wall Street Journal, August 1, 2007, p. D8; William
M. Bulkeley, “Kodak Revamps Wal-Mart Kiosks,”
Wall Street Journal, September 6, 2006; Faith
Keenan, “Big Yellow’s Digital Dilemma,”
BusinessWeek, March 24, 2003, pp. 80–81.
9. Louis P. Bucklin, A Theory of Distribution Channel
Structure (Berkeley: Institute of Business and
Economic Research, University of California, 1966).
10. Allison Enright, “Shed New Light,” Marketing
News, May 1, 2006, pp. 9–10.
11. For more on relationship marketing and the
governance of marketing channels, see Jan B. Heide,
“Interorganizational Governance in Marketing
Channels,” Journal of Marketing (January 1994):
71–85.
12. Anderson and Coughlan, “Channel Management:
Structure, Governance, and Relationship
Management,” pp. 223–247.
13. Bert Rosenbloom, Marketing Channels: A Management
View, 5th ed. (Hinsdale, IL: Dryden, 1995).
14. Bruce Horovitz, “Cranium Guys Have Their Inner
Child on Speed Dial,” USA Today, May 8, 2006, p. 7B;
Christopher Palmeri, “March of the Toys—Out of the
Toy Section,” BusinessWeek, November 29, 2004,
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Chapter 13 Designing and Managing Integrated Marketing Channels 247
p. 37; Miles Cook and Rob Tyndall, “Lessons from
the Leaders,” Supply Chain Management Review,
November–December 2001, pp. 22+.
15. Thomas H. Davenport and Jeanne G. Harris,
Competing on Analytics: the New Science of Winning
(Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2007).
16. For an excellent report on this issue, see Howard
Sutton, Rethinking the Company’s Selling and
Distribution Channels, research report no. 885,
Conference Board, 1986, p. 26.
17. V. Kasturi Rangan, Transforming Your Go-to-Market
Strategy: The Three Disciplines of Channel Management
(Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2006).
18. Parker Howell, “Columbia Paint Takeover Set,”
Spokesman-Review (Spokane), August 29, 2007.
19. Russell Johnston and Paul R. Lawrence, “Beyond
Vertical Integration—The Rise of the Value-Adding
Partnership,” Harvard Business Review (July–August
1988): 94–101. See also Judy A. Siguaw, Penny M.
Simpson, and Thomas L. Baker, “Effects of
Supplier Market Orientation on Distributor
Market Orientation and the Channel Relationship:
The Distribution Perspective,” Journal of Marketing
(July 1998): 99–111; Narakesari Narayandas and
Manohar U. Kalwani, “Long-Term
Manufacturer–Supplier Relationships: Do They
Pay Off for Supplier Firms?” Journal of Marketing
(January 1995): 1–16.
20. Raji Srinivasan, “Dual Distribution and Intangible
Firm Value: Franchising in Restaurant Chains,”
Journal of Marketing 70 ( July 2006): 120–135.
21. Rajkumar Venkatesan, V. Kumar, and Nalini
Ravishanker, “Multichannel Shopping: Causes
and Consequences,” Journal of Marketing 71
(April 2007): 114–132.
22. Anne T. Coughlan and Louis W. Stern, “Marketing
Channel Design and Management,” in Dawn
Iacobucci, ed., Kellogg on Marketing (New York:
John Wiley, 2001), pp. 247–269.
23. Alberto Sa Vinhas and Erin Anderson, “How
Potential Conflict Drives Channel Structure:
Concurrent (Direct and Indirect) Channels,” Journal
of Marketing Research 42 (November 2005): 507–515.
24. For an example of when conflict can be viewed as
helpful, see Anil Arya and Brian Mittendorf,
“Benefits of Channel Discord in the Sale of Durable
Goods,” Marketing Science 25 (January-February
2006): 91–96 and Nirmalya Kumar, “Living with
Channel Conflict,” CMO Magazine, October 2004.
25. This section draws on Coughlan, Anderson, Stern,
and El-Ansary, Marketing Channels, ch. 6. See also
Jonathan D. Hibbard, Nirmalya Kumar, and Louis
W. Stern, “Examining the Impact of Destructive
Acts in Marketing Channel Relationships,” Journal
of Marketing Research 38 (February 2001): 45–61;
Kersi D. Antia and Gary L. Frazier, “The Severity
of Contract Enforcement in Interfirm Channel
Relationships,” Journal of Marketing 65 (October
2001): 67–81; James R. Brown, Chekitan S. Dev,
and Dong-Jin Lee, “Managing Marketing Channel
Opportunism: The Efficiency of Alternative
Governance Mechanisms,” Journal of Marketing 64
(April 2001): 51–65.
26. Christina Passriello, “Fashionably Late? Designer
Brands Are Starting to Embrace E-Commerce,”
Wall Street Journal, May 19, 2006, pp. B1, B4.
27. Mylene Mangalindan, “Amazon’s MP3 Store Takes
Aim at Apple,” Wall Street Journal, September 26,
2007, p. B3; Jim Carlton, “Amazon Looks to Keep
Sales Momentum,” Wall Street Journal, July 25,
2007, p. A3; Riva Richmond, “Amazon Offer: Its
Gigabytes Now for Sale,” Wall Street Journal, June
27, 2007, p. B5D; “Click to Download,” The
Economist, August 19, 2006, pp. 57–58; Robert D.
Hof, “Jeff Bezos’ Risky Bet,” BusinessWeek,
November 13, 2006; Erick Schonfield, “The Great
Giveaway,” Business 2.0, April 2005, 80–86.
28. For an in-depth academic examination, see John G.
Lynch, Jr. and Dan Ariely, “Wine Online: Search
Costs and Competition on Price, Quality, and
Distribution,” Marketing Science 19 (Winter 2000):
83–103.
29. Described in Inside 1-to-1, Peppers and Rogers
Group newsletter, May 14, 2001.
30. Bob Tedeshi, “How Harley Revved Online Sales,”
Business 2.0, December 2002/January 2003, p. 44.
31. Douglas Lamont, Conquering the Wireless World: The
Age of M-Commerce (New York: Wiley, 2001); Marc
Weingarten, “The Medium Is the Instant Message,”
Business 2.0, February 2002, pp. 98–99.
32. Gordon Xu and Jairo A. Gutierrez, “An Exploratory
Study of Killer Applications and Critical Success
Factors in M-commerce,” Journal of Electronic
Commerce in Organizations 4.3 (July-September
2006): 63+.
33. Kanako Takahara, “McDonald’s, DoCoMo Team
Up on Marketing,” Japan Times, February 27, 2007.
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