Description
Transaction Utility theory was propounded by Thaler to explain that the value derived
by a customer from an exchange consists of two drivers: Acquisition Utilities and
Transaction utilities. Acquisition utility represents the economic gain or loss from the
transaction. Where as transaction utility is associated with purchase or (sale) and
represents the pleasure (or displeasure) of the financial deal per se and is a function of
the difference between the selling price and the reference price. Choice of a format has
been studied from several dimensions including the cost and effort as well as the nonmonetary
values.
However,
the
studies
that
present
the
complete
picture
and
combine
the
aspects
of
the tangible
as
well as intangible
values derived out
of the
shopping
process
are
limited.
Most
of
the studies,
all of them
from
the
developed
economies,
have
focussed
on the
selection
of
a store.
They
represent
a scenario
where
formats
have
stabilised.
However,
in Indian
scenario
formats
have been
found
to
be
influencing
the
choice
of store
as
well as orientation
of
the
shoppers.
Also,
retailers
are experimenting
with alternate format with differing success rates. The author has also not found a study
that has applied this theory. It is felt that the Transactional Utility Theory may provide
a suitable approach for making format decisions.
Using Transaction Utility Approach for Retail Format Decision:
Abstract
Transaction Utility theory was propounded by Thaler to explain that the value derived
by a customer from an exchange consists of two drivers: Acquisition Utilities and
Transaction utilities. Acquisition utility represents the economic gain or loss from the
transaction. Where as transaction utility is associated with purchase or (sale) and
represents the pleasure (or displeasure) of the financial deal per se and is a function of
the difference between the selling price and the reference price. Choice of a format has
been studied from several dimensions including the cost and effort as well as the non-
monetary values. However, the studies that present the complete picture and combine
the aspects of the tangible as well as intangible values derived out of the shopping
process are limited. Most of the studies, all of them from the developed economies,
have focussed on the selection of a store. They represent a scenario where formats have
stabilised. However, in Indian scenario formats have been found to be influencing the
choice of store as well as orientation of the shoppers. Also, retailers are experimenting
with alternate format with differing success rates. The author has also not found a study
that has applied this theory. It is felt that the Transactional Utility Theory may provide
a suitable approach for making format decisions.
Retail Formats
The retail format is the store ‘package’ that the retailer presents to the shopper. A
format is defined as a type of retail mix, used by a set of retailers
1
. Store Formats are
formats based on the physical store where the vendor interacts with the customer
2
. It
is the mix of variables that retailers use to develop their business strategies and
constitute the mix as assortment, price, transactional convenience and experience
3
.
Therefore each retailer needs to evaluate the enablers and deterrents in the retail
marketplace. This primarily involves identifying the key drivers of growth, the
shoppers’ profile and shopper expectations .It also means evaluating the nature of
competition and challenges in the market place. Then the retailer decides the elements
of the retail mix to satisfy the target markets’ needs more effectively than its
competitors. The choice of retail mix elements will enable it to decide the type of
format or structure of business.
Classification of Formats
The term retail institution refers to the basic format or structure of a business.
Classification for Retail institutions is necessary to enable firms to better understand
and enact their own strategies: selecting an organizational mission, choosing an
ownership alternative, defining the goods/ service category and setting objectives.
1
Levy Michael, Barton A. Weitz, (2002 ) “Retailing Management” , Tata Mcgraw Hill , Fourth edition, p.172
2
Albrecht Enders and Tawfik Jelassi, (October 2000) "The Converging Business Models of Internet and Bricks-and-Mortar
Retailers", European Management Journal, pp. 542-550
3
Messinger, Paul R and Narasimhan, Chakravarthi (1997), "A Model of Retail Formats Based on Consumers' Economising on
Shopping Time", Marketing Science, Vol. 16, No. 1, pp. 1 – 23
Figure 1 shows a breakdown of each category
4
. The classification is not mutually
exclusive; that is, an institution may be correctly placed in more than one category.
For example, a department store unit may be part of a chain, have a store-based
strategy, accept mail order sales, and have a Web site. These are commonly used
typographies. They are likely to vary between countries. For instance, a Kirana store
in India or car boot sales in the UK.
Ownership Based
Retailing is one of the few sectors in our economy where entrepreneurial activity is
extensive. Although retailers are primarily small (80% of all stores are operated by
firms with one outlet and over one-half of all firms have two or fewer paid
employees), there are also very large retailers.
Retail firms may be independently owned, chain owned, franchisee operated, leased
departments, owned by manufacturers or wholesalers, consumer owned
5
. From a
positioning and operating perspective, each ownership format delivers unique value.
Retail executives must work on the strengths and weaknesses inherent in each of these
formats to be successful.
Independents
An Independent retailer owns a single retail unit. In the United States, they account
for nearly 80 percent of total retail establishments and firms generate just 3 percent of
total U.S. store sales. One half of all independents are run entirely by the owners
and/or their families and have no paid workers. The high number of independent
retailers is associated with the ease of entry into the marketplace, owing to low capital
requirement, no or relatively simple, licensing procedures. The ease of entry into
retailing is reflected in the low market shares of the leading firms in many goods
/service categories as a percentage of total category sales. For example, in the grocery
store category where large chains are quite strong, the five largest grocery retailers
account for only about 22 percent of sales
6
. A similar large format in India contributed
to less than 3% of total retail sales. The Indian retail market has around 12 million
outlets and has the largest retail outlet density in the world. However, most of these
outlets are basic mom-and-pop stores with very basic offerings, fixed prices, and no
ambience. These are highly competitive stores due to cheap land prices and labour.
Also, most of the time these stores save tax as they belong to the small industry
sector.
Due to relative ease of entry into retailing, there is a great deal of competition
resulting in the high rate of retail business failures among new firms. According to
Small Business Administration estimates one-third of new U.S. retailers do not
4
Berman Barry and Evans Joel R, "Retail Management - A Strategic Approach", Eastern Economy
Edition, Eighth Edition – Prentice-Hall India, p.115
5
ibid.4
6
Caffey Andrew A. (1997), “Opportunity Knocks’’, Entrepreneur Magazine ‘s Buyer Guide to
Franchisee and Business Opportunities, p. 3
survive their first year and two –thirds do not continue beyond their third year. Most
of the failures involve independents.
These stores have a great deal of flexibility in choosing retail formats and locations.
They target smaller consumer segments rather than mass markets. Since only one
store location is involved, detailed specifications can be set for determining best
location, product assortments, prices, store hours, and other factors consistent with
their target segment. They have low investments in terms of lease, fixtures, workers
and merchandise. Thirdly, independents often act as specialists and acquire skills in a
niche for a particular goods/service category. Decision-making in these stores is
usually centralised as the owner operator is typically on the premises, who have a
strong entrepreneurial drive as they have personal investment in the business, success
or failure has huge implications, and there is a lot of ego involvement. They are
consistent in their efforts as they generally adopt just one strategy.
There are some disadvantages of independent retailing. They have limited bargaining
power with suppliers as they often buy in small quantities. Reordering may also be
tough if minimum order requirements are too high for them to qualify. To overcome
this problem, a number of independents form buying groups. Due to low economies in
buying and maintaining inventory, the transportation, ordering, and handling costs are
higher. These stores often have operations that are labour intensive, sometimes with
little computerisation. Ordering, taking inventory, marking items, ringing up sales and
bookkeeping may be done manually as most independents tend to find investment in
technology and training not worthy. Compared to other formats, Independents incur
high costs of advertising due to limited access to advertising media and may pay
higher fees compared to regular users. There is often disruption when the owner is ill,
on vacation, or retires. They also allocate limited amount of time and resources to
long term planning. To offset the disadvantage of economies, these retailers offer
complementary merchandise and services. Often while all stores in the chain offer the
same merchandise, independents can provide merchandise compatible with local
market needs.
Chains
A chain retailer operates multiple outlets (store units) under common. In developed
economies, they account for nearly a quarter of retail outlets and over 50 percent of
retail sales. Retail chains can range from two stores to retailers with over 1,000 stores.
Some retail chains are divisions of larger corporations or holding companies. The
select large retail chains in India are shown in Annexure-I
Chain Retailers have several advantages. They enjoy strong bargaining power with
suppliers due to the volumes of purchases. They generally bypass wholesalers. Many
of them buy directly from the manufacturers. Suppliers service the orders from chains
promptly and extend a higher level of proper service and selling support. New brands
reach these stores faster. Most of these chains sell private. Chains achieve efficiency
due to the centralisation of purchasing and warehousing and computerisation. Wider
geographic coverage of markets allows chains to utilize all forms of media. Most of
the chains invest considerable time and resources in long term planning, monitoring
opportunities and threats.
Chain retailers suffer from limited flexibility, as they need to be consistent throughout
in terms of prices, promotions, and product assortments. Chain retailers have high
investments in multiple leases, fixtures, product assortments and employees. Due to
their spread, these retailers have reduced control, lack of communication and time
delays. Thus, such retailers focus on managing a specific retail format for a better
strategic advantage and increased profitability. Some chain retailers capitalise on their
widely known image and adopt flexibility to market changes.
Franchising
Franchising is a contractual agreement between a franchiser and a franchisee that
allows the franchisee to operate a retail outlet using a name and format developed and
supported by the franchiser. Approximately one –third of all U.S. retail sales are made
by franchisees. In a franchise contract the franchisee pays a lump sum plus a royalty
on all sales for the right to operate a store in a specific location. The franchisee also
agrees to operate the outlet in accordance with procedures prescribed by the
franchisers. The franchiser provides
7
assistance in locating and building the store,
developing the products and/or services sold, management training and advertising.
There are two types of franchising: product/ trademark and business format. In
product/ trademark franchising, franchisees acquire the identities of the franchiser by
agreeing to sell the latter’s product and/or operate under the latter’s names. But the are
independent in their operation. They may draw certain operating rules in consultation
with the franchiser. In a business format franchising arrangement, the two parties have
a synergetic relationship. The franchiser provides assistance in strategic and operation
issues besides the right to sell goods and services. The franchisees can take advantage
of prototype stores, standardised product lines and cooperative advertising.
Three structural arrangements are found in retail franchising. (a) Manufacturer-
Retailer; where a manufacturer the right to sell goods and related services through a
licensing agreement as in the case of automotive dealers and petroleum products
dealers. (b) Wholesaler- retailer; which may take the form of a voluntary franchise
system as in consumer electronic stores or co-operative where a group of retailers set
up a franchise system and share the ownership and operations of a wholesaling
organisation. (c) Service sponsor retailer, where a service firm licenses individual
retailers to let them offer specific service package to consumers, such as auto rental,
hotels and fast food restaurants.
This arrangement has several advantages. Individual franchisees can own retail
enterprises with relatively small capital investments. Franchisers gain a national or
global presence quickly and with less investment. It improves cash flow as money is
obtained when goods are delivered rather than when they are sold. Since franchisees
are owners and not employees, they have a greater incentive to work hard.
Franchisees may also have to face certain disadvantages. Over saturation could occur
adversely affecting the sales and profits of each unit. They may enter into contract
provisions that give the franchisers undue advantage. The can exclude franchisees
7
Fernie John and Fernie Suzanne I (1997), “The Development of a US Retail Format in Europe”,
International Journal of Retail and Distribution Management, Vol. 25 (11), pp. 342 – 350.
from, or limit their involvement in, the strategic planning process. Franchisers also
face a lot of potential problems. Franchisees can harm a firm’s overall reputation and/
or customer loyalty if they do not adhere to company standards. Intra-franchise
competition is not desirable. Ineffective franchised units directly impact franchiser
profitability from selling services, materials, or products to the franchisees and from
royalty fees. Franchisees, in greater numbers, are seeking independence from
franchiser rules and regulations.
Leased Department
A Leased Department is a department in a retail store rented generally by a
manufacturer. The lessee is responsible for all aspects of business and pays the store a
rent. The store may impose operating restrictions for the leased department to ensure
the overall consistency. The leased departments choose to operate in categories that
are generally on the fringe of the store’s major product lines, such as in-store beauty
salons, banks, photographic studios and food courts.
Leased departments help the stores in generating greater traffic and providing one-
stop shopping. They benefit from expertise of lessees in personal management,
merchandise displays, the recording of items, as store personnel might lack the
merchandising ability to handle and sell certain goods and services. This is also a
regular source of revenue and reduces costs as leased departments pay for inventory
and personal expenses. This may also be a source of conflict with lessees as leased
departments may use operating procedures which conflict with those of the stores.
The lessees may adversely affect stores’ images and customers may blame problems
on the host stores rather than on the lessees.
The leased department operators benefit as the main store generates immediate sales
for leased departments. This arrangement reduces expenses through economics of
scale (like pooled advertising) and shared facilities (like security equipment and
display windows). Also lessees’ images are aided by there relationships with popular
stores. However, there may be inflexibility due to the restrictions imposed by the
operations of the main store. There is always the fear that the stores may raise the rent
or may not renew leases when they expire even if lessees are successful.
Vertical Marketing System
A Vertical Marketing System consists of all levels of independently owned businesses
along a channel of distribution. Goods and services are normally distributed through
one of these types of vertical marketing systems: independent, partially integrated,
and fully integrated as shown in figure 2.
In an independent firm vertical marketing system, there are levels of independently
owned firms: manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers. Such a system is most often
used when the manufacturers have to reach a wider market or retailers are small. Also
when company resources are low and channel members want to share costs and risks
such an arrangement is desirable. Independent retailers capitalise on their targeted
customer base and build loyalty by playing the role of a friendly shop-owner and
build a good word –of –mouth communication.
With a partially integrated vertical marketing system, two independently owned
businesses along a channel perform all production and distribution functions without
the aid of the third. The most common form of this system is when a manufacturer
and retailer complete transactions and shipping, storing and other distribution
functions in the absence of independent wholesalers. A partially integrated system is
most appropriate if manufacturers and retailers are large, selective or exclusive
distribution is sought, unit sales are moderate, company resources are high, greater
channel control is desired, and existing wholesalers are too expensive or unavailable.
Through a fully integrated vertical marketing system, a single Company performs all
production and distribution functions by eliminating the other channel members. The
advantages to a firm are total control over strategy, direct contact with final
consumers, and higher retail mark-ups without raising prices, self-sufficiency,
exclusivity over goods and services offered, and retention of profits within the
company. In the past, this system was usually employed only by manufacturers, but
now retailers have also moved upward in the chain. Some wholesalers have bother
either way to deliver better value to their customers.
Consumer Co-operatives
A Consumer Cooperative is a retail firm in which a group of consumers invest in the
enterprise. The officers are elected. Consumer-members share the profits or savings
that accrue. Such retailers are many in umber but small in size and are most popular in
food retailing. They are started mainly to guard against the malpractice that many
retailers indulge in and either charge higher prices or offer inconsistent quality of
merchandise. The consumer co-operatives are limited because consumers are usually
not expert in buying, handling and selling goods and services and the cost savings and
low selling prices have not been as expected in many cases.
Store Based Retailer
Retail institutions may be classified by store based strategy mix and divided into
food–oriented and general merchandise. The selected aspects of the strategy of store
based retail institutions are described in Figure - 4.
Food- Oriented Retailers
Six major strategic formats are used by food oriented retailers: convenience store,
conventional supermarket, food based superstore, combination store, box (limited line
store) and warehouse store. These are discussed in the following subsections.
Convenience Stores
A convenience store is a well-located store. The ease of shopping and personalised
services are the major reasons for its patronage, even when it charges average to
above average prices, and carries a moderate number of items.. It stays open for long
hours and provides an average atmosphere and customer services. It is often also
called the "mom–and-pop" stores. It is useful for fill-in merchandise and emergency
purchases. Many customers shop at least two to three times a week at these stores.
The convenience stores face most competition from supermarkets that have started
providing longer hours and better stocks of non-food items.
Conventional Supermarket
A conventional supermarket is a self-service food store offering groceries, meat,
produce with limited sales of non-food items, such as health and beauty aids and
general merchandise at low prices. They are large in size and carry 9,000 to 11,000
items. They are chosen due to volume sales, self-service, low prices and easy parking.
The self-service nature allows supermarkets to cut costs, as well as increase volume.
The conventional supermarket was once the most common format.
8
Conventional
supermarkets have to deal with intense competition from other types of food stores.
Convenience stores offer greater customer convenience; food based superstores and
combination stores have more product lines and greater variety, as well as better gross
margins; and box and warehouse stores have lower operating costs and prices.
Membership clubs, with their discount prices, also provide competition – especially
now that they have expanded food lines. Discount store chains are able to undercut
supermarket prices because their efficient distribution systems focus on reducing
inventory investments by selling fast moving items.
Food-based Superstores:
Superstores are large supermarkets ranging from 20,000 to 50,000 square feet. They
cater to consumers grocery needs and offer them the ability to buy fill-in general
merchandise. The advantages of food-based superstores are that they are efficient,
offer a degree of one-stop shopping, stimulate impulse purchases and feature high
profit general merchandise. Other advantages are that it is easier and less costly to
redesign and convert supermarkets into food-based superstores than combination
stores. Management expertise is better focused in food-based superstores. Many
consumers feel more comfortable shopping in true food stores than combination
stores. Most of the supermarket chains have also started offering food to compete with
these stores.
Combination Stores/ Supercentres
Combination stores are food-based retailers that unite supermarket and general
merchandise sales in one facility with the latter typically accounting for 25 to 40
percent of total sales. They achieve operational efficiencies and cost savings through
their large-scale operations. Consumers like one-stop shopping and travel further to
visit these stores. Impulse sales are high. A super centre is a combination store
blending an economy supermarket with a discount department store. Traditional
supermarkets are facing serious new competitive challenges from supercentres at the
price-conscious end of the market and from "home meal replacement" providers at
the convenience-oriented end. Supercentres with an average size of about 150,000 sq.
8
Doris Newton J (1993), “Non-traditional Retailers Challenge the Supermarket Industry", Food
Review; Washington; Jan-Apr
ft. devote about 40% of their space to grocery items and the rest to discount general
merchandise.
Box (Limited-Line) Store:
The Box (Limited-Line) Store is a food based discounter that focuses on a small
selection of items, moderate hours of operation (compared to other supermarkets),
few additional services, and limited manufacturer brands. There stock usually less
items, few or no refrigerated perishables, and few sizes and brands per item. Items are
displayed in cut cases. Customers do their own bagging. Box stores depend on low –
priced private-label brands. They aim to price merchandise 20 to 30 percent below
supermarkets.
Warehouse Store:
A warehouse club is a retailer that offers a limited assortment of food and general
merchandise, with limited services, at low prices to ultimate consumers and small
businesses. It appeals to price–conscious consumers, who must be members to shop
there. Its inventory turnover rate is several times that of a department store. Stores
are large and located in low–rent areas. They have simple interiors and concrete
floors. Aisles are wide to facilitate pick up pallets of merchandise. Specific brands
and items differ from time to time as the stores buy merchandise available on special
promotions from manufacturers. The clubs pass on these savings to shoppers through
lower prices. Most warehouse clubs have two types of members. Wholesale members
who are small business people, and individual members who purchase for their own
use.
The major retailing challenge faced by membership clubs is the limited size of their
final consumer market segment. The main limiting factor is the lack of brand
continuity. Since products are usually bought when special deals are available, brands
may be temporarily or permanently out of stock. In addition, many consumers do not
like shopping in warehouse settings.
General Merchandise Retailers
Department Store
A department store is a large retail unit with an extensive assortment (width and
depth) of goods and services that are organised into separate departments for purposes
of buying, promotion, customer service and control. It has the greatest selection of
any general merchandise retailer and often serves as the anchor store in a shopping
centre or district. Department Stores are unique in terms of the shopping experience
they offer, the services they provide and the atmosphere of the store. They offer a full
range of services from altering clothing to home delivery. Over its history, the
department store has been responsible for many innovations, including advertising
prices, enacting a one-price policy (whereby all shoppers pay the same price for the
same good or service.), developing computerised checkouts, offering money back
guarantees, adding branch stores and decentralised management
However, during the past few years, industry wide sales growth of traditional
department stores has lagged behind the full line discount stores. They no longer have
brand exclusivity for a lot of items they sell; manufacturer brands are also available at
specialty and discount outlets. Many firms, instead of creating their own brands, have
signed exclusive licensing agreements with fashion designers. This perpetuates
customer loyalty to the designer and not the store. There are more price conscious
consumers than before, and they are attracted to discount retailers. The popularity of
shopping malls has aided specialty stores since consumers can accomplish one-stop
shopping through several specialty stores in the same mall or shopping centre. Some
department stores are too big and have too much unproductive selling space and low
turnover of merchandise.
Full –line Discount Store
A full–line discount store targets the middle -class and lower- middle class shoppers
who looking for good value. It conveys the image of a high-volume, low cost and fast
turnover outlet. It sells a broad merchandise assortment for less than conventional
prices. It is likely to carry the range of product lines expected at department stores.
Products are normally sold via self-service with minimal assistance in any single
department. Centralised checkout service is provided. Buildings, equipment and
fixtures are less expensive; and operating costs are lower than for traditional
department stores. To respond to category specialists, full –line discount retailers are
creating more attractive shopping environments, placing more emphasis on apparel,
developing private label merchandise, and increasing store visits by offering easily
accessible convenience store merchandise.
Speciality Stores
A traditional specialty store concentrates on a limited number of complementary
merchandise categories and provides a high level of service. They are smaller in size.
• Drugstores
Drugstores are specialty stores that concentrate on health and personal grooming
merchandise. Pharmaceuticals often represent over 50 percent of drugstore sales and
an even greater percentage of their profits. Drugstores are facing considerable
competition from discount stores and supermarkets adding pharmacies. In response,
the major drugstore chains are building larger stand-alone stores offering a wider
assortment of merchandise, more frequently purchased consumer products and drive
through windows for picking up prescriptions. To build customer loyalty, the chains
are also changing the role of their pharmacists from dispensing pills to providing
health care assistance and personalised service. For example, Planet Health,
Subhiksha.
• Category Killers
The category killer concept originated in the U.S. due to abundance of cheap land and
the dominant car culture. A category specialist is a discount store that offers a narrow
variety but deep assortment of merchandise. These retailers are basically discount
specialty stores. By offering a complete assortment in a category at low prices,
category specialists can “kill” a category of merchandise for other retailers. Most
category specialists use a self-service approach. They use their buying power to
negotiate low prices, excellent terms and assured supply when items are scarce.
The category killers are facing reduced profits as the competition is focusing on
prices. They have difficulty differentiating themselves on other elements of retail
mix. All competitors in a category provide similar assortments and the same level of
service. According to a report in the European Retail Digest, there are some that
believe that the category killer format will burn out, leaving only a few hardened
experts, as happened with the warehouse club sector. In response to this increasing
competitive intensity, the category killers continue to concentrate on reducing costs
by increasing operational efficiency, acquiring smaller chains to gain economies of
scale and expanding into less competitive international markets. France, Germany,
Spain and the UK provide attractive markets for expanding category killers.
Interestingly, with the clampdown on out-of-town developments in the UK,
homegrown category killers that are typically located in town centres will benefit
from legislative changes in this area. Some out of town category killers are choosing
to downsize their format to make it fit small towns.
9
• DIY Stores
A home improvement centre is a category specialist offering equipment and material
used by do-it–yourselfers and contractors to make home improvements. It focuses on
providing material and information that enables consumers to maintain and improve
their homes. While merchandise in these stores is displayed in a warehouse
atmosphere, salespeople are available to assist customers in selecting merchandise
through demonstrations and workshops. They are not facing the same level of
competitive intensity as other category specialists, because the merchandise varies
considerably across the country and there are opportunities for differentiation on
customer service.
Off-Price Stores:
An off-price chain offers brand–names and designer labels and sells them at a low
price in an efficient, limited service environment. An off-price store buys other
retailers’ cancelled orders, manufacturers’ irregulars and overruns and end-of–season
items for a fraction of their original wholesale prices. Due to this pattern of
opportunistic buying, the same type of merchandise may not be in stock when
customers visit the store. Typically, different bargains will be available on each visit.
Their inventory turnover is far higher than that of departmental stores. The most
crucial aspect of the strategy for off-price chains involves buying merchandise and
establishing long-term relationships with suppliers. Three special types of off-price
retailers are outlet, closeout, and single-price retail stores.
9
“Category Killers in Europe - A Retail Format for the Future”, European Retail Digest, Spring 1996,
p. 42.
Over the past few years, the sales growth of off-price retailers has slowed. The
challenge is from an increase in sales and promotion in department stores, consumers
being more fashionable, brand name merchandise in department stores at the same
discounted prices offered by off-price retailers. Also, more sophisticated inventory
management systems have reduced the amount of excess production that can be
bought by off-price retailers. Therefore the manufacturers have sought opportunities
to apply this successful format in foreign markets, particularly in the UK. By the early
1990s, the UK market appeared to be attractive for the introduction of factory outlet
centres for a variety of reasons. First, the growth of retail formats in out of town
locations (superstores, retail parks, and regional centres) was conducive to a fourth
wave of development. Second, this trend to out of town shopping coincided with the
rise of discounting formats, creating a climate suitable for the growth of value
retailing. Third, the relaxation of planning guidelines in the 1980s and early 1990s
allowed the development of new out of town retail formats.
10
• Factory Outlet Stores:
Outlet Stores are off-price retailers owned by manufacturers or by department or
specialty store chains and are frequently referred to as factory outlets. A factory outlet
is a manufacturer–owned store selling manufacturer closeouts, discontinued
merchandise, irregulars, cancelled orders, and sometimes, in season, first quality
merchandise. They closely resemble shopping centres, both in terms of size, layout,
and in carefully controlled tenant mix, with manufacturers operating separate units on
a single co-coordinated site. Additional amenities include car parking, restaurant and
leisure facilities. Factory outlet stores are located out of town, lowering development
and operating costs and the distribution channel for certain categories of merchandise
is shortened, cutting out the functions and profits of traditional retailers. The
manufacturers have various interests in outlet stores.
11
It helps in the disposal of
surplus stock due to unreliable accounts, late payers, and cancelled orders. It allows a
manufacturer to control where its discounted merchandise is sold. A manufacturer
chooses out-of–the-way locations, depressed areas, or areas with low sales
penetration of the firm’s brands, whereby the factory outlet revenues are unlikely to
affect the sales at manufacturers’ key specialty and department stores. A
manufacturer can decide on store visibility, set promotion policies, remove labels and
be sure that discontinued items and irregulars are disposed of properly.
• Closeout Retailers:
Closeout Retailers are off-price retailers that sell a broad but consistent assortment of
general merchandise as well as apparel and soft home goods.
• Single Price Retailers:
Single Price Retailers are closeout stores that sell all their merchandise at a single
price.
10
Ibid. 7
11
Fernie Suzanne (1996), “The Future for Factory Outlet Centres in the UK”, International Journal of
Retail and Distribution Management, Vol. 24 (6), pp. 11 – 21.
Hypermarkets
Hypermarkets were created in France after World War II. A hypermarket is a very
large retail store offering low prices. It combines a discount store and superstore food
retailer in one warehouse like building. Hypermarkets can be up to 300,000 square
feet and stock over 50,000 different items. Hypermarkets are unique in terms of store
size; low operating margins, low prices and the size of general merchandise
assortment. The store sells a broad variety of basic merchandise ranging from food to
consumer electronics. All hypermarkets are based on three concepts of: one stop
shopping, ample free parking and a discount pricing strategy. The main limitation of
hypermarkets is that many consumers find that shopping in stores over 200,000
square feet is too time consuming. It is hard to find merchandise and checkout lines
can be very long.
Variety Store
A variety store handles a wide assortment of inexpensive and popularly priced goods
and services, such as stationary, gift items, women’s accessories, health and beauty
aids, light hardware, toys, house ware and confectionery items. They do not carry full
product lines, may not be departmentalised and do not deliver products. Transactions
are often on a cash basis. There are often displays and few salespeople.
The challenge for variety stores has come from specialty stores, discount stores and
closeout chains often sell similar items to those sold in conventional variety stores,
but in plainer surroundings and much lower prices.
Flea Market
A flea market has many retail vendors offering a range of products at discount prices
in plain surroundings. It is rooted in the centuries old tradition of street selling -
shoppers touch, sample and haggle over the prices of items. Price-conscious
consumers who find that other retail formats have upgraded merchandise and
customer service or raised prices frequent them. Many flea markets are located in
nontraditional sites not normally associated with retailing: racetracks, stadiums and
arenas. Others are at sites abandoned by supermarkets and department stores. They
may be indoor or outdoor. At a flea market, individual retailers rent space on a daily,
weekly or seasonal basis. The newest trend in flea markets involves web-based flea
markets such as eBay and Amazon.com with its zShops. Flea markets are believed by
some to misrepresent or overstate the quality of merchandise. The can easily avoid
taxes and their operating costs are quite low.
Non-Store Based Retailers
Nonstore retailing is a form of retailing in which sales are made to consumers without
using physical stores
12
. The non-store retailers are known by medium they use to
communicate with their customers, such as direct marketing, direct selling and
vending machines or e-tailing. Non store retailing is patronised to time conscious
12
Ibid.1 p.75
consumers and consumers who can’t easily go to stores, or compulsive buyers
13
. Most
non-store retailers offer consumers the convenience of buying 24 hours a day seven
days a week and delivery at location and time of their choice.
Nonstore sales are now growing at a higher rate than sales in retail stores. The high
growth rate is primarily due to the growth of electronic retailing. The growth of
catalogue retail sales and sales in other nonstore retailing formats such as TV home
shopping, direct selling, and vending machines are slower
14
.
Vending Machines
Vending machine is a retailing format involving the coin or card operated dispensing
of goods (such as beverages) and services (such as life insurance sales at airports)
15
. It
eliminates the use of sales personnel and allows for round the clock sales. Machines
can be placed wherever they are most convenient to the consumers –inside or outside
a store, in a hotel corridor, at a station, airport or a street corner.
Although many attempts have been made to ‘vend’ other products, beverages and
food items remain the largest category. Hotels, restaurants and at train stations are
highly visible spots for vending but they account for a small proportion of sales.
Higher priced items have not sold well in vending machines because too many coins
are required for each transaction and many vending machines are not equipped with
currency note changers. Many consumers are reluctant to purchase more expensive
items - they cannot see them displayed or have them explained and there is the
difficulty of returning unsatisfactory merchandise. In evolved markets, vending
machine sales have experienced little growth over the past five years largely due to
the changes in the workplace. Employment growth has been limited and the largest
growth in the work-force is white and pink collar employees rather than the blue –
collar workers who buy most heavily from vending machines.
To improve productivity and customer relations, vending machine retailers use
microprocessors to track consumer preferences, trace malfunctions and record
receipts. The devices transmit data back to the host computer. This data is analysed
and communications are sent to route drivers informing them of stock outs and
malfunctions. Some machines even have voice synthesisers. Video kiosks enable
consumers to assess the merchandise and also use their credit cards to make a
purchase. In India vending machines are at a very nascent stage. Almost all of them
are operated by an attendant. Even coffee machines are operated with assistance.
Companies like Cadbury’s and Malayalam Manorma (newspaper publishing house)
have installed them at places that attract a lot of traffic, such as the airport. But the
sales from these are limited.
Electronic Retailing
13
Cynthia Crossen and Ellen Graham(1996), “Pressed for Time or Pressed for Money?” The Wall
Street Journal , March 8, p. 4; George Milne and Mary Ellen Gordon (1994), “A Segmentation Study
Of Consumer’s Attitudes toward Direct Mail,” Journal Of Direct Marketing, Vol. 8, Spring), pp. 45-52
14
Ibid.4 p.176
15
Ibid.4 p.191
Electronic retailing (also called e-tailing and Internet retailing) is a retail format in
which the retailer and customer communicate which each other through an interactive
electronic network. After an electronic dialogue between the retailer and customer, the
customer can order merchandise directly through the interactive network or by
telephone. The merchandise is then delivered to the customer’s address.
The World Wide Web can serve one or more of these roles for a retailer
16
:
• Project a retail presence.
• Generate sales as the major source of revenue for an online retailer or as a
complementary source of revenue for a store-based retailer.
• Enhance the retailer’s image.
• Reach geographically dispersed consumers including foreign ones.
• Provide information to consumers about the products carried, store locations,
usage information, answers to common questions, customer loyalty programmes
and so on.
• Promote new products and fully explain and demonstrate their features.
• Furnish customer service in the form of E-mail, “hot links”, and other
communications.
• Be more personal with consumers by letting them point and click on topics they
choose.
• Conduct a retail business in a cost efficient manner.
• Obtain customer feedback.
• Give special offers and send coupons to web customers.
• Describe employment opportunities.
• Present information to potential investors, potential franchisees and the media.
The role assigned to the web by a given retailer depends on whether it is
predominantly a traditional retailer that wants to have a web presence or a newer firm
that wants to derive most or all its revenues from web transactions.
Strong growth of Internet users and electronic retail sales is evident Figure - 4. In
addition, Forrester Research has forecast that 13% of U.S. retailing will be conducted
via the Internet by 2004.
17
Non U.S. markets account for about 30 percent of the e-
commerce industry.
18
In India Non-Store retailing represented by direct selling and e-
tailing is estimated at Rs 1,100 crores. Only 19 percent of all retailers have an e-
retailing initiative. The number of retailers with plans to e-tail within one year and
those with no plans are almost equal. Significantly, 10 percent of the retailers have
discontinued their e-retail initiatives. The main reasons for retailers to stay away from
e-tailing is predominantly non-viability of business and resource constraints
19
. It is
estimated that 5 percent or more of retail sales of goods and services such as apparel,
banking, books, computer hardware and software, consumer electronics, gifts,
greeting cards, insurance, music, newspapers/magazines, sporting goods, toys, travel
16
Ibid.4 p.193
17
Nongkran Lertpittayapoom and Tadisina Suresh, “The Antecedents Of Customer Satisfaction In
Electronic Retailing”, Working paper, Department of Management, Southern Illinois University
Carbondale,
18
Byliner: Amazon.Com’s VP on Global Electronic Retailing, (18 May 2000)
19
Changing Gears: Retailing In India, ET knowledge Series, p. 134
and videos will be made online.
20
In the case of products where it is difficult to
provide ‘touch and feel’ information electronically, such as clothing, perfumes,
flowers and food electronic retailers may not be successful. Branding may help
overcome many of the uncertainties in purchasing merchandise without touching and
feeling it. For example, if customers purchase a size 30–inch waist / 32-inch inseam
pair of jeans, they knows they will fit when bought from an electronic retailer.
In some products and services, such as travelling or hotels, electronic retailers might
even be able to provide superior information compared to store retailers. The critical
issue related to selling successfully for electronic retailers is whether they can provide
enough information prior to the purchase and make sure the customers will be
satisfied with the merchandise once they get it. There are many buying situations in
which electronic retailers can provide sufficient information, even though the
merchandise has important ‘touch and feel’ attributes. Figure - 5
Started on venture capitalist (VC) or initial public offering (IPO) money, by 1999
there was hype around e-tailing. Consumers were thought to be ready to make a
deliberate choice of buying from e-tailers rather than retailers. They seemed to fulfil
the consumer dream of no queues, no geographic barriers, low prices and unlimited
selection - what retail had failed to deliver
21
. But e-tailing ended up disappointing and
found that traditional shopping was easier. Ernst & Young statistics for the 1999
Christmas season revealed that US online buyers spent only 26% of their holiday
spending (averaging $1,080 per capita) online, while they devoted 67% of their total
holiday expenditure to in-store purchases, the remaining 7% they spent on catalogue
products. By the end of the 2000 holiday season more than 90% of e-tailers closed
down in the period to January 2001
22
. E-commerce witnessed the collapse of several
online grocers, drug stores, auto dealerships, pet supply stores and other budding e-
commerce ventures and hundreds of dotcom investors abandoning their dreams of
getting rich quick with e-commerce
23
.
However, Retail e-commerce sales grew to $7.5 billion, up 24.7 percent in the second
quarter of 2001 compared with just under $6 billion in the second quarter of 2000,
according to an August report from the U.S. Commerce Department
24
. Leading
market researchers suggest that U.S. markets for online retailers will cross $27 billion
by 2005
25
. European Web shoppers are expected to spend more money online for
groceries than their American counterparts, according to Forrester Research. The
report predicts that Web grocery shopping in Europe will be $51 million –or five
percent of Europe’s total grocery sales by 2005. Seven percent of the United
Kingdom’s grocery sales will go online by 2005. The Nordic countries are expected to
follow closely with six percent of grocery sales taking place online. France and
Germany will account for more than three percent of sales online in 2005
26
. The
20
Business Week e.biz (Feburary 7, 2000)
21
Lindstorm Martin, Peppers Don and Rogers Martha (2001), “Clicks, Bricks and Brands : the
Marriage of Online and Offline Business", Kogan Page, London, p. 11
22
Ibid.21
23
Mello Adrian (2001), “Four Myths of Online Retailing", November 7
24
Ibid.21
25
Ibid.19 p.117
26
“Electronic Retailing and eMarketing", Newsletter Hermes, Issue No.5-September-October (2000)
present players in the market are trying to learn the lessons from the failures and
success of extinct and surviving e-commerce pioneers.
E-tailing Myths:
The common myths earlier were that online selling required low investment and low
cost and hence had no entry barriers and it was easy to succeed. There are four B2C
myths that can be misleading while managing e-commerce operations
27
.
1. Stickiness is good: Many sites aspire to keep customers on the site as long as
possible by adding features and design navigation. They have too many sequential
click through pages and save the best page for the last. On the contrary it is
observed that when it comes to e-commerce sites, the customers would rather
complete their purpose than unnecessarily waste a lot of time on a site when
looking for a particular product. Therefore, a site should have an introductory
home page, offer speed navigation, vividly describe product benefits, update
displays regularly, provide expert information and price competitively.
2. More is better: Some sites try to attract customers with flashy technology by
bombarding them with fancy graphics, animation and sound effects. But fancy
visual and sound effects slow sites to a crawl. A recent survey from Jupiter Media
Metrix found that visitors were twice as likely to return to a site with faster
loading pages than they were to sites that provide rich media. The Jupiter survey
also found that 59 percent of those surveyed would be more likely to return to a
site that offered more product information
28
.
3. Personalisation drives profitability: Personalisation was supposed to be the killer
application of B2C. But personalisation is just one of the merchandising
techniques that e- commerce sites should consider for incremental sales
improvement but per se it does not help to complete sales. This is because
customer actions don’t always reflect their interests. For example, a customer may
have bought a book on baseball as a gift for his brother-in-law, a sports fan. But
the customer dislikes sports himself. However, that does not stop the site from
continually calling the customer’s attention to books on baseball, football,
basketball and the like. It is recommended that instead of investing in expensive
personalisation technology sites they would be better off devoting their energies to
proper merchandising by answering questions and having items logically
arranged
29
.
4. You can sell anything on the web: One can sell many products like CDs,
books,gifts, online. But certain products aren’t a good fit for e-commerce sales,
either due to legal restrictions like in the case of alcohol, or the customers need to
touch and feel the product or try an expensive piece of apparel to make sure it fits.
Sometimes the discounted price shoppers’ find on the Web may not offset the
hefty shipping charges for large, heavy items such as an oven or jacuzzi.
Although, in the case of such products one may not be able to complete the
transaction on the Web but it can assist the sale. The web-site can be used to
inform customers about these items and direct them to an appropriate sales
channel, like its stores or distribution network.
27
Ibid.21
28
Ibid. 23
29
Ibid.23
5. Some common myths now are that e-commerce entails high cost and hence is not
viable. E-commerce is undoubtedly a high investment business requiring
substantial investment to set up the web site, the software for data capture, records
and interactive systems for customer dialogue. These are sometimes
underestimated and often cause downfalls. But they are investments like any
bricks and mortar business; only the heads under which they are made are
different.
6. Another myth is that e-commerce cannot make money
30
. But e-commerce can be
made profitable by generating volumes to make money and given time to mature
and taking up the challenge to change customer behaviour. However, it cannot be
a gold mine
31
.
7. According to the Ernst & Young “Global Online Retailing” report, the main
reasons that non buyers don’t buy online are: they are uncomfortable sending
credit card information, preference for seeing the product before purchasing, no
existence of credit card, insufficient information about products to make
decisions, lack of confidence with online merchants and limitation of talking to
the sale person. In addition, the main concerns of online buyers are overly high
shipping costs, need to try for fit in the case of apparel, high prices, inappropriate
for large, perishable and luxury items, need to feel and see and concern of
privacy
32
. The report also charted that 3 biggest “barriers” consumers feel hinder
their online shopping experience are price, security and ease of navigation.
8. The e-tailers have high fulfillment of costs (which can be as high as US$16 an
order for most dotcom e-tailers) and lack of scale makes the business unprofitable.
9. Poor inventory management also causes major losses for many dotcoms. This fact
along with inexperienced merchandising teams, brutal price competition,
inefficient product return systems, result in poor gross margins for online –only
players.
10. High marketing costs: Experienced offline brands spend about 18% less than
startups on establishing retail websites. E –tailer-marketing costs are high. Online
“rent”, a term for the price of time and space on media channels for on-and offline
brand marketing, has inflated hugely over the last decade of the twentieth century.
According to Thomas Weitzel Partners (August 1999) where a superstore spends
an average of US$2.50 promoting a product, e-tailers spend US $17.29 per
product.
11. Online customer acquisition costs: Most consumers still need to be persuaded to
go online and at the same time almost all e-tailers lose money on every customer.
Their customers generate too few orders and too little profit per order to cover the
costs of winning them, which can be as high as 65% per order. According to a
study by The McKinsey Quarterly in July 2000, for e-tailers to achieve
comfortable contributions on each transaction, they would need efficient order
fulfilment processes, average orders of at least US$100 and gross margins of at
least 25%.
30
Sudhakar V.S (2004), “E-Tailing – The Opportunities and the Challenges”, Presentation at Indian
Institute of Management, Ahmedabad,
31
Ibid.21 p.98-100
32
Ibid.26
Factors Affecting the Growth of Electronic Retailing
33
:
Three critical factors affecting the adoption of a new innovation such as shopping
electronically are (1) the ease with which customers can try the innovation, (2) the
perceived risks in adopting the innovation, and (3) the benefits offered by the
innovation compared to the present alternatives.
Trying Out Electronic Shopping:
In September 2002 about 605.60 million around the world had access to the Internet.
Majority of these web surfers were living in Europe, followed by Asia/Pacific,
Canada & USA, Latin America, Africa and the Middle East. According to the United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD report) Internet usage is
seeing an annual rise of about 30-percent which is equivalent to about 2.5 percent of
the global population. A growing share of new internet users are in developing
countries, which accounted for nearly a third of all new Internet users worldwide in
2001. Already Asia, excluding Japan and the Republic of Korea, added almost 21
million new users to the Internet in 2001, more than North America
34
. With 77 million
people under 18 expected to be online globally by 2005, teenagers and children
constitute one of the fastest growing Internet populations,. Surfing the net is a highly
regarded activity by this age group. However, adults over 50 years old are one of the
fastest growing markets on-line. A large number of this age group have home access
to the Internet. Studies have revealed that older people are receptive to new
technology and have time, money and enthusiasm to surf the web regularly. Apart
from staying in touch with far-flung family and friends, the older people tend to
purchase merchandise and services online because shopping in stores can be difficult
for them
35
.
Perceived Risks in Electronic Shopping
Technological developments are reducing the risk of electronic shopping by enabling
secure transactions and increasing the amount and quality of information available to
electronic shopper. However, security of the credit card transactions remains one of
the major concerns, especially in developing economies.
Entertainment and Social Experience:
All non-store retail formats are limited in the degree to which they can satisfy these
entertainment and social needs. In-store retail formats score high on this account.
They provide more benefits to consumers in terms of entertainment and social
experience than simply having merchandise readily available and helping them to buy
it. Even the most attractive and inventive web pages and video clips will not be as
exciting as the displays and activities in a Disney or Toys R Us store due to their
interactivity.
33
Ibid.1 p.81
34
http://www.metimes.com/2K2/issue2002-47/net/655_million_internet.htm
35
Cleaver Joanne (1999), “Surfing for Seniors,” Marketing News, July 19, ,pp.1-7; and Gapper Justina
(1998), “The Rise of the New Media Greys,” New Media Age , January 29, ,p.p.10-12
Ordering and Receiving Merchandise:
In the case of store-based retail formats the delivery time of getting merchandise is
immediate. But in the case of non-store retail formats consumers usually have to wait
several days to get merchandise, especially when the goods are of a perishable nature
and bought prior to an occasion.
Number of alternatives:
The biggest benefit of electronic retailing compared to other retail formats is the vast
number of alternatives that become available to consumers. For example, a person
living in India can shop electronically at Harrod’s in London in less time than it takes
to visit the local supermarket. However, it does have limitations. Shoppers may visit
all the sites selling the product. This may be a time consuming exercise unless the
consumer is focussed and finds a few items that they might like to study in detail.
A more significant potential benefit of electronic retailing is the ability to have an
electronic agent to select a small set for the customer to look at in detail. Service-
oriented retailers score higher on this account as their salespeople know what their
preferred customers want and help indecision making by limiting the choice.
Cost of Merchandise:
Since electronic retailers do not have to spend money building and operating stores at
convenient locations, they have much lower costs, as much as 25 percent lower than
in-store retailers. But the electronic retailers or the customers will have higher costs to
get the merchandise to homes, deal with the high level of returns and attract customers
to their website. It is quite costly to deliver merchandise in small quantities to
customers’ homes. Customers presently incur these costs when they spend their time
and money going to stores to pick out and take home merchandise and then going
back to the stores to return the merchandise they don’t want. A comparison of various
formats in terms of their economies and the cost of operation for format in food stores
are given in Figure - 5
36
. The comparison reveals that online retailing scores over all
newer formats in terms of benefits to retailers. It scores over even hypermarkets with
respect to the benefits to the customers. It is also observed that its operation costs are
also similar to other formats. Therefore it is necessary that an e-tailer should try to
achieve large volumes as soon as possible.
E-TAILING CHALLENGES
37
1. Zero error operations
38
:
A study by Boston Consulting Group in the United States and Canada in 1999 showed
that 57% of Internet users have shopped online and 51% actually purchased goods or
services online. The typical online purchaser completed ten transactions and spent
$460 online over the previous twelve months. Yet 28% of all attempted online
purchases failed, and four out of five consumers who made purchases online
36
Ibid.30
37
Ibid.30
38
Ibid.21 p.39
experienced at least one failed attempt over the same period. These failures resulted
from technical problems consumers encountered with the sites, difficulties in finding
products and logistical and delivery problems after the sale. Twenty eight percent of
consumers who suffered a failed purchase attempt stopped shopping online and 23 %
stopped purchasing at the site in question.
However, the study also showed that consumers who enjoyed a satisfying first
purchase experience online were likely to spend more time and money on the Net.
The satisfied first-time purchaser typically engaged in twelve online transactions and
spent $500 during the previous twelve months. The dissatisfied first time purchaser
spent only $140 on four online transactions. About 5% of users who had bad online
shopping experiences also stopped patronizing the retailer’s physical store. There are
a number of things in the e-business environment that can impact the consumer’s
shopping experience negatively. Primarily the e-tailers need to think about providing
support for customers on two subjects: problems with the website usage and questions
or problems with the product. Appropriate use of technology and people solutions will
have to be defined in order to support e-business initiatives by understanding, tracking
and monitoring the online behaviour of customers
39
. Normally, people have to spend a
lot of time describing the problem. The customer support team can see where the
customer was at the time of reporting the problem or what task was abandoned. Based
on which they can efficiently resolve this issue. This type of service will not only
enhance a customer’s experience on the e-tailers website but also provide the
organisation with an opportunity to reduce costs. E-tailers have several customer
service options ranging from real–time consumer interactions to self-service options:
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs): This is a self-service option that relies on
information stored in a database to assist customer transactions and provide
answers to common questions that are asked by customers. This database is
continually built over time and new customers and answers are added, based
on knowledge gathered from earlier customer interactions.
Call Us Buttons: Call-us buttons appear on the website pages, allowing the
customer to call the customer support representative on a regular phone via the
web. PCs that are equipped with speakers and a microphone may take
advantage of voice-activated websites that send voice over Internet using VoIP
technology. Another variation to the same option is ‘call-me’ buttons, where
the customer can request the customer representative to call back, though this
may force the customer to go offline.
Text Chat: Text chat over the net allows a client to send a question and receive
a real –time written response. This allows almost instantaneous
communication with more than one customer at a time or in a group.
Depending on how it is implemented, it may appear to be slow to some users.
Collaboration/Co-browsing: Web collaboration technology allows a customer
support representative and the customer to share the same screen so that the
representative can see exactly what the customer is doing. This type of
interaction will help the support representative solve a problem if the customer
39
Nanda Rajeev, "How to Map out a Viable e-Strategy", e-verything.com, p.196-198
is stuck at a certain place on the website. On the other hand co-browsing offers
the capability where more than one person can browse a site together, with one
of the users doing the ‘driving’ while the other has secondary control. This
type of interaction will provide the representative with capability to handle a
customer who seems lost on the website.
E-Mail Management: email systems should be fully automated using artificial
intelligence (AI) or other new technologies that help the e-tailer to deliver an
instant automatic reply based on key words or FAQs. E-mail systems can
automatically route e-mails to a call centre, where a customer support
representative can review the suggested computer-generated response or can
prepare a new response before it is sent to the customer.
Call Centres: Plain old call centres should be enhanced to support calls from
online customers as well as catalogue shoppers. Earlier, the call centres had to
be confined to a geographic area or country to provide the best support, with
the Internet, the call centres can be spread across multiple countries to provide
the same, or better, quality of support and reduce the cost of providing the
support.
E-businesses are realizing that it is imperative to communicate with their
customers through a range of media options and that these technologies must
work together seamlessly for the customer. This places huge pressure on the
customer service divisions of the company. The online e-tailer will use
multiple forms of customer service including live interaction by telephone and
chat, asynchronous communications using e-mail and fax and computerised
service using natural language-based help systems
40
.
2. Increased Gross Margin:
Every retailer ideally wants to have high value, high margin and fast moving products.
But that is often not possible. The products that fetch the most money may not be the
products that the customer wants to buy. Therefore retailing is ultimately about being
able to find a balance
41
. E-tailers need to pay attention to gross margin return on
investment. For example, if a 25 percent margin category sells six times a year and a
15 percent one sells 12 times a year, it is better to go with the latter
42
. Therefore
getting the right product mix is critical to retailing. An e-tailer should also try to cut
down the direct costs by achieving distribution efficiencies. There are many factors
like the product’s retail price, the physical requirements of the product to be shipped
and delivery speed required for the product category that would influence the e-tailers
distribution considerations. Price point is a crucial determinant in distribution and
business viability decisions
43
. The fulfilment costs associated with FMCG products
are so high that merchandise with low price points fail to achieve break even. For
almost all products, packaging and/or shipment and same day fulfilment can be vital.
40
Ibid 21
41
“Retailing”, A&M, February 28, 2001 p.39
42
Ibid.41p.40
43
Ibid.28 p.15
In these cases the best distribution centre is the retail outlet closest to the consumer,
making personal collection or speedy individual delivery possible. E-tailers should be,
wherever possible, to adopt the vendor shipping option that would enable it to cut
down direct costs and hence increase the realisable gross margin
44
.
3. Customer Acquisition:
Gaining information about customers and potential customers and converting such
needs into demand is more feasible in electronic commerce than any other marketing
channel
45
. The Internet allows e-tailers to gather huge amounts of information about
their customers easily. They can use this information for personal pricing and
customer specific targeted promotions. It might also be used to directly offer
customers related products, either in real time during the on-line shopping process or
by e-mailing them with special offers. This possibility offers benefits for customers. It
is a convenient opportunity to get to know new products they would like to buy
without having to look for information in many places.
One way e-merchants attempt to lure new customers is through online coupons
especially in the case of grocery shoppers
46
. Other categories such as toys, books and
music are also popular in terms of redemption of e-coupons. Majority of grocery
shoppers use online coupons and nearly half as many redeem online coupons. Toy e-
coupons witness the highest online redemption rate at 87% followed by books at 83%.
While the potential for e-tailing seems boundless, challenges do exist to altering
customers’ expectations and behaviour. Changing customer behaviour is the most
complex task
47
. The e-tailer can change customer behaviour and increase their
clientele by managing four key elements
48
:
Educate: As a rule, the more potential customers know about the product or
services the e-tailer is selling, the more they’re likely to buy. Education does
not only have to be about the product but also of the e-tailers’ business, quality
assurance and processes.
Guarantee: Any purchase represents a risk to the buyer. The risk may be of
paying much more than what it’s worth or the item may not look as good at
home as it does on the web site. The e-tailer should not only eliminate the risk
but also reduce the customer’s perception of risk by having risk-free return or
exchange policies.
Manage Expectations: The e-tailer will need to manage customers’
expectations so that they are not disappointed or frustrated by the shopping
experience. The expectations may be as simple as those about availability of
the item or shipping time or the total cost.
Satisfaction: The e-tailer, after having educated its customers, hedged their
risk and set their expectations, needs to follow through with online customer
service. A study in found that U.S. businesses lost more than $6.1 billion in
potential Internet sales in 1999 because of poor online customer service and
44
Ibid.22
45
Efraim Turban, Jae Leel, David King H and Michael Ching (2000), “Electronic Commerce: A
Managerial Perspective”, Prentice Hall, p.86,
46
Ibid.26
47
Ibid.30
48
Ibid.26 p.202
estimated that an industry wide failure to resolve the problem could lead to at
least $ 173 billion in lost revenues through 2004. Additionally, 7.8 percent of
online transactions initiated by customers are abandoned because of poor
customer service
49
. Thus, customer service must integrate seamlessly not only
with the company’s existing Web site, but the company’s entire operations,
online and offline.
4. Generating customer traffic:
E-tailers adopt one of two approaches to generate traffic: Impulse Driven and Serious
Shopper Approach. Impulse purchases are defined as purchases that signify with high
emotional activation, low cognitive control and largely reactive behaviour
50
. This
occurs when consumers experience a sudden and often powerful and persistent urge to
buy something immediately even though they she had no prior intention of doing so.
Under this approach the e-tailer generates high traffic
51
. The more often a customer
visits a site, the more likely they are to spend an increasing amount of money and thus
generate profits for the e-tailer. For instance, in apparel, the average repeat customer
spends 67% more overall in the third year of shopping relationship with an online
vendor than in the first six months. And over three years, customers referred by online
grocery shoppers spent an extra 75% above what the original shopper spent
52
.
Products that are generally bought on impulse purchases usually have several of the
following characteristics:
o Their price is considered average or acceptably low enough by the consumers;
o They are low involvement goods;
o They are related to entertainment activities and hobbies;
o They are used as gifts to friends and relatives;
o They are considered “trendy” or popular items;
o They are personalised versions of common products;
o They are related to holidays or important festivals or occasions
In order to take advantage of such shopping online retailers should offer products that
can be bought on impulse. They also need to emphasis product presentation and
placement to reinforce the emotions that motivate consumer purchase decisions. They
could choose some of the following to generate higher traffic:
Ease of access: Impulse purchases can be made without requiring the customer to
leave their home in order to see the product on display.
Low touch: Most products likely to be bought on an impulse do not require “touching”
or “tying on” which makes them appropriate for on-line retailing.
Dynamic displays: customers can be presented with such products while navigating
through the online shop; different items can be shown on each page to maximize the
likelihood of purchase; items which are related or complimentary to those in the
section of the catalogue currently viewed can be displayed.
49
Ibid.26
50
England Debra, Retailing on the Internet Aparoopa, Kozyrakis Christoforos, Singh Ena and
Wemhoener Nils (1999), “Retailing on the Internet: Beyond Commoditization”, Strategic Computing
and Communication Technology, Spring
51
Ibid.21
52
Ibid.30
Personalised displays: on line technology allows personalising the items advertised to
the customer during navigation which can be done based on the customer preferences
or demographic information (if membership is an option) or purchase history.
Personalised reminders: members or previous customers can be sent or presented
reminders about coming holidays or popular items (best sellers) in categories they
have expressed interest or made purchases in, in the past.
Personalisation opportunities: customers can easily be presented with opportunities to
personalise common products (e.g. print a name on a cup) that can initiate impulse
purchases.
Advanced visualisation techniques: graphics technology (animation, sound / image
effects) gives many opportunities to present a product in a way that will impress the
consumer and motivate them to buy it.
Purchase expediting: on line retailing allows on–click purchasing (for registered
customers or members) which leaves virtually no time for second thoughts or
reasoning about the purchase of product.
In case of the Serious Shopper Approach, the e-tailer builds a relationship based on
service levels and quality of products. The e-tailers have to proactively anticipate and
handle consumer expectations and ensure that what’s being delivered is better than
what users expect
53
. So retailers constantly need to analyse their product/service
category’s relationship with consumers and ensure that their own business isn’t
becoming disconnected from general expectations
54
.
5. Customer Retention
E-business is redefining the way the e-tailers manage customer relationships and place
new demands for customer support throughout the sales cycle and thereafter. This task
has been made more complex by individualisation of customers. The e-tailers cannot
afford to ignore even an individual customer because word -of- mouth spreads very
fast on the Internet. User groups, communities, web chat and e-mail each have enough
individual power to drain away revenues or create bad publicity. Only personalised
support and sophisticated customer interaction can help the e-tailer convert more
‘browsers’ into buyers, resulting in higher revenues per customer
55
. Also, it costs
about five to eight times more to acquire a new customer than to keep an existing one.
Therefore, it is essential for the e-tailers to build loyalty, aim to achieve zero error
operation, to create continuing excitement at the stores and have a mix of impulse and
need based products to induce customers to visit the site often
56
. Some notable
consumer-driven e-commerce site content already in use
57
:
i. Testimonial pages: Testimonials are a powerful tool to establish credibility,
which is especially important for a website in the early stages of existence
and/or in the early stages of developing any individual consumer relationship.
A web site can also request feedback for testimonials from happy customers
and opinion leaders.
ii. Awards: This is another credibility tool as well as a tactic to increase traffic.
iii. Extensive and useful links or resource pages.
53
Ibid.26
54
Ibid.21 p.67
55
Ibid.26 p.194
56
Ibid.30
57
Ibid.23
iv. Contests, sweepstakes, sign-ups to get visitors to voluntarily opt for future
marketing efforts targeting their specific consumer interests.
v. Information: according to an MSN Sidewalk survey, 74% of Internet users
seek information
vi. Reviews/ Opinions, especially product related.
vii. Learning networks/communities: through forums, chats, interactive software
mailing lists and newsletters. This is particularly relevant to complex and/or
non–commoditised products.
viii. A niche network of related sites: reciprocal links, banner ads, sponsorships.
New releases and articles can be sent to publications focused on various
products or product–user niches.
6. Earning Customer E-loyalty
Customer loyalty is a key driver of profitability for on line companies. Consumers are
motivated to buy more goods online when security features were enhanced and
personal information kept private. Increased loyalty can bring cost savings to a
company in many ways: lower marketing costs, lower transaction costs (such as
contract negotiation and order processing), customer turnover expenses and lower
failure costs such as warranty claims and so on. During the past decade, customer
loyalty in general has been decreasing. The introduction of electronic commerce
accelerated this trend because customers’ ability to shop, compare and switch is
extremely fast and inexpensive, given the aid of search engines, mall directories and
intelligent agents
58
. A study found that 75% of online customers who participated in
loyalty programmes say that it is not the loyalty factor that motivates them to make
online purchases. Instead, e-commerce providers should fill functionality gaps or face
losing customers to competitors. Only 22% of 1,200 online consumers said loyalty
programmes served as an incentive to buy online. The survey highlighted that loyalty
programmes must go beyond giving out points and should reward loyalty with
improved service such as priority service, personalised offers and e-mail updates. 72%
of the respondents said that customer service is a critical factor in shopping
satisfaction and only 41% indicated they were satisfied with the service they had
experienced as evident from Figure – 5.
59
Managing privacy is an important issue in
building loyalty. It is becoming a major concern as technology gets better and
companies collect large customer data and start trading it in the market. As a business,
e-tailers would need to clearly communicate their privacy policies to build trust with
customers
60
.
7. Managing Technology
In e-tailing business, size is no longer a determining factor for success. The critical
metric is the speed of decision-making, customer service, response time, etc which are
all shortening, owing to the technological revolution
61
. Up-to-date, intelligent and
user-friendly technology also communicates professionalism, a vital quality in
building trust
62
. Indian retailers are gradually but steadily upgrading their IT
58
Ibid.21 p.50
59
Ibid.21p.40
60
Ibid.33
61
Ibid.30
62
Ibid.21p.92
infrastructure. Companies are willing to increase their IT spending from 1 percent of
sales at present to 5 percent and expect clear benefits in vital areas like inventory
management and customer interfaces
63
. In India, Shoppers Stop has one of the most
advanced IT systems in place. In a recent Economic Times survey the company was
recognised as among the most IT-savvy companies in India. It has already pumped in
over 10 crores in to IT systems - merchandise management systems, inventory
management, CRM package etc, and has futuristic plans to continue its spate of
investments. The main aim of the company is to see that the time spent by their
merchandisers on mundane functions is minimised and they can spend more time on
strategy related issues
64
. However, e-tailers should not fall prey to becoming a slave to
technology. In the aftermath of the dotcom blowout and the downturn in the economy
e-tailers are reviewing strategies, processes and questioning IT spending as they strive
to improve performance and boost profits in a difficult economic climate
65
. It is more
critical to have a robust, reliable and scalable software platform than have bells and
whistles
66
. Therefore e-tailers should not try to attract customers with flashy
technology with fancy graphics, animations and sound effects but should offer more
product information
67
. A recent survey found that visitors were twice as likely to
return to a site with faster loading pages than they were to sites that provided rich
media. It also found that 59 percent of those surveyed would be more likely to return
to a site that offered more product information
68
.
New Retailing Formats
The practice of retailing is continuously evolving. New formats are born and old ones
die. Incessant pressure to improve efficiency and effectiveness and a continual effort
to serve the customer better forces the retailers to find new ways of doing business.
This has also resulted in a shortened lifecycle for retail formats. For example, in the
late 1980s most retail experts agreed that hypermarkets would be retailing’s success
story of the 1990s. However, despite their overwhelming success in Europe and their
limited success in the United States, these mega stores were retailing’s biggest failure
in the 1990s. The customers were unnerved by the sheer size of these stores. In
addition, category killers offered greater selection and wholesale clubs offered better
prices, while supermarkets and discounters offered more convenient locations.
Another retail format that didn’t achieve the success predicted was the off-price
retailer because the regular merchants, including discounters, became more price-
competitive on the brands the off-pricer was currently selling. Although these
retailing formats have not lived up to expectations, many other new formats are
emerging.
Supercentres:
Supercentres, which is a one-stop combination of supermarket and discount
department store that carries from 80,000 to more than 100,000 products (ranging
from televisions to peanut butter to fax machines), are new the format for the mass
63
Ibid.19 p.9
64
Ibid.19 p71-72
65
Friedman Tom, "The Future of Retail IT: Keys to the Technological Payoff ",
66
Ibid.30
67
Ibid.23
68
Ibid.23
merchants
69
. These stores offer the customer the convenience of one-stop shopping
without sacrificing service and variety. They are capable of drawing customers from a
60 to 80 mile radius in some rural areas. Hence they seem to be a perfect answer to
today’s time-pressed consumer needs. The supercentre concept has even branched out
in to the automobile market. The supermarkets are implementing strategies to
counteract the supercentres. They are joining the discounters in letting the customers’
purchasing habits determine their purchasing and inventory decisions. By using “just-
in-time”(JIT) methods grocers are now reordering only when and what their
computer, which is connected to their in-store bar-code scanners, deems necessary.
This way supermarkets try to reduce costs and meet the discounters’ prices head on.
Recycled Merchandise Retailers:
Recycled merchandise retailers are a product of great depression, which sell cast-off
clothes; furniture, sporting goods and computers. They include pawnshops, thrift
shops, consignment shops and even flea markets. Due to their very small numbers just
a decade ago, recycled merchandisers have experienced the fastest growth of any
retail format over the past five years. Even as a record number of retailers were
seeking bankruptcy protection in the mid–1990s, these recycled merchandise retailers
were growing at 10 percent a year. Recycling is not just an American phenomenon; it
is also big in Europe and Latin America. However, it is growing fastest in Japan
where this retail format is expanding at nearly a 20 percent annual rate. Japanese
companies from kimono stores to catalogue retailers have jumped on the second-hand
bandwagon. One of the most popular stores in Japan is called “Per Gram Market”,
which sells items at eight cents a gram. Thus, a second-hand T-shirt would cost
around $ 8.50, but a silk scarf would sell for $2.80
70
. Recyclers have developed to
serve specific markets, such as pregnant women, large sizes or children, or even
specific merchandise such as toys, sporting goods (including camping and
backpacking equipment), outwear, CDs, tools or jewellery. The apparel group
accounting for the lowest resale and thrift store sales is men’s clothing. The reason
being that men hang onto their clothes longer than women and children do, leaving
much less available for resale.
Liquidators
Liquidators are a retail format that comes in and liquidates leftover merchandise when
an established retailer shuts down or downsizes. They make their money by seldom
paying more than 30 cents on the wholesaler price for the closeout retailers. They are
often called retailing’s undertakers or vultures. Retailers utilise the services of
liquidators because running closeouts requires some special retailing skills.
Liquidators have a talent for pricing merchandise and estimating the expense of
everything from ad budgets and payrolls to utility bills. Liquidators also have to
develop special incentive plans to make it more profitable for store personnel to stay
and work rather than quit or walk off with merchandise
71
.
69
Dunne Patrick M,. Lusch Robert F, Griffith David A. “Retailing - Future Changes in Retail
Competition”
70
“Used Products Are Hot as Japanese discover the joy of Buying Second –Hand”, Wall Street Journal,
June 22, 2000, A1
71
“Everything Must Go-To The Liquidators,” Business Week, January 15,1996, 52
Video Kiosks
The video kiosk is a freestanding, interactive, electronic computer terminal that
displays products and related information on a video screen. It often uses a touch
screen for consumers to make selections. Video kiosks can be situated anywhere
(from a store aisle to the lobby of a college dormitory to a hotel lobby). They require
enable consumers to place orders, complete transactions (typically with a credit card)
and arrange for products to be shipped. Kiosks can be linked to retailers’ computer
networks or tied in to the web. Many shopping centres and individual store-based
retailers are setting up video kiosks in open hallways.
At the beginning of 1999, there were about 250,000 video kiosks, in use through out
the United States. It is estimated that there will be 1.7 million U.S. kiosks by the end
of 2003. It is also forecast that video kiosk sales will rise from $830 million in 1999 to
$3 billion in 2003. Worldwide, nearly 80 percent of kiosks are involved with retail
related transactions. North America accounts for 59 percent of kiosk sales, the Pacific
Rim for 20 percent, Europe for 16 percent and the rest of the world for 5 percent
72
.
Car Boot Sales
Car boot sales are becoming increasingly popular, where often a vehicle is modified
for the sale of a variety of merchandise like books, magazines, clothes, music
cassettes, export surplus and/or rejects, fast food items. The boot sale boom has given
software pirates, for example, "an ideal outlet and quick getaway". It also provides
opportunities for small traders who may lack the capital for permanent premises. They
are often situated near the university campus and commercial areas. Its target
audience is lower middle and middle class customers looking for “value for money
products.”
Mobile Vans are modified vehicles usually poultry and meat products, library books,
etc. They move from location to location, for fixed periods of time, thus providing
convenience by coming closer to customers.
A Value Based Model of Format Choice
It is evident that each of the formats offers some unique benefit that helps in attracting
shoppers. What is also interesting is that even with the proliferation of formats, each one of
them is surviving. Shoppers have spread their purchases across formats. In some cases,
different merchandise is bought through specific channels. So, while books and music are
being bought in large volumes through the Internet, grocery and high value purchases are
being bought through store-based formats. Some shoppers are also buying similar
merchandise through separate formats. Due to the choices available to shoppers, there is an
effort to optimise the value derived and hence split purchases between formats. However, it is
also noticed that shoppers tend to make one of the formats their primary choices and make
most of their purchases from that format. It is, therefore, imperative that a retailer should
select the value and then choose the format that delivers the value to the fullest. A format is
defined as the system for delivering the value promised to the shoppers so as to create a
sustainable competitive advantage as described in Figure - 6.
72
Frost & Sullivan (1999), “Interactive Kiosk Markets”, San Francisco
Define Value Proposition:
The first step in deciding the format is to identify and select the value proposition that the
store would like to offer to shoppers. Shoppers have several reasons for choosing their
stores
73
. A study conducted in India indicated that proximity and merchandise were the
primary reasons. More than 70% of respondents indicated these as their strongest reason for
choice. The third reason was ambience (8%) and patronised store (8%). Only 40% could
provide as many as three reasons. Seventy percent had at least two reasons. This indicates that
shoppers generally have just one good reason, and at most two reasons for visiting a particular
store. A store would thus build a value proposition based on its target customers, competition
and company objectives. Each retailer would need to vary its offering by different
combinations of the elements of value mix, called Retail Value Proposition.
74
Identify enablers and Deterrents:
Each of the formats would yield optimum results only when certain conditions are fulfilled. A
store needs to identify these conditions and the variables causing them. These variables then
need to be classified as enablers or deterrents. Enablers are factors that could be utilised to
manage the format successfully. Deterrents consist of variables that would impede the
successful working and growth of the format. Toys R Us found that in entering Japan their
biggest challenge was finding space for large size stores. The largest stores in Japan were
about 1/3 of the existing stores of TRS. TRS is a category killer. It drives the value from
focusing on one category and offering price and depth. The store needs to conduct a thorough
analysis of the macro and microenvironment that is impinging on its business.
Find out what its take to Deliver the Values
Based on the value identified and the environmental factors, retailers develop a mix by using
the following five elements:
a) Variety and assortment of merchandise: Variety is the number of different merchandise
categories a retailer offers. Assortment is the number of different items in a merchandise
category. Each different kind of merchandise is called an SKU (stock keeping unit). For
example, department stores, discount stores and toy stores all sell toys. However,
department stores sell many other categories of merchandise in addition to toys. (They
have greater variety). The toy stores stock more types of toys (more SKUs). For each type
of toy, such as dolls, the specialty toy retailer will offer more assortment (more models,
sizes, brands and deeper assortments) than general merchants such as department or
discount stores. Elements like product quality, uniqueness and reliability can also be
clubbed with this factor of the retail mix
75
.
b) Customer Service and Facility: Services provided by retailers to facilitate the shopping
process for customers are called customer services. It includes easy access to product and
price information, employing in-store sales people, parking, accepting modes of payment
suitable to customers, express checkouts, home delivery, gift wrapping, rest and
refreshment facility, child care facility etc.
c) Store design, Display and Ambience: Ambience can be described as non-visual,
background condition in the store environment including elements like temperature,
73
Sinha, Piyush Kumar; Banerjee, Arindam and Uniyal Dwarika Prasad (2002), "Deciding Where to
Buy: Store Choice Behaviour of Indian Shoppers", Vikalpa, Vol 27, No 2, pp. 13-28.
74
Stevenson, Lawrence N; Schlesinger Joseph C and Pearce Michael R (1999), Power Retail, Canada:
McGraw-Hill, pp. 58 – 84.
75
Ibid .1
lighting, music, noise levels, air quality, and scent
76
. Display and design factors are the
environmental elements that are more visible in nature than ambient factors. These
include layout, width of aisles, equipment, furnishing, cleanliness etc. Kotler
77
has
proposed atmospherics as an important part of retail marketing strategy. Shoppers also
determine the value of the merchandise based on monetary as well as non-monetary
costs
78
. The shopping experience, as created by the store environment plays an important
role in building store patronage. Along with the merchandise, it triggers affective
reaction among shoppers
79
and contributes to creating store patronage intentions
80
.
d) Pricing: It is one of the strategic decisions and plays a vital role in store selection. Pricing
decisions like Premium Pricing, Everyday Low Pricing (EDLP), Hi-Low (HILO) pricing,
Discount Pricing are some of the pricing considerations offered to the customer. The
shopper may also evaluate each of the situations in the light of the cost incurred and the
utilities derived out of shopping. These costs can be classified as fixed and variable costs
of shopping
81
. The variable cost is related to the basket size or the list and hence is likely
to change with every trip. The fixed costs, such as location of the store or the price
format, would remain unchanged over list size. It is suggested that these costs can be
converted into utilities for each of the shoppers by the store. In a study of the two price
formats, EDLP and HILO, it was found that the store could influence the choice of
shoppers by enhancing the perceived utilities
82
. It is also argued that the shopper may
evaluate a shopping situation in the light of cost incurred and utilities derived out of
shopping
83
.
e) Accessibility: It is the convenience component of the retail mix. Store location, travelling
time, parking facility, service hours are considered as important elements. The first
decision is the store - location choice problem. The second is the shopping trip incidence
problem relating to the timing of shopping trips. The two decision processes are
correlated. It is found that, on an overall basis, shoppers give prominence to proximity of
the store, merchandise and service provided by the store
84
.
Decide on Brick or Click or Brick and click
76
Spenberg, E.R; Crowley, A.E and Henderson, P.W (1996), "Improving the store environment: Do
olfactory cues affect evaluation and behaviours”, Journal of Marketing, Vol. 60, No. 2, pp. 67 – 80.
77
Kotler Philip (1973), “Atmospherics as a Marketing Tool”, Journal of Retailing, Vol. 49 Winter, pp.
48 – 64.
78
Zeithaml V (1988), “Consumer Perception of Price, Quality and Value: A Means-End Model and
Synthesis of Evidence”, Journal of Marketing, Vol. 52 (July), pp. 2 – 22.
79
Baker J, Grewal D and Levy (1992), “An Experimental Approach to Making Retail Store
Environmental Decisions”, Journal of Retailing, Vol. 68, Winter, pp. 445 – 60.
80
Baker J, Grewal D, Parasuraman A and Glenn B (2002), “The Influence of Multi-Store
Environmental Clues on Perceived Merchandise Value and Patronage Intentions”, Journal of
Marketing, Vol. 66, April, pp. 120 – 41
81
Bell, David R; Ho, Teck-Hua and Tang, Christopher S (1998), "Determining Where to Shop: Fixed
and Variable Costs of Shopping," Journal of Marketing Research, Vol. XXXV, August, pp 352-369
82
Tang, Christopher S; Bell, David R; Ho, Teck-Hua (2001), "Store Choice and Shopping Behaviour:
How Price Format Works," California Management Review, Vol. 43, No. 2, Winter, pp. 56 – 74.
83
Messinger, Paul R and Narasimhan, Chakravarthi (1997), "A Model of Retail Formats Based on
Consumers' Economising on Shopping Time", Marketing Science, Vol. 16, No. 1, pp. 1 – 23; Sinha,
Piyush Kumar; Banerjee, Arindam and Uniyal Dwarika Prasad (2002), "Deciding Where to Buy: Store
Choice Behaviour of Indian Shoppers", Vikalpa, Vol 27, No 2, pp. 13-28; Leszczyc, Peter Popkowski,
T L; Sinha, Ashish and Timmermans, Harry J P (2000), "Consumer Store Choice Dynamics: An
Analysis of Competitive Market Structure for Grocery Stores," Journal Of Retailing, Vol. 59, No.2,
Summer, pp. 75-105; Van Kenhove, Patrick; De Wulf, Kristof; Van Waterschoot, Walter (1999), The
Impact of task Definition on Store Attribute Salience and Store Choice Journal of Retailing, Spring,
Vol. 75, pp. 125 – 135.
84
ibid.7
Offline retailer have taken cognisance of the online model’s ability to drive an expansion in
customer base that would never have been possible in a pure offline-retailing model and with
much lesser investment to boot. The Click model also enables retailers to offer a lot of value
added services to their customers, which perhaps will be the only differentiation, factor in the
emerging global market place
85
. For the pure play online retailers such alliances offer a
chance to leverage the extensive distribution infrastructure, credibility and stability of the
established offline players. It also helps in customer acquisition because experience has
shown that shoppers are more comfortable in making online purchase if their familiar offline
retailers have an online presence.
Many offline retailers realised that it is not always viable to venture alone into the online
market place. This has given rise to several alliances. Offline retailers can include their web
addresses in their communication. Moreover, they can also tie their store loyalty cards and
catalogue circulation lists to their mailing lists in order to increase awareness and usage of the
online channel. They can find out new shoppers to their site and their conversion. Traditional
retailers can leverage their "physical" assets to build strong "bricks and clicks" organisations
that are able to deliver seamless offerings across multiple channels to build and strengthen
customer loyalty.
However, integrating offline and online store operations is a complex process. Initially there
were concerns for the pure plays about mergers between offline and online retailers because
pure plays were concerned about erosion in their valuations due to merger with the
conservative offline ventures. On the other hand offline retailers were concerned about the
potential cannibalisation of the sales from their traditional offline outlets. But the advantages
outweigh the disadvantages.
In integrating click and brick retail models the executives need to decide on integrating or
keeping them separate. Integrating them offers the benefits of cross promotions, shared
information and purchasing leverage and distribution economies. Figure 7 highlights some
points that a retailer needs to keep in mind while deciding on this issue. The primary concern
in integration is the cultural fit. The two types of retailer represent different business and
retailing environment. The shoppers behave differently, the technology is different and so are
the processes.
Meaning Of Utility
Utility is a concept used to denote the subjective pleasure, usefulness or satisfaction derived
from consuming goods. It is an analytical construct used to explain how consumers divide
their limited income among goods that provide them satisfaction or utility. When economists
describe about utility, they also proclaimed the law of diminishing marginal utility, which
states that total utility increases with increase in consumption. However, as consumption
increases, total utility grows at a slower and slower rate. A consumer with a fixed income and
facing given market prices of goods can come to a point (or equilibrium) of maximum
satisfaction or utility only by acting in the following manner. Each product is demanded up to
the point where the marginal utility for every unit of money spent on it is exactly the same as
the marginal utility of the spent on any other good. This fundamental condition of consumer
equilibrium can be written in terms of Marginal Utilities (MU) and Prices (P) of the different
goods in the following compact way.
MU Good1 = MU Good 2 = MU Good3 = Common MU per unit of income.
P1 P2 P3
85
Meyer Harvey (2000), "Building a Click and Mortar World”, Journal of Business Strategy, Mar/Apr,
Vol. 21 (2), pp. 20 - 25
In Victorian days, philosophers and economists talked blithely of “utility” as an indicator of a
person’s overall well being
86
. Utility was thought of as a numeric measure of a person’s
happiness. Given this idea, it was natural to think of consumer’ making choices so as to
maximize their utility, that is, to make themselves as happy as possible. The trouble with this
definition was that classical economists never described how to measure utility or quantify the
“amount” of utility associated with different choices. Is one person’s utility the same as
another’s? What would it mean to say that an extra candy bar would give me twice as much
utility as an extra carrot? Does the concept of utility have any independent meaning other than
its being what people maximize? Because of these conceptual problems, economists have
abandoned the old fashioned view of utility as being a measure of happiness. Instead the
theory of consumer behaviour has been reformulated entirely in terms of consumer
preferences and utility is seen only as a way to describe preferences.
Economists gradually came to recognize that all that mattered about utility as far as choice
behaviour was concerned was whether one bundle has a higher utility than another – how
much higher didn’t matter. Originally preferences were defined in terms of utility, to say a
bundle (x
1
, x
2
) was preferred to a bundle (y
1
, y
2
) meant that the x-bundle had a higher utility
than the y bundle. A utility function is a way of assigning a number to every possible
consumption bundle such that more preferred bundles get assigned larger numbers than less
preferred bundles. That is bundle (x
1
, x
2 )
is preferred to a bundle (y
1
,y
2
) if and only if the
utility of (x
1
,x
2 )
is larger than the utility of (y
1
,y
2
). The only property of a utility assignment
that is important is how it orders the bundle of goods. The magnitude of the utility function is
only important in so far as it ranks the different consumption bundles. The size of the utility
difference between any two consumption bundles doesn’t matter. Because of this emphasis on
ordering of bundles of goods, this kind of utility is referred to as ordinal utility.
In studying the Consumer Behaviour Model the value or worth of a good or service, its utility
is the prime determinant of individual demand
87
. Utility is a number that represents the level
of satisfaction that the consumer derives from a particular market basket
88
. Individuals are
viewed as attempting to maximize the total utility or satisfaction provided by the goods and
services they acquire and consume. This optimisation process requires that consumers
consider the marginal utility of acquiring additional units of a given product and of acquiring
one product as opposed to another. Product characteristics, individual preferences (tastes) and
resources are important determinants of direct demand. Utility is maximized when products
are purchased at levels such that relative prices equal the relative marginal utility derived
from consumption. Therefore utility concept works as a measure of satisfaction or well-being
derived from consumption. The utility functions are shaped both by the tastes and preferences
of consumers and the quantity and quality of available products. The utility derived from
consumption is intangible. However, the consumers reveal their preferences through purchase
decisions and thus provide tangible evidence of the utility they derive from various products.
The utility function of a consumer is simply a function from the commodity space to a real
line, which preserves the ordering of the indifference curves in the commodity space
89
. The
consumer’s preferences among commodity bundles can also be represented by an index,
showing the degree of his satisfaction associated with each commodity bundle. Such an index,
called the utility index function or simply the utility function, assigns a real number say u (x)
for each point x of the commodity plane so that, for commodity bundles x' and x" whenever x'
> x".
86
Varian Hal R, “Intermediate Microeconomics - A Modern Approach”, 3
rd
Edition, affiliated East
West Press, New Delhi.
87
Pappas James L, and Hirshey Mark, “Fundamentals of Managerial Economic”, Third Edition,
Dryden Press, Chicago
88
Mansfield Edwin, “Essential Microeconomics”, W W Norton & Co, New York, London
89
Kogiku K.C (1971), “Micro Economic Models”, Harper International Edition, Harper & Row
Publishers, New York
U (x') ? U (x")
That is the utility function need only preserve the ranking by the consumer’s preferences. In
this sense the utility function is ordinal and defined by the preference relation on the
commodity plane.
Utility can be defined as an individual’s perception of his or her satisfaction from consuming
any specific bundle of goods and services
90
. We can write a utility function in the form of
U = f (X
1,
X
2
,X
3
…………..,X
n
)
Where X, is the amount of the i-th good or service to be consumed. If U is some index, the
value of this index depends upon the quantities of goods one through n consumed. For
example, let’s assume that the consumer chooses among bundles consisting of only among
goods (or services) X and Y. The utility function can be written as
U = f (X, Y)
Where X and Y are respectively the levels of consumption of the two commodities.
A utility function is a mathematical representation of individual’s tastes, preferences and
morals
91
. An individual utility function takes the form U = U (x
1
,x
2
,……x
n
), the amount of
utility that a person has is some function of the level of goods x
1
,…….x
n
consumed. The more
x
1
or x
2
there is, the higher the utility indicator. The utility numbers are meaningless, unless
the scale is known. The level of the numbers does not indicate quantitative amounts of
happiness. Instead it only compares two states and indicates whether one is better than the
other. It is impossible to say that a person enjoys one thing a lot more than something else. All
we can say is that a person prefers one bundle or situation to another. The higher the utility
indicator, the happier is the customer. It is important, however to remember that this
formulation of consumer preferences does not allow for interpersonal utility comparisons nor
does it permit cardinal quantification.
Maximizing Utility
Economic theory assumes the consumers’ objective is to maximize utility. People want to be
as happy as possible. However the limited income restricts the ability to achieve maximum
happiness or satiation. In other words income constrains the choice of goods. As a
mathematical problem, the consumer maximizes a utility function, U (x
1
,x
2
,…….x
n
) subject to
the constraint that total expenditures on goods do not exceed the amount of income or money
available, M. If the expenditures for a particular is expresses as E
1
= P
1
.x
1
, then
n
M = ?? x
i
p
i
i =1
So the Utility Function can be written as
Maximize U = U (x
1
,x
2
,……x
n
)
Subject to
n
90
Meuve Charles S, Smithson Charles W(1985), “Managerial Economics”, 2
nd
Edition, Irwin
Publication, Homewood Illinoids
91
McCormick Robert E (1993), “Managerial Economics”, Prentice Hall , Englewood Cliffs
M = ?? x
i
p
i
i =1
This is a mathematical problem that can be solved using a technique called LaGrange
Multipliers. Solving this problem is equivalent to finding the appropriate levels of each x
i
to
maximize happiness given the prices of the goods and the amount of money available. In
simple terms, the consumer has a fixed amount of money to allocate among many different
products in a way that gets the greatest level of happiness from the expenditure. The
mathematical conditions necessary to maximize U, subject to the budget constraint M are
U
i
/ U
j
= P
i
/ P
j
for all i and j
Where U
i
is ? U/ ?x
i ,
the marginal utility of all the ith good. The marginal utility of every
good divided by the marginal utility of each other good is equal to the relative price ratio of
the goods. Alternatively, U
i
/ P
i
= U
j
/ P
j
By dividing both sides by P
i
and multiplying both
sides by U
j.
The second expression is analytically equivalent to the first but the interpretation
is slightly different; the extra happiness a consumer gets from every unit of money spent must
be the same for all goods. Regardless of the equation, to maximise utility subject to a budget
constraint, the consumer purchases an amount of each good such that the ratio of the marginal
utilities is equal to the ratio of their prices. The ratio of the marginal utilities of the two
products is the consumers’ personal evaluation of one product versus the other, the
consumers’ own feelings about the merits of one good compared to the other. The price of the
first product p
1
divided by the price of the second p
2
, is the price of the first good in the
market place in terms of the second good. It represents the sellers’ relative evaluation of one
good versus the other. Since the consumer can choose the quantities to buy, equilibrium is
only achieved when the consumer chooses goods in proportion that makes the consumer’s
evaluation equal to the seller’s posted evaluation. The ratio of the marginal utilities of the two
goods must equal the ratio of the prices. In essence, to maximise utility the consumer must
select goods from a limited budget in such a way that the personal evaluation of the products
is the same as the market evaluation. Otherwise there is a profit opportunity, a chance for the
buyer to increase happiness. The ratio of the marginal utilities of any two goods is called
marginal rate of substitution. Utility maximisation requires that the consumer arrange
expenditures so the marginal rate of substitution is equal to the ratio of prices for all goods.
Transaction Utility Theory
The basic tenet of the theory is that a consumer’s notion of value depends not only on the
value of goods and services available relative to the respective prices, but also on the
perception of the quality of the financial deal.
92
This theory was developed based on the
Prospect Theory as explained by Khanmen and Tversky.
93
Later the concept of Transaction
Utility was modelled depending on the difference between the selling price and reference
price.
94
To explain this he postulated reference price, which is the amount of money that a
customer expects to pay for a good or service. It is suggested that any purchase occasion is
associated with two utilities: acquisition utility and transaction utility. Acquisition utility
represents the economic gain or loss from the transaction. Where as transaction utility is
associated with purchase or (sale) and represents the pleasure (or displeasure) of the financial
deal per se and is function of the difference between the selling price (p) and the reference
92
Thaler, Richard (1983), “Transaction Utility Theory”, Advances in Consumer Research, Vol. 10, pp.
229 – 232.
93
Khanmen, Daniel and Tversky, Amos (1979), “ Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision Under
Risk”, Econometrica, Vol. 47, March, pp. 263 – 291.
94
Thaler, Richard (1985), “Mental Accounting and Consumer Choice”, Marketing Science, Vol. 4,
No.3, pp 199-214.
price (q). The situation where p > q, the transaction utility is negative (rip-off situation);
conversely when p < q, the transaction utility is positive (bargain situation). The total utility
of a purchase is just sum of acquisition utility and transaction utility. The implication is that
an individual may not buy a product if acquisition utility is offset by loss in transaction utility
when the price is sufficiently larger than reference price.
This theory has found uses in several contexts. One of the studies investigated the
determinants of consumers’ purchase probabilities towards recycled products. It concluded
that the psychological benefits derived out of purchase might be more significant than the
product itself.
95
Transaction Utility Theory, in the context of social exchange, explored the
concept of fair price on relationship and perspective between buyer and seller as well as
legitimacy of profits.
96
This theory has also been used to understand the difference between
coupon proneness and value consciousness of customers.
97
However, even though this theory exemplifies a purchase situation, it has not been applied in
a retailing perspective. Given the basic tenet, it is felt that acquisition utility and transaction
utility can be used to explain the shoppers’ choice of a format. The theory may require
modifications. Acquisition utility can be extended to include not only the price of the
merchandise but also other costs associated with shopping such as, cost of product search,
cost of information, size of purchase, and cost of access to the store. Shopping, being
essentially a process that occurs in a context of a store, may have a close association with the
transaction utility. The perceived value delivered through the transaction could include all
non-monetary aspects of the 'deal' that may include ambience and service at the retail point
for explaining the transactional utility of the format. The theory also suggests that the two
utilities are not mutually exclusive. It is imperative that any format decision would have to
take a holistic view and incorporate both sets of utilities.
Research Agenda
A framework of store choice developed in Indian context (Figure - 8) suggests that customers
use three broad dimensions in choosing a store that could be utilised to classify the formats as
(a) formats that reduce the risk of purchase, (b) formats that enhance the choice and (c)
formats that enhance shopping experience.
98
Based on this the utility of a format could be
expressed as
U
Fi
= U
Pi
+ U
Di ------------
(1)
Where,
U
Fi
= Utility of Format i
U
Pi
= Utility of Price at format i
U
Di
= Utility of Deal at format i
95
Bei, Lien Ti; Simpson, Ethil M (1995), “The Determinants of Consumers’ Purchase Decision for
Recycled Products: An Application of Acquisition – Transaction Utility Theory”, Advances in
Consumer Research, Vol. 25, pp. 257-261.
96
Boza, M. E; Diamond, W (1998), “The Social Context of Exchange: Transaction Utility,
Relationship and Legitimacy”, Advances in Consumer Research, Vol.25, 557 – 562.
97
Lichtenstein, Donald R, Netemeyer Richard G and Burton Scot (1999), “Distinguishing Coupon
Proneness from Value Consciousness: An Acquisition-Transaction Utility Theory Perspective”, Journal
of Marketing, Vol. 54, July, 54 – 67.
98
Sinha P K and Banerjee A (2004), “Sore Choice in an Evolving Market”, International Journal of
Retail and Distribution Management (Forthcoming)
U
Di
could take the form of Risk Reduction (rr
i
), Choice Enhancing (ce
i
) and Experience
Enhancing (ee
i
). While a store would consist of all the three dimensions, generally one of
them is chosen to develop the value proposition. Therefore, for three formats that plan to
deliver different utilities, Equation 1 can be written for primary utility drivers as
U
F1
= U
P1
+ U
rr1 ------------
(2a)
OR
U
rr
= U
Prr
+ U
(proximity + merchandise quality + personal relationship) ------------
(2a')
In equation 2a, the reference for determining the deal and the price, for formats that position
based on Risk Reduction, would be determined by proximity of the store, its quality of the
merchandise and the personal relationship developed with the customers.
Similarly, the reference for determining the deal and the price for the formats that deliver the
Choice Enhancing value more than others would be determined by convenience in terms of
timings, deliveries and payments, and width and depth of the merchandise.
U
F2
= U
P2
+ U
ce2 ------------
(2b)
U
ce
= U
Prr
+ U
(timing + home delivery + payment terms + merchandise width + merchandise depth) ------------
(2b')
The reference for determining the deal and the price for the formats that deliver the
Experience Enhancing value more than others would be determined by ambience, customer
service and entertainment provided at the store.
U
F3
= U
P3
+ U
EE3 ------------
(2c)
U
ce
= U
Prr
+ U
(ambience + service + entertainment) ------------
(2c')
Inferring from the above expressions, several hypotheses could be generated for the research.
It is assumed in each case, in line with the Transactional Utility Theory, that customers would
trade-off between price and deal and patronise store where U
Pi
< U
Di
. It is not desirable to
compare the utilities of different formats and, by themselves, they are different. Also the total
utilities of each of the formats are a function of their own primary value drivers. However, if
it is assumed that the price of a merchandise remain same across formats, the deal utilities can
be the main drivers of value. Such situations exist in cases where products are subject to MRP
restrictions.
The role of the price of the merchandise in selecting a format is interesting. It is likely that its
importance in customers' decision making for each of the formats would be different and
would reduce in a manner such that U
P1
> U
P3
> U
P3.
In the same manner, the deal factors can
also be expressed in an orderly fashion as given in Figure - 9.
Summary
The retail canvass is dotted with several formats. These are broadly classified into store and
non-store formats and on the basis of their ownership. Each format has a specific driver that
makes it succeed. This is called the Retail Value Proposition. This proposition is a
combination of the variables of the retail mix that consists of merchandise, display, pricing,
accessibility and service. A retailer needs to identify one aspect that would provide
sustainable competitive advantage. The selection is dependent on the target customers,
competition and the objectives of the retailers.
Based on the market the retailer wishes to target, the mix could be decided using the
Transaction Utility Theory as proposed by Thaler. The elements of mix could be divided into
price and non-price factors. An approach for the same is described in this paper. The study
could use either Conjoint or structural equation based models to understand format choice
behaviour of the customers.
______________
Food –oriented
Retailers
Figure 1: A Classification Method for Retail Institutions
I
Ownership
II
Store-based
Retail Strategy
Mix
III
Source: Berman Barry and Evans Joel R, "Retail Management - A Strategic Approach",
Prentice Hall India, Eighth Edition
• Independent
• Chain
• Franchise
• Leased department
• Vertical marketing system
• Consumer cooperative
• Convenience store
• Conventional supermarket
• Food -based superstore
• Combination store
• Box (limited line) store
• Warehouse store
• Specialty store
• Variety store
• Traditional department store
• Full –line discount store
• Off-price chain
• Factory outlet
• Membership club
• Flea market
Non store-based
Retail strategy mix and
Nontraditional retailing
• Direct marketing
• Direct selling
• Vending machine
• World Wide Web
• Other emerging retail
formats
General
Merchandise
Retailers
Figure – 2: Vertical Marketing Systems: Functions and Ownership
Type of Channel Channel Functions Ownership
Source: Berman Barry and Evans Joel R, "Retail Management - A Strategic Approach",
Prentice Hall India, Eighth Edition
Independent
Manufacturer
Independent
Wholesaler
Independent
Retailer
Partially
Integrated
Systems
II.
I
Manufacturing
Wholesaling
Retailing
Two channel
members
have all
facilities and
perform all
functions
Independent
Systems
Manufacturing
Wholesaling
Retailing
III
Fully
Integrated
Systems
Manufacturing
Wholesaling
Retailing
All production
and distribution
functions are
performed by
one channel
member.
Figure – 3: Store Based Retailers
TYPE LOCATION ASSORTMENT SERVICES PRICES AND
PROMOTIONS
Traditional
department Store
Business district
shopping centre Or
isolated store
Extensive width and
depth of assortment;
average to good quality
Good to
excellent
Average to high
Prices Heavy ad
and catalogue use,
direct mail;
personal selling
Full –line discount
store
Business district
shopping centre Or
isolated store
power strip centres
Extensive width and
depth of assortment;
average to good quality
Slightly
below
average-to-
average
Low Prices; Heavy
use of newspapers,
price oriented,
moderate sales
force
Speciality store Business district
Or shopping centre
Regional malls
Very narrow width of
assortments; extensive
depth of Assortments;
average to good quality
Average to
high
excellent
High Prices, Heavy
use of displays;
extensive sales
force
Hypermarkets Stand-alone Average Low Low
Variety Store Business district
shopping centre Or
isolated store
Good width and depth
of assortment; below
average to average
quality
Below
Average
Heavy use of
newspapers, self
service
Off-price Chain Business district,
suburban shopping
strip or isolated
store.
Moderate width, but
poor depth of
assortment; average to
good quality, low
continuity
Below
Average
Use of newspapers,
brands not
advertised; limited
sales force
Factory Outlet Out-of –the –way
site or discount
mall
Moderate width but
poor depth of
assortment; some
irregular merchandise;
low continuity
Very low
Little; self-
service
Membership Club Isolated store or
Secondary site
Moderate width but
poor depth of
assortment; low
continuity
Very low
Little; some direct
mail; limited sales
force
Flea market Isolated site, race
track
Or arena
Extensive width, but
poor depth of
assortment; variable
quality; low continuity
Very low Limited ; self
service
Drugstore Stand alone, strip
centres
Very deep Average Average to high
Home improvement
Centres
Stand-alone, power
strip centres
Very deep Low to high Low
Figure - 4: Internet Users
World wide Internet users
in million in September 2002
source Nua Internet Surveys
Africa, 6.31
Asia/Pacific, 187.24
Europe, 190.91
Middle East, 5.12
Canada & USA, 182.67
Latin America, 33.35
Africa
Asia/Pacific
Europe
Middle East
Canada & USA
Latin America
China, 22
India, 4.5
Japan, 27.06
Malaysia, 1.5
Singapore, 1.74
United Kingdom, 19.47
United States, 148
Taiwan, 6.4
other, 374.93
China
India
Japan
Malaysia
Singapore
United Kingdom
United States
Taiwan
other
Figure 5: A Comparison of E-tailing and Other Formats
MODEL COMPARISON FOR GROCERY
Hypermarket Supermarket Kirana Online Call-in
BENEFITS TO THE
RETAILER
Breakeven volumes High Medium Low Medium Medium
Scalability High High Low High Medium
Up front investment High Medium Low Medium Medium
GM based on volumes High High Low Medium Medium
End customer experience Medium High Low Medium Medium
BENEFITS TO
CUSTOMERS
Pricing Low High High High High
Services Low High Low High High
Atmosphere Medium High Low Medium Medium
Convenience Low Medium High High High
Range High Medium Low High Low
End customer experience Medium High Low Medium Medium
Comparison of Cost of Operation
Sales/Sq.ft Rs. 500 Rs. 750 Rs. 1000 Rs. 1250
Hypermkt 13.33% 10.23% 8.68% 7.75%
Supermkt 19.96% 14.52% 11.81% 10.18%
Kirana 7.60% 5.57% 4.55% 3.94%
SuperKirana 16.85% 11.68% 9.10% 7.55%
Sales/Location Rs. 14 Lac Rs. 18 Lac Rs. 26 Lac Rs. 38 Lac
Online* 13.29% 9.62% 8.03% 7.16%
Notes:
1. Online cost does not include Marketing and Technology costs.
2. Location is treated as mainly a large city when the store's service centre is located.
3. Lac = 1,00,000
Figure - 6: Process of Format Selection
Define Value Proposition
Find out the Enablers and Deterrents in the Environment
Find out what it takes to deliver the Value Proposition
Size Merchandise Display Service Price Location
Decide on Store or Non-Store Format and their Derivatives
Shoppers
Retailer’s
Objectives
Competitors
Figure 7: Click, Click and Brick and Brick and Mortar
Factors Pure Play Click and Brick Brick & Mortar
Ease of Distribution Low High High
Scalability High Moderate Low
Market Valuation High Moderate Low
Inventory Costs Low High High
Infrastructure Cost Low High High
Security of Payment Low Mixed High
Variable Costs High Low Low
Consumer Tracking Easy Easy Difficult
Channel Conflict Low High Low
Brand Equity Low High High
Customer Acquisition Cost High Moderate Low
Figure - 8: Store Choice Model for Evolving Markets
Figure - 9: Assumed Utilities of Formats
Format 1 Format 2 Format 3
U
i
t
l
i
t
y
Price Risk Reduction Choice Enhancing Experience Enhancing
doc_425404137.pdf
Transaction Utility theory was propounded by Thaler to explain that the value derived
by a customer from an exchange consists of two drivers: Acquisition Utilities and
Transaction utilities. Acquisition utility represents the economic gain or loss from the
transaction. Where as transaction utility is associated with purchase or (sale) and
represents the pleasure (or displeasure) of the financial deal per se and is a function of
the difference between the selling price and the reference price. Choice of a format has
been studied from several dimensions including the cost and effort as well as the nonmonetary
values.
However,
the
studies
that
present
the
complete
picture
and
combine
the
aspects
of
the tangible
as
well as intangible
values derived out
of the
shopping
process
are
limited.
Most
of
the studies,
all of them
from
the
developed
economies,
have
focussed
on the
selection
of
a store.
They
represent
a scenario
where
formats
have
stabilised.
However,
in Indian
scenario
formats
have been
found
to
be
influencing
the
choice
of store
as
well as orientation
of
the
shoppers.
Also,
retailers
are experimenting
with alternate format with differing success rates. The author has also not found a study
that has applied this theory. It is felt that the Transactional Utility Theory may provide
a suitable approach for making format decisions.
Using Transaction Utility Approach for Retail Format Decision:
Abstract
Transaction Utility theory was propounded by Thaler to explain that the value derived
by a customer from an exchange consists of two drivers: Acquisition Utilities and
Transaction utilities. Acquisition utility represents the economic gain or loss from the
transaction. Where as transaction utility is associated with purchase or (sale) and
represents the pleasure (or displeasure) of the financial deal per se and is a function of
the difference between the selling price and the reference price. Choice of a format has
been studied from several dimensions including the cost and effort as well as the non-
monetary values. However, the studies that present the complete picture and combine
the aspects of the tangible as well as intangible values derived out of the shopping
process are limited. Most of the studies, all of them from the developed economies,
have focussed on the selection of a store. They represent a scenario where formats have
stabilised. However, in Indian scenario formats have been found to be influencing the
choice of store as well as orientation of the shoppers. Also, retailers are experimenting
with alternate format with differing success rates. The author has also not found a study
that has applied this theory. It is felt that the Transactional Utility Theory may provide
a suitable approach for making format decisions.
Retail Formats
The retail format is the store ‘package’ that the retailer presents to the shopper. A
format is defined as a type of retail mix, used by a set of retailers
1
. Store Formats are
formats based on the physical store where the vendor interacts with the customer
2
. It
is the mix of variables that retailers use to develop their business strategies and
constitute the mix as assortment, price, transactional convenience and experience
3
.
Therefore each retailer needs to evaluate the enablers and deterrents in the retail
marketplace. This primarily involves identifying the key drivers of growth, the
shoppers’ profile and shopper expectations .It also means evaluating the nature of
competition and challenges in the market place. Then the retailer decides the elements
of the retail mix to satisfy the target markets’ needs more effectively than its
competitors. The choice of retail mix elements will enable it to decide the type of
format or structure of business.
Classification of Formats
The term retail institution refers to the basic format or structure of a business.
Classification for Retail institutions is necessary to enable firms to better understand
and enact their own strategies: selecting an organizational mission, choosing an
ownership alternative, defining the goods/ service category and setting objectives.
1
Levy Michael, Barton A. Weitz, (2002 ) “Retailing Management” , Tata Mcgraw Hill , Fourth edition, p.172
2
Albrecht Enders and Tawfik Jelassi, (October 2000) "The Converging Business Models of Internet and Bricks-and-Mortar
Retailers", European Management Journal, pp. 542-550
3
Messinger, Paul R and Narasimhan, Chakravarthi (1997), "A Model of Retail Formats Based on Consumers' Economising on
Shopping Time", Marketing Science, Vol. 16, No. 1, pp. 1 – 23
Figure 1 shows a breakdown of each category
4
. The classification is not mutually
exclusive; that is, an institution may be correctly placed in more than one category.
For example, a department store unit may be part of a chain, have a store-based
strategy, accept mail order sales, and have a Web site. These are commonly used
typographies. They are likely to vary between countries. For instance, a Kirana store
in India or car boot sales in the UK.
Ownership Based
Retailing is one of the few sectors in our economy where entrepreneurial activity is
extensive. Although retailers are primarily small (80% of all stores are operated by
firms with one outlet and over one-half of all firms have two or fewer paid
employees), there are also very large retailers.
Retail firms may be independently owned, chain owned, franchisee operated, leased
departments, owned by manufacturers or wholesalers, consumer owned
5
. From a
positioning and operating perspective, each ownership format delivers unique value.
Retail executives must work on the strengths and weaknesses inherent in each of these
formats to be successful.
Independents
An Independent retailer owns a single retail unit. In the United States, they account
for nearly 80 percent of total retail establishments and firms generate just 3 percent of
total U.S. store sales. One half of all independents are run entirely by the owners
and/or their families and have no paid workers. The high number of independent
retailers is associated with the ease of entry into the marketplace, owing to low capital
requirement, no or relatively simple, licensing procedures. The ease of entry into
retailing is reflected in the low market shares of the leading firms in many goods
/service categories as a percentage of total category sales. For example, in the grocery
store category where large chains are quite strong, the five largest grocery retailers
account for only about 22 percent of sales
6
. A similar large format in India contributed
to less than 3% of total retail sales. The Indian retail market has around 12 million
outlets and has the largest retail outlet density in the world. However, most of these
outlets are basic mom-and-pop stores with very basic offerings, fixed prices, and no
ambience. These are highly competitive stores due to cheap land prices and labour.
Also, most of the time these stores save tax as they belong to the small industry
sector.
Due to relative ease of entry into retailing, there is a great deal of competition
resulting in the high rate of retail business failures among new firms. According to
Small Business Administration estimates one-third of new U.S. retailers do not
4
Berman Barry and Evans Joel R, "Retail Management - A Strategic Approach", Eastern Economy
Edition, Eighth Edition – Prentice-Hall India, p.115
5
ibid.4
6
Caffey Andrew A. (1997), “Opportunity Knocks’’, Entrepreneur Magazine ‘s Buyer Guide to
Franchisee and Business Opportunities, p. 3
survive their first year and two –thirds do not continue beyond their third year. Most
of the failures involve independents.
These stores have a great deal of flexibility in choosing retail formats and locations.
They target smaller consumer segments rather than mass markets. Since only one
store location is involved, detailed specifications can be set for determining best
location, product assortments, prices, store hours, and other factors consistent with
their target segment. They have low investments in terms of lease, fixtures, workers
and merchandise. Thirdly, independents often act as specialists and acquire skills in a
niche for a particular goods/service category. Decision-making in these stores is
usually centralised as the owner operator is typically on the premises, who have a
strong entrepreneurial drive as they have personal investment in the business, success
or failure has huge implications, and there is a lot of ego involvement. They are
consistent in their efforts as they generally adopt just one strategy.
There are some disadvantages of independent retailing. They have limited bargaining
power with suppliers as they often buy in small quantities. Reordering may also be
tough if minimum order requirements are too high for them to qualify. To overcome
this problem, a number of independents form buying groups. Due to low economies in
buying and maintaining inventory, the transportation, ordering, and handling costs are
higher. These stores often have operations that are labour intensive, sometimes with
little computerisation. Ordering, taking inventory, marking items, ringing up sales and
bookkeeping may be done manually as most independents tend to find investment in
technology and training not worthy. Compared to other formats, Independents incur
high costs of advertising due to limited access to advertising media and may pay
higher fees compared to regular users. There is often disruption when the owner is ill,
on vacation, or retires. They also allocate limited amount of time and resources to
long term planning. To offset the disadvantage of economies, these retailers offer
complementary merchandise and services. Often while all stores in the chain offer the
same merchandise, independents can provide merchandise compatible with local
market needs.
Chains
A chain retailer operates multiple outlets (store units) under common. In developed
economies, they account for nearly a quarter of retail outlets and over 50 percent of
retail sales. Retail chains can range from two stores to retailers with over 1,000 stores.
Some retail chains are divisions of larger corporations or holding companies. The
select large retail chains in India are shown in Annexure-I
Chain Retailers have several advantages. They enjoy strong bargaining power with
suppliers due to the volumes of purchases. They generally bypass wholesalers. Many
of them buy directly from the manufacturers. Suppliers service the orders from chains
promptly and extend a higher level of proper service and selling support. New brands
reach these stores faster. Most of these chains sell private. Chains achieve efficiency
due to the centralisation of purchasing and warehousing and computerisation. Wider
geographic coverage of markets allows chains to utilize all forms of media. Most of
the chains invest considerable time and resources in long term planning, monitoring
opportunities and threats.
Chain retailers suffer from limited flexibility, as they need to be consistent throughout
in terms of prices, promotions, and product assortments. Chain retailers have high
investments in multiple leases, fixtures, product assortments and employees. Due to
their spread, these retailers have reduced control, lack of communication and time
delays. Thus, such retailers focus on managing a specific retail format for a better
strategic advantage and increased profitability. Some chain retailers capitalise on their
widely known image and adopt flexibility to market changes.
Franchising
Franchising is a contractual agreement between a franchiser and a franchisee that
allows the franchisee to operate a retail outlet using a name and format developed and
supported by the franchiser. Approximately one –third of all U.S. retail sales are made
by franchisees. In a franchise contract the franchisee pays a lump sum plus a royalty
on all sales for the right to operate a store in a specific location. The franchisee also
agrees to operate the outlet in accordance with procedures prescribed by the
franchisers. The franchiser provides
7
assistance in locating and building the store,
developing the products and/or services sold, management training and advertising.
There are two types of franchising: product/ trademark and business format. In
product/ trademark franchising, franchisees acquire the identities of the franchiser by
agreeing to sell the latter’s product and/or operate under the latter’s names. But the are
independent in their operation. They may draw certain operating rules in consultation
with the franchiser. In a business format franchising arrangement, the two parties have
a synergetic relationship. The franchiser provides assistance in strategic and operation
issues besides the right to sell goods and services. The franchisees can take advantage
of prototype stores, standardised product lines and cooperative advertising.
Three structural arrangements are found in retail franchising. (a) Manufacturer-
Retailer; where a manufacturer the right to sell goods and related services through a
licensing agreement as in the case of automotive dealers and petroleum products
dealers. (b) Wholesaler- retailer; which may take the form of a voluntary franchise
system as in consumer electronic stores or co-operative where a group of retailers set
up a franchise system and share the ownership and operations of a wholesaling
organisation. (c) Service sponsor retailer, where a service firm licenses individual
retailers to let them offer specific service package to consumers, such as auto rental,
hotels and fast food restaurants.
This arrangement has several advantages. Individual franchisees can own retail
enterprises with relatively small capital investments. Franchisers gain a national or
global presence quickly and with less investment. It improves cash flow as money is
obtained when goods are delivered rather than when they are sold. Since franchisees
are owners and not employees, they have a greater incentive to work hard.
Franchisees may also have to face certain disadvantages. Over saturation could occur
adversely affecting the sales and profits of each unit. They may enter into contract
provisions that give the franchisers undue advantage. The can exclude franchisees
7
Fernie John and Fernie Suzanne I (1997), “The Development of a US Retail Format in Europe”,
International Journal of Retail and Distribution Management, Vol. 25 (11), pp. 342 – 350.
from, or limit their involvement in, the strategic planning process. Franchisers also
face a lot of potential problems. Franchisees can harm a firm’s overall reputation and/
or customer loyalty if they do not adhere to company standards. Intra-franchise
competition is not desirable. Ineffective franchised units directly impact franchiser
profitability from selling services, materials, or products to the franchisees and from
royalty fees. Franchisees, in greater numbers, are seeking independence from
franchiser rules and regulations.
Leased Department
A Leased Department is a department in a retail store rented generally by a
manufacturer. The lessee is responsible for all aspects of business and pays the store a
rent. The store may impose operating restrictions for the leased department to ensure
the overall consistency. The leased departments choose to operate in categories that
are generally on the fringe of the store’s major product lines, such as in-store beauty
salons, banks, photographic studios and food courts.
Leased departments help the stores in generating greater traffic and providing one-
stop shopping. They benefit from expertise of lessees in personal management,
merchandise displays, the recording of items, as store personnel might lack the
merchandising ability to handle and sell certain goods and services. This is also a
regular source of revenue and reduces costs as leased departments pay for inventory
and personal expenses. This may also be a source of conflict with lessees as leased
departments may use operating procedures which conflict with those of the stores.
The lessees may adversely affect stores’ images and customers may blame problems
on the host stores rather than on the lessees.
The leased department operators benefit as the main store generates immediate sales
for leased departments. This arrangement reduces expenses through economics of
scale (like pooled advertising) and shared facilities (like security equipment and
display windows). Also lessees’ images are aided by there relationships with popular
stores. However, there may be inflexibility due to the restrictions imposed by the
operations of the main store. There is always the fear that the stores may raise the rent
or may not renew leases when they expire even if lessees are successful.
Vertical Marketing System
A Vertical Marketing System consists of all levels of independently owned businesses
along a channel of distribution. Goods and services are normally distributed through
one of these types of vertical marketing systems: independent, partially integrated,
and fully integrated as shown in figure 2.
In an independent firm vertical marketing system, there are levels of independently
owned firms: manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers. Such a system is most often
used when the manufacturers have to reach a wider market or retailers are small. Also
when company resources are low and channel members want to share costs and risks
such an arrangement is desirable. Independent retailers capitalise on their targeted
customer base and build loyalty by playing the role of a friendly shop-owner and
build a good word –of –mouth communication.
With a partially integrated vertical marketing system, two independently owned
businesses along a channel perform all production and distribution functions without
the aid of the third. The most common form of this system is when a manufacturer
and retailer complete transactions and shipping, storing and other distribution
functions in the absence of independent wholesalers. A partially integrated system is
most appropriate if manufacturers and retailers are large, selective or exclusive
distribution is sought, unit sales are moderate, company resources are high, greater
channel control is desired, and existing wholesalers are too expensive or unavailable.
Through a fully integrated vertical marketing system, a single Company performs all
production and distribution functions by eliminating the other channel members. The
advantages to a firm are total control over strategy, direct contact with final
consumers, and higher retail mark-ups without raising prices, self-sufficiency,
exclusivity over goods and services offered, and retention of profits within the
company. In the past, this system was usually employed only by manufacturers, but
now retailers have also moved upward in the chain. Some wholesalers have bother
either way to deliver better value to their customers.
Consumer Co-operatives
A Consumer Cooperative is a retail firm in which a group of consumers invest in the
enterprise. The officers are elected. Consumer-members share the profits or savings
that accrue. Such retailers are many in umber but small in size and are most popular in
food retailing. They are started mainly to guard against the malpractice that many
retailers indulge in and either charge higher prices or offer inconsistent quality of
merchandise. The consumer co-operatives are limited because consumers are usually
not expert in buying, handling and selling goods and services and the cost savings and
low selling prices have not been as expected in many cases.
Store Based Retailer
Retail institutions may be classified by store based strategy mix and divided into
food–oriented and general merchandise. The selected aspects of the strategy of store
based retail institutions are described in Figure - 4.
Food- Oriented Retailers
Six major strategic formats are used by food oriented retailers: convenience store,
conventional supermarket, food based superstore, combination store, box (limited line
store) and warehouse store. These are discussed in the following subsections.
Convenience Stores
A convenience store is a well-located store. The ease of shopping and personalised
services are the major reasons for its patronage, even when it charges average to
above average prices, and carries a moderate number of items.. It stays open for long
hours and provides an average atmosphere and customer services. It is often also
called the "mom–and-pop" stores. It is useful for fill-in merchandise and emergency
purchases. Many customers shop at least two to three times a week at these stores.
The convenience stores face most competition from supermarkets that have started
providing longer hours and better stocks of non-food items.
Conventional Supermarket
A conventional supermarket is a self-service food store offering groceries, meat,
produce with limited sales of non-food items, such as health and beauty aids and
general merchandise at low prices. They are large in size and carry 9,000 to 11,000
items. They are chosen due to volume sales, self-service, low prices and easy parking.
The self-service nature allows supermarkets to cut costs, as well as increase volume.
The conventional supermarket was once the most common format.
8
Conventional
supermarkets have to deal with intense competition from other types of food stores.
Convenience stores offer greater customer convenience; food based superstores and
combination stores have more product lines and greater variety, as well as better gross
margins; and box and warehouse stores have lower operating costs and prices.
Membership clubs, with their discount prices, also provide competition – especially
now that they have expanded food lines. Discount store chains are able to undercut
supermarket prices because their efficient distribution systems focus on reducing
inventory investments by selling fast moving items.
Food-based Superstores:
Superstores are large supermarkets ranging from 20,000 to 50,000 square feet. They
cater to consumers grocery needs and offer them the ability to buy fill-in general
merchandise. The advantages of food-based superstores are that they are efficient,
offer a degree of one-stop shopping, stimulate impulse purchases and feature high
profit general merchandise. Other advantages are that it is easier and less costly to
redesign and convert supermarkets into food-based superstores than combination
stores. Management expertise is better focused in food-based superstores. Many
consumers feel more comfortable shopping in true food stores than combination
stores. Most of the supermarket chains have also started offering food to compete with
these stores.
Combination Stores/ Supercentres
Combination stores are food-based retailers that unite supermarket and general
merchandise sales in one facility with the latter typically accounting for 25 to 40
percent of total sales. They achieve operational efficiencies and cost savings through
their large-scale operations. Consumers like one-stop shopping and travel further to
visit these stores. Impulse sales are high. A super centre is a combination store
blending an economy supermarket with a discount department store. Traditional
supermarkets are facing serious new competitive challenges from supercentres at the
price-conscious end of the market and from "home meal replacement" providers at
the convenience-oriented end. Supercentres with an average size of about 150,000 sq.
8
Doris Newton J (1993), “Non-traditional Retailers Challenge the Supermarket Industry", Food
Review; Washington; Jan-Apr
ft. devote about 40% of their space to grocery items and the rest to discount general
merchandise.
Box (Limited-Line) Store:
The Box (Limited-Line) Store is a food based discounter that focuses on a small
selection of items, moderate hours of operation (compared to other supermarkets),
few additional services, and limited manufacturer brands. There stock usually less
items, few or no refrigerated perishables, and few sizes and brands per item. Items are
displayed in cut cases. Customers do their own bagging. Box stores depend on low –
priced private-label brands. They aim to price merchandise 20 to 30 percent below
supermarkets.
Warehouse Store:
A warehouse club is a retailer that offers a limited assortment of food and general
merchandise, with limited services, at low prices to ultimate consumers and small
businesses. It appeals to price–conscious consumers, who must be members to shop
there. Its inventory turnover rate is several times that of a department store. Stores
are large and located in low–rent areas. They have simple interiors and concrete
floors. Aisles are wide to facilitate pick up pallets of merchandise. Specific brands
and items differ from time to time as the stores buy merchandise available on special
promotions from manufacturers. The clubs pass on these savings to shoppers through
lower prices. Most warehouse clubs have two types of members. Wholesale members
who are small business people, and individual members who purchase for their own
use.
The major retailing challenge faced by membership clubs is the limited size of their
final consumer market segment. The main limiting factor is the lack of brand
continuity. Since products are usually bought when special deals are available, brands
may be temporarily or permanently out of stock. In addition, many consumers do not
like shopping in warehouse settings.
General Merchandise Retailers
Department Store
A department store is a large retail unit with an extensive assortment (width and
depth) of goods and services that are organised into separate departments for purposes
of buying, promotion, customer service and control. It has the greatest selection of
any general merchandise retailer and often serves as the anchor store in a shopping
centre or district. Department Stores are unique in terms of the shopping experience
they offer, the services they provide and the atmosphere of the store. They offer a full
range of services from altering clothing to home delivery. Over its history, the
department store has been responsible for many innovations, including advertising
prices, enacting a one-price policy (whereby all shoppers pay the same price for the
same good or service.), developing computerised checkouts, offering money back
guarantees, adding branch stores and decentralised management
However, during the past few years, industry wide sales growth of traditional
department stores has lagged behind the full line discount stores. They no longer have
brand exclusivity for a lot of items they sell; manufacturer brands are also available at
specialty and discount outlets. Many firms, instead of creating their own brands, have
signed exclusive licensing agreements with fashion designers. This perpetuates
customer loyalty to the designer and not the store. There are more price conscious
consumers than before, and they are attracted to discount retailers. The popularity of
shopping malls has aided specialty stores since consumers can accomplish one-stop
shopping through several specialty stores in the same mall or shopping centre. Some
department stores are too big and have too much unproductive selling space and low
turnover of merchandise.
Full –line Discount Store
A full–line discount store targets the middle -class and lower- middle class shoppers
who looking for good value. It conveys the image of a high-volume, low cost and fast
turnover outlet. It sells a broad merchandise assortment for less than conventional
prices. It is likely to carry the range of product lines expected at department stores.
Products are normally sold via self-service with minimal assistance in any single
department. Centralised checkout service is provided. Buildings, equipment and
fixtures are less expensive; and operating costs are lower than for traditional
department stores. To respond to category specialists, full –line discount retailers are
creating more attractive shopping environments, placing more emphasis on apparel,
developing private label merchandise, and increasing store visits by offering easily
accessible convenience store merchandise.
Speciality Stores
A traditional specialty store concentrates on a limited number of complementary
merchandise categories and provides a high level of service. They are smaller in size.
• Drugstores
Drugstores are specialty stores that concentrate on health and personal grooming
merchandise. Pharmaceuticals often represent over 50 percent of drugstore sales and
an even greater percentage of their profits. Drugstores are facing considerable
competition from discount stores and supermarkets adding pharmacies. In response,
the major drugstore chains are building larger stand-alone stores offering a wider
assortment of merchandise, more frequently purchased consumer products and drive
through windows for picking up prescriptions. To build customer loyalty, the chains
are also changing the role of their pharmacists from dispensing pills to providing
health care assistance and personalised service. For example, Planet Health,
Subhiksha.
• Category Killers
The category killer concept originated in the U.S. due to abundance of cheap land and
the dominant car culture. A category specialist is a discount store that offers a narrow
variety but deep assortment of merchandise. These retailers are basically discount
specialty stores. By offering a complete assortment in a category at low prices,
category specialists can “kill” a category of merchandise for other retailers. Most
category specialists use a self-service approach. They use their buying power to
negotiate low prices, excellent terms and assured supply when items are scarce.
The category killers are facing reduced profits as the competition is focusing on
prices. They have difficulty differentiating themselves on other elements of retail
mix. All competitors in a category provide similar assortments and the same level of
service. According to a report in the European Retail Digest, there are some that
believe that the category killer format will burn out, leaving only a few hardened
experts, as happened with the warehouse club sector. In response to this increasing
competitive intensity, the category killers continue to concentrate on reducing costs
by increasing operational efficiency, acquiring smaller chains to gain economies of
scale and expanding into less competitive international markets. France, Germany,
Spain and the UK provide attractive markets for expanding category killers.
Interestingly, with the clampdown on out-of-town developments in the UK,
homegrown category killers that are typically located in town centres will benefit
from legislative changes in this area. Some out of town category killers are choosing
to downsize their format to make it fit small towns.
9
• DIY Stores
A home improvement centre is a category specialist offering equipment and material
used by do-it–yourselfers and contractors to make home improvements. It focuses on
providing material and information that enables consumers to maintain and improve
their homes. While merchandise in these stores is displayed in a warehouse
atmosphere, salespeople are available to assist customers in selecting merchandise
through demonstrations and workshops. They are not facing the same level of
competitive intensity as other category specialists, because the merchandise varies
considerably across the country and there are opportunities for differentiation on
customer service.
Off-Price Stores:
An off-price chain offers brand–names and designer labels and sells them at a low
price in an efficient, limited service environment. An off-price store buys other
retailers’ cancelled orders, manufacturers’ irregulars and overruns and end-of–season
items for a fraction of their original wholesale prices. Due to this pattern of
opportunistic buying, the same type of merchandise may not be in stock when
customers visit the store. Typically, different bargains will be available on each visit.
Their inventory turnover is far higher than that of departmental stores. The most
crucial aspect of the strategy for off-price chains involves buying merchandise and
establishing long-term relationships with suppliers. Three special types of off-price
retailers are outlet, closeout, and single-price retail stores.
9
“Category Killers in Europe - A Retail Format for the Future”, European Retail Digest, Spring 1996,
p. 42.
Over the past few years, the sales growth of off-price retailers has slowed. The
challenge is from an increase in sales and promotion in department stores, consumers
being more fashionable, brand name merchandise in department stores at the same
discounted prices offered by off-price retailers. Also, more sophisticated inventory
management systems have reduced the amount of excess production that can be
bought by off-price retailers. Therefore the manufacturers have sought opportunities
to apply this successful format in foreign markets, particularly in the UK. By the early
1990s, the UK market appeared to be attractive for the introduction of factory outlet
centres for a variety of reasons. First, the growth of retail formats in out of town
locations (superstores, retail parks, and regional centres) was conducive to a fourth
wave of development. Second, this trend to out of town shopping coincided with the
rise of discounting formats, creating a climate suitable for the growth of value
retailing. Third, the relaxation of planning guidelines in the 1980s and early 1990s
allowed the development of new out of town retail formats.
10
• Factory Outlet Stores:
Outlet Stores are off-price retailers owned by manufacturers or by department or
specialty store chains and are frequently referred to as factory outlets. A factory outlet
is a manufacturer–owned store selling manufacturer closeouts, discontinued
merchandise, irregulars, cancelled orders, and sometimes, in season, first quality
merchandise. They closely resemble shopping centres, both in terms of size, layout,
and in carefully controlled tenant mix, with manufacturers operating separate units on
a single co-coordinated site. Additional amenities include car parking, restaurant and
leisure facilities. Factory outlet stores are located out of town, lowering development
and operating costs and the distribution channel for certain categories of merchandise
is shortened, cutting out the functions and profits of traditional retailers. The
manufacturers have various interests in outlet stores.
11
It helps in the disposal of
surplus stock due to unreliable accounts, late payers, and cancelled orders. It allows a
manufacturer to control where its discounted merchandise is sold. A manufacturer
chooses out-of–the-way locations, depressed areas, or areas with low sales
penetration of the firm’s brands, whereby the factory outlet revenues are unlikely to
affect the sales at manufacturers’ key specialty and department stores. A
manufacturer can decide on store visibility, set promotion policies, remove labels and
be sure that discontinued items and irregulars are disposed of properly.
• Closeout Retailers:
Closeout Retailers are off-price retailers that sell a broad but consistent assortment of
general merchandise as well as apparel and soft home goods.
• Single Price Retailers:
Single Price Retailers are closeout stores that sell all their merchandise at a single
price.
10
Ibid. 7
11
Fernie Suzanne (1996), “The Future for Factory Outlet Centres in the UK”, International Journal of
Retail and Distribution Management, Vol. 24 (6), pp. 11 – 21.
Hypermarkets
Hypermarkets were created in France after World War II. A hypermarket is a very
large retail store offering low prices. It combines a discount store and superstore food
retailer in one warehouse like building. Hypermarkets can be up to 300,000 square
feet and stock over 50,000 different items. Hypermarkets are unique in terms of store
size; low operating margins, low prices and the size of general merchandise
assortment. The store sells a broad variety of basic merchandise ranging from food to
consumer electronics. All hypermarkets are based on three concepts of: one stop
shopping, ample free parking and a discount pricing strategy. The main limitation of
hypermarkets is that many consumers find that shopping in stores over 200,000
square feet is too time consuming. It is hard to find merchandise and checkout lines
can be very long.
Variety Store
A variety store handles a wide assortment of inexpensive and popularly priced goods
and services, such as stationary, gift items, women’s accessories, health and beauty
aids, light hardware, toys, house ware and confectionery items. They do not carry full
product lines, may not be departmentalised and do not deliver products. Transactions
are often on a cash basis. There are often displays and few salespeople.
The challenge for variety stores has come from specialty stores, discount stores and
closeout chains often sell similar items to those sold in conventional variety stores,
but in plainer surroundings and much lower prices.
Flea Market
A flea market has many retail vendors offering a range of products at discount prices
in plain surroundings. It is rooted in the centuries old tradition of street selling -
shoppers touch, sample and haggle over the prices of items. Price-conscious
consumers who find that other retail formats have upgraded merchandise and
customer service or raised prices frequent them. Many flea markets are located in
nontraditional sites not normally associated with retailing: racetracks, stadiums and
arenas. Others are at sites abandoned by supermarkets and department stores. They
may be indoor or outdoor. At a flea market, individual retailers rent space on a daily,
weekly or seasonal basis. The newest trend in flea markets involves web-based flea
markets such as eBay and Amazon.com with its zShops. Flea markets are believed by
some to misrepresent or overstate the quality of merchandise. The can easily avoid
taxes and their operating costs are quite low.
Non-Store Based Retailers
Nonstore retailing is a form of retailing in which sales are made to consumers without
using physical stores
12
. The non-store retailers are known by medium they use to
communicate with their customers, such as direct marketing, direct selling and
vending machines or e-tailing. Non store retailing is patronised to time conscious
12
Ibid.1 p.75
consumers and consumers who can’t easily go to stores, or compulsive buyers
13
. Most
non-store retailers offer consumers the convenience of buying 24 hours a day seven
days a week and delivery at location and time of their choice.
Nonstore sales are now growing at a higher rate than sales in retail stores. The high
growth rate is primarily due to the growth of electronic retailing. The growth of
catalogue retail sales and sales in other nonstore retailing formats such as TV home
shopping, direct selling, and vending machines are slower
14
.
Vending Machines
Vending machine is a retailing format involving the coin or card operated dispensing
of goods (such as beverages) and services (such as life insurance sales at airports)
15
. It
eliminates the use of sales personnel and allows for round the clock sales. Machines
can be placed wherever they are most convenient to the consumers –inside or outside
a store, in a hotel corridor, at a station, airport or a street corner.
Although many attempts have been made to ‘vend’ other products, beverages and
food items remain the largest category. Hotels, restaurants and at train stations are
highly visible spots for vending but they account for a small proportion of sales.
Higher priced items have not sold well in vending machines because too many coins
are required for each transaction and many vending machines are not equipped with
currency note changers. Many consumers are reluctant to purchase more expensive
items - they cannot see them displayed or have them explained and there is the
difficulty of returning unsatisfactory merchandise. In evolved markets, vending
machine sales have experienced little growth over the past five years largely due to
the changes in the workplace. Employment growth has been limited and the largest
growth in the work-force is white and pink collar employees rather than the blue –
collar workers who buy most heavily from vending machines.
To improve productivity and customer relations, vending machine retailers use
microprocessors to track consumer preferences, trace malfunctions and record
receipts. The devices transmit data back to the host computer. This data is analysed
and communications are sent to route drivers informing them of stock outs and
malfunctions. Some machines even have voice synthesisers. Video kiosks enable
consumers to assess the merchandise and also use their credit cards to make a
purchase. In India vending machines are at a very nascent stage. Almost all of them
are operated by an attendant. Even coffee machines are operated with assistance.
Companies like Cadbury’s and Malayalam Manorma (newspaper publishing house)
have installed them at places that attract a lot of traffic, such as the airport. But the
sales from these are limited.
Electronic Retailing
13
Cynthia Crossen and Ellen Graham(1996), “Pressed for Time or Pressed for Money?” The Wall
Street Journal , March 8, p. 4; George Milne and Mary Ellen Gordon (1994), “A Segmentation Study
Of Consumer’s Attitudes toward Direct Mail,” Journal Of Direct Marketing, Vol. 8, Spring), pp. 45-52
14
Ibid.4 p.176
15
Ibid.4 p.191
Electronic retailing (also called e-tailing and Internet retailing) is a retail format in
which the retailer and customer communicate which each other through an interactive
electronic network. After an electronic dialogue between the retailer and customer, the
customer can order merchandise directly through the interactive network or by
telephone. The merchandise is then delivered to the customer’s address.
The World Wide Web can serve one or more of these roles for a retailer
16
:
• Project a retail presence.
• Generate sales as the major source of revenue for an online retailer or as a
complementary source of revenue for a store-based retailer.
• Enhance the retailer’s image.
• Reach geographically dispersed consumers including foreign ones.
• Provide information to consumers about the products carried, store locations,
usage information, answers to common questions, customer loyalty programmes
and so on.
• Promote new products and fully explain and demonstrate their features.
• Furnish customer service in the form of E-mail, “hot links”, and other
communications.
• Be more personal with consumers by letting them point and click on topics they
choose.
• Conduct a retail business in a cost efficient manner.
• Obtain customer feedback.
• Give special offers and send coupons to web customers.
• Describe employment opportunities.
• Present information to potential investors, potential franchisees and the media.
The role assigned to the web by a given retailer depends on whether it is
predominantly a traditional retailer that wants to have a web presence or a newer firm
that wants to derive most or all its revenues from web transactions.
Strong growth of Internet users and electronic retail sales is evident Figure - 4. In
addition, Forrester Research has forecast that 13% of U.S. retailing will be conducted
via the Internet by 2004.
17
Non U.S. markets account for about 30 percent of the e-
commerce industry.
18
In India Non-Store retailing represented by direct selling and e-
tailing is estimated at Rs 1,100 crores. Only 19 percent of all retailers have an e-
retailing initiative. The number of retailers with plans to e-tail within one year and
those with no plans are almost equal. Significantly, 10 percent of the retailers have
discontinued their e-retail initiatives. The main reasons for retailers to stay away from
e-tailing is predominantly non-viability of business and resource constraints
19
. It is
estimated that 5 percent or more of retail sales of goods and services such as apparel,
banking, books, computer hardware and software, consumer electronics, gifts,
greeting cards, insurance, music, newspapers/magazines, sporting goods, toys, travel
16
Ibid.4 p.193
17
Nongkran Lertpittayapoom and Tadisina Suresh, “The Antecedents Of Customer Satisfaction In
Electronic Retailing”, Working paper, Department of Management, Southern Illinois University
Carbondale,
18
Byliner: Amazon.Com’s VP on Global Electronic Retailing, (18 May 2000)
19
Changing Gears: Retailing In India, ET knowledge Series, p. 134
and videos will be made online.
20
In the case of products where it is difficult to
provide ‘touch and feel’ information electronically, such as clothing, perfumes,
flowers and food electronic retailers may not be successful. Branding may help
overcome many of the uncertainties in purchasing merchandise without touching and
feeling it. For example, if customers purchase a size 30–inch waist / 32-inch inseam
pair of jeans, they knows they will fit when bought from an electronic retailer.
In some products and services, such as travelling or hotels, electronic retailers might
even be able to provide superior information compared to store retailers. The critical
issue related to selling successfully for electronic retailers is whether they can provide
enough information prior to the purchase and make sure the customers will be
satisfied with the merchandise once they get it. There are many buying situations in
which electronic retailers can provide sufficient information, even though the
merchandise has important ‘touch and feel’ attributes. Figure - 5
Started on venture capitalist (VC) or initial public offering (IPO) money, by 1999
there was hype around e-tailing. Consumers were thought to be ready to make a
deliberate choice of buying from e-tailers rather than retailers. They seemed to fulfil
the consumer dream of no queues, no geographic barriers, low prices and unlimited
selection - what retail had failed to deliver
21
. But e-tailing ended up disappointing and
found that traditional shopping was easier. Ernst & Young statistics for the 1999
Christmas season revealed that US online buyers spent only 26% of their holiday
spending (averaging $1,080 per capita) online, while they devoted 67% of their total
holiday expenditure to in-store purchases, the remaining 7% they spent on catalogue
products. By the end of the 2000 holiday season more than 90% of e-tailers closed
down in the period to January 2001
22
. E-commerce witnessed the collapse of several
online grocers, drug stores, auto dealerships, pet supply stores and other budding e-
commerce ventures and hundreds of dotcom investors abandoning their dreams of
getting rich quick with e-commerce
23
.
However, Retail e-commerce sales grew to $7.5 billion, up 24.7 percent in the second
quarter of 2001 compared with just under $6 billion in the second quarter of 2000,
according to an August report from the U.S. Commerce Department
24
. Leading
market researchers suggest that U.S. markets for online retailers will cross $27 billion
by 2005
25
. European Web shoppers are expected to spend more money online for
groceries than their American counterparts, according to Forrester Research. The
report predicts that Web grocery shopping in Europe will be $51 million –or five
percent of Europe’s total grocery sales by 2005. Seven percent of the United
Kingdom’s grocery sales will go online by 2005. The Nordic countries are expected to
follow closely with six percent of grocery sales taking place online. France and
Germany will account for more than three percent of sales online in 2005
26
. The
20
Business Week e.biz (Feburary 7, 2000)
21
Lindstorm Martin, Peppers Don and Rogers Martha (2001), “Clicks, Bricks and Brands : the
Marriage of Online and Offline Business", Kogan Page, London, p. 11
22
Ibid.21
23
Mello Adrian (2001), “Four Myths of Online Retailing", November 7
24
Ibid.21
25
Ibid.19 p.117
26
“Electronic Retailing and eMarketing", Newsletter Hermes, Issue No.5-September-October (2000)
present players in the market are trying to learn the lessons from the failures and
success of extinct and surviving e-commerce pioneers.
E-tailing Myths:
The common myths earlier were that online selling required low investment and low
cost and hence had no entry barriers and it was easy to succeed. There are four B2C
myths that can be misleading while managing e-commerce operations
27
.
1. Stickiness is good: Many sites aspire to keep customers on the site as long as
possible by adding features and design navigation. They have too many sequential
click through pages and save the best page for the last. On the contrary it is
observed that when it comes to e-commerce sites, the customers would rather
complete their purpose than unnecessarily waste a lot of time on a site when
looking for a particular product. Therefore, a site should have an introductory
home page, offer speed navigation, vividly describe product benefits, update
displays regularly, provide expert information and price competitively.
2. More is better: Some sites try to attract customers with flashy technology by
bombarding them with fancy graphics, animation and sound effects. But fancy
visual and sound effects slow sites to a crawl. A recent survey from Jupiter Media
Metrix found that visitors were twice as likely to return to a site with faster
loading pages than they were to sites that provide rich media. The Jupiter survey
also found that 59 percent of those surveyed would be more likely to return to a
site that offered more product information
28
.
3. Personalisation drives profitability: Personalisation was supposed to be the killer
application of B2C. But personalisation is just one of the merchandising
techniques that e- commerce sites should consider for incremental sales
improvement but per se it does not help to complete sales. This is because
customer actions don’t always reflect their interests. For example, a customer may
have bought a book on baseball as a gift for his brother-in-law, a sports fan. But
the customer dislikes sports himself. However, that does not stop the site from
continually calling the customer’s attention to books on baseball, football,
basketball and the like. It is recommended that instead of investing in expensive
personalisation technology sites they would be better off devoting their energies to
proper merchandising by answering questions and having items logically
arranged
29
.
4. You can sell anything on the web: One can sell many products like CDs,
books,gifts, online. But certain products aren’t a good fit for e-commerce sales,
either due to legal restrictions like in the case of alcohol, or the customers need to
touch and feel the product or try an expensive piece of apparel to make sure it fits.
Sometimes the discounted price shoppers’ find on the Web may not offset the
hefty shipping charges for large, heavy items such as an oven or jacuzzi.
Although, in the case of such products one may not be able to complete the
transaction on the Web but it can assist the sale. The web-site can be used to
inform customers about these items and direct them to an appropriate sales
channel, like its stores or distribution network.
27
Ibid.21
28
Ibid. 23
29
Ibid.23
5. Some common myths now are that e-commerce entails high cost and hence is not
viable. E-commerce is undoubtedly a high investment business requiring
substantial investment to set up the web site, the software for data capture, records
and interactive systems for customer dialogue. These are sometimes
underestimated and often cause downfalls. But they are investments like any
bricks and mortar business; only the heads under which they are made are
different.
6. Another myth is that e-commerce cannot make money
30
. But e-commerce can be
made profitable by generating volumes to make money and given time to mature
and taking up the challenge to change customer behaviour. However, it cannot be
a gold mine
31
.
7. According to the Ernst & Young “Global Online Retailing” report, the main
reasons that non buyers don’t buy online are: they are uncomfortable sending
credit card information, preference for seeing the product before purchasing, no
existence of credit card, insufficient information about products to make
decisions, lack of confidence with online merchants and limitation of talking to
the sale person. In addition, the main concerns of online buyers are overly high
shipping costs, need to try for fit in the case of apparel, high prices, inappropriate
for large, perishable and luxury items, need to feel and see and concern of
privacy
32
. The report also charted that 3 biggest “barriers” consumers feel hinder
their online shopping experience are price, security and ease of navigation.
8. The e-tailers have high fulfillment of costs (which can be as high as US$16 an
order for most dotcom e-tailers) and lack of scale makes the business unprofitable.
9. Poor inventory management also causes major losses for many dotcoms. This fact
along with inexperienced merchandising teams, brutal price competition,
inefficient product return systems, result in poor gross margins for online –only
players.
10. High marketing costs: Experienced offline brands spend about 18% less than
startups on establishing retail websites. E –tailer-marketing costs are high. Online
“rent”, a term for the price of time and space on media channels for on-and offline
brand marketing, has inflated hugely over the last decade of the twentieth century.
According to Thomas Weitzel Partners (August 1999) where a superstore spends
an average of US$2.50 promoting a product, e-tailers spend US $17.29 per
product.
11. Online customer acquisition costs: Most consumers still need to be persuaded to
go online and at the same time almost all e-tailers lose money on every customer.
Their customers generate too few orders and too little profit per order to cover the
costs of winning them, which can be as high as 65% per order. According to a
study by The McKinsey Quarterly in July 2000, for e-tailers to achieve
comfortable contributions on each transaction, they would need efficient order
fulfilment processes, average orders of at least US$100 and gross margins of at
least 25%.
30
Sudhakar V.S (2004), “E-Tailing – The Opportunities and the Challenges”, Presentation at Indian
Institute of Management, Ahmedabad,
31
Ibid.21 p.98-100
32
Ibid.26
Factors Affecting the Growth of Electronic Retailing
33
:
Three critical factors affecting the adoption of a new innovation such as shopping
electronically are (1) the ease with which customers can try the innovation, (2) the
perceived risks in adopting the innovation, and (3) the benefits offered by the
innovation compared to the present alternatives.
Trying Out Electronic Shopping:
In September 2002 about 605.60 million around the world had access to the Internet.
Majority of these web surfers were living in Europe, followed by Asia/Pacific,
Canada & USA, Latin America, Africa and the Middle East. According to the United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD report) Internet usage is
seeing an annual rise of about 30-percent which is equivalent to about 2.5 percent of
the global population. A growing share of new internet users are in developing
countries, which accounted for nearly a third of all new Internet users worldwide in
2001. Already Asia, excluding Japan and the Republic of Korea, added almost 21
million new users to the Internet in 2001, more than North America
34
. With 77 million
people under 18 expected to be online globally by 2005, teenagers and children
constitute one of the fastest growing Internet populations,. Surfing the net is a highly
regarded activity by this age group. However, adults over 50 years old are one of the
fastest growing markets on-line. A large number of this age group have home access
to the Internet. Studies have revealed that older people are receptive to new
technology and have time, money and enthusiasm to surf the web regularly. Apart
from staying in touch with far-flung family and friends, the older people tend to
purchase merchandise and services online because shopping in stores can be difficult
for them
35
.
Perceived Risks in Electronic Shopping
Technological developments are reducing the risk of electronic shopping by enabling
secure transactions and increasing the amount and quality of information available to
electronic shopper. However, security of the credit card transactions remains one of
the major concerns, especially in developing economies.
Entertainment and Social Experience:
All non-store retail formats are limited in the degree to which they can satisfy these
entertainment and social needs. In-store retail formats score high on this account.
They provide more benefits to consumers in terms of entertainment and social
experience than simply having merchandise readily available and helping them to buy
it. Even the most attractive and inventive web pages and video clips will not be as
exciting as the displays and activities in a Disney or Toys R Us store due to their
interactivity.
33
Ibid.1 p.81
34
http://www.metimes.com/2K2/issue2002-47/net/655_million_internet.htm
35
Cleaver Joanne (1999), “Surfing for Seniors,” Marketing News, July 19, ,pp.1-7; and Gapper Justina
(1998), “The Rise of the New Media Greys,” New Media Age , January 29, ,p.p.10-12
Ordering and Receiving Merchandise:
In the case of store-based retail formats the delivery time of getting merchandise is
immediate. But in the case of non-store retail formats consumers usually have to wait
several days to get merchandise, especially when the goods are of a perishable nature
and bought prior to an occasion.
Number of alternatives:
The biggest benefit of electronic retailing compared to other retail formats is the vast
number of alternatives that become available to consumers. For example, a person
living in India can shop electronically at Harrod’s in London in less time than it takes
to visit the local supermarket. However, it does have limitations. Shoppers may visit
all the sites selling the product. This may be a time consuming exercise unless the
consumer is focussed and finds a few items that they might like to study in detail.
A more significant potential benefit of electronic retailing is the ability to have an
electronic agent to select a small set for the customer to look at in detail. Service-
oriented retailers score higher on this account as their salespeople know what their
preferred customers want and help indecision making by limiting the choice.
Cost of Merchandise:
Since electronic retailers do not have to spend money building and operating stores at
convenient locations, they have much lower costs, as much as 25 percent lower than
in-store retailers. But the electronic retailers or the customers will have higher costs to
get the merchandise to homes, deal with the high level of returns and attract customers
to their website. It is quite costly to deliver merchandise in small quantities to
customers’ homes. Customers presently incur these costs when they spend their time
and money going to stores to pick out and take home merchandise and then going
back to the stores to return the merchandise they don’t want. A comparison of various
formats in terms of their economies and the cost of operation for format in food stores
are given in Figure - 5
36
. The comparison reveals that online retailing scores over all
newer formats in terms of benefits to retailers. It scores over even hypermarkets with
respect to the benefits to the customers. It is also observed that its operation costs are
also similar to other formats. Therefore it is necessary that an e-tailer should try to
achieve large volumes as soon as possible.
E-TAILING CHALLENGES
37
1. Zero error operations
38
:
A study by Boston Consulting Group in the United States and Canada in 1999 showed
that 57% of Internet users have shopped online and 51% actually purchased goods or
services online. The typical online purchaser completed ten transactions and spent
$460 online over the previous twelve months. Yet 28% of all attempted online
purchases failed, and four out of five consumers who made purchases online
36
Ibid.30
37
Ibid.30
38
Ibid.21 p.39
experienced at least one failed attempt over the same period. These failures resulted
from technical problems consumers encountered with the sites, difficulties in finding
products and logistical and delivery problems after the sale. Twenty eight percent of
consumers who suffered a failed purchase attempt stopped shopping online and 23 %
stopped purchasing at the site in question.
However, the study also showed that consumers who enjoyed a satisfying first
purchase experience online were likely to spend more time and money on the Net.
The satisfied first-time purchaser typically engaged in twelve online transactions and
spent $500 during the previous twelve months. The dissatisfied first time purchaser
spent only $140 on four online transactions. About 5% of users who had bad online
shopping experiences also stopped patronizing the retailer’s physical store. There are
a number of things in the e-business environment that can impact the consumer’s
shopping experience negatively. Primarily the e-tailers need to think about providing
support for customers on two subjects: problems with the website usage and questions
or problems with the product. Appropriate use of technology and people solutions will
have to be defined in order to support e-business initiatives by understanding, tracking
and monitoring the online behaviour of customers
39
. Normally, people have to spend a
lot of time describing the problem. The customer support team can see where the
customer was at the time of reporting the problem or what task was abandoned. Based
on which they can efficiently resolve this issue. This type of service will not only
enhance a customer’s experience on the e-tailers website but also provide the
organisation with an opportunity to reduce costs. E-tailers have several customer
service options ranging from real–time consumer interactions to self-service options:
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs): This is a self-service option that relies on
information stored in a database to assist customer transactions and provide
answers to common questions that are asked by customers. This database is
continually built over time and new customers and answers are added, based
on knowledge gathered from earlier customer interactions.
Call Us Buttons: Call-us buttons appear on the website pages, allowing the
customer to call the customer support representative on a regular phone via the
web. PCs that are equipped with speakers and a microphone may take
advantage of voice-activated websites that send voice over Internet using VoIP
technology. Another variation to the same option is ‘call-me’ buttons, where
the customer can request the customer representative to call back, though this
may force the customer to go offline.
Text Chat: Text chat over the net allows a client to send a question and receive
a real –time written response. This allows almost instantaneous
communication with more than one customer at a time or in a group.
Depending on how it is implemented, it may appear to be slow to some users.
Collaboration/Co-browsing: Web collaboration technology allows a customer
support representative and the customer to share the same screen so that the
representative can see exactly what the customer is doing. This type of
interaction will help the support representative solve a problem if the customer
39
Nanda Rajeev, "How to Map out a Viable e-Strategy", e-verything.com, p.196-198
is stuck at a certain place on the website. On the other hand co-browsing offers
the capability where more than one person can browse a site together, with one
of the users doing the ‘driving’ while the other has secondary control. This
type of interaction will provide the representative with capability to handle a
customer who seems lost on the website.
E-Mail Management: email systems should be fully automated using artificial
intelligence (AI) or other new technologies that help the e-tailer to deliver an
instant automatic reply based on key words or FAQs. E-mail systems can
automatically route e-mails to a call centre, where a customer support
representative can review the suggested computer-generated response or can
prepare a new response before it is sent to the customer.
Call Centres: Plain old call centres should be enhanced to support calls from
online customers as well as catalogue shoppers. Earlier, the call centres had to
be confined to a geographic area or country to provide the best support, with
the Internet, the call centres can be spread across multiple countries to provide
the same, or better, quality of support and reduce the cost of providing the
support.
E-businesses are realizing that it is imperative to communicate with their
customers through a range of media options and that these technologies must
work together seamlessly for the customer. This places huge pressure on the
customer service divisions of the company. The online e-tailer will use
multiple forms of customer service including live interaction by telephone and
chat, asynchronous communications using e-mail and fax and computerised
service using natural language-based help systems
40
.
2. Increased Gross Margin:
Every retailer ideally wants to have high value, high margin and fast moving products.
But that is often not possible. The products that fetch the most money may not be the
products that the customer wants to buy. Therefore retailing is ultimately about being
able to find a balance
41
. E-tailers need to pay attention to gross margin return on
investment. For example, if a 25 percent margin category sells six times a year and a
15 percent one sells 12 times a year, it is better to go with the latter
42
. Therefore
getting the right product mix is critical to retailing. An e-tailer should also try to cut
down the direct costs by achieving distribution efficiencies. There are many factors
like the product’s retail price, the physical requirements of the product to be shipped
and delivery speed required for the product category that would influence the e-tailers
distribution considerations. Price point is a crucial determinant in distribution and
business viability decisions
43
. The fulfilment costs associated with FMCG products
are so high that merchandise with low price points fail to achieve break even. For
almost all products, packaging and/or shipment and same day fulfilment can be vital.
40
Ibid 21
41
“Retailing”, A&M, February 28, 2001 p.39
42
Ibid.41p.40
43
Ibid.28 p.15
In these cases the best distribution centre is the retail outlet closest to the consumer,
making personal collection or speedy individual delivery possible. E-tailers should be,
wherever possible, to adopt the vendor shipping option that would enable it to cut
down direct costs and hence increase the realisable gross margin
44
.
3. Customer Acquisition:
Gaining information about customers and potential customers and converting such
needs into demand is more feasible in electronic commerce than any other marketing
channel
45
. The Internet allows e-tailers to gather huge amounts of information about
their customers easily. They can use this information for personal pricing and
customer specific targeted promotions. It might also be used to directly offer
customers related products, either in real time during the on-line shopping process or
by e-mailing them with special offers. This possibility offers benefits for customers. It
is a convenient opportunity to get to know new products they would like to buy
without having to look for information in many places.
One way e-merchants attempt to lure new customers is through online coupons
especially in the case of grocery shoppers
46
. Other categories such as toys, books and
music are also popular in terms of redemption of e-coupons. Majority of grocery
shoppers use online coupons and nearly half as many redeem online coupons. Toy e-
coupons witness the highest online redemption rate at 87% followed by books at 83%.
While the potential for e-tailing seems boundless, challenges do exist to altering
customers’ expectations and behaviour. Changing customer behaviour is the most
complex task
47
. The e-tailer can change customer behaviour and increase their
clientele by managing four key elements
48
:
Educate: As a rule, the more potential customers know about the product or
services the e-tailer is selling, the more they’re likely to buy. Education does
not only have to be about the product but also of the e-tailers’ business, quality
assurance and processes.
Guarantee: Any purchase represents a risk to the buyer. The risk may be of
paying much more than what it’s worth or the item may not look as good at
home as it does on the web site. The e-tailer should not only eliminate the risk
but also reduce the customer’s perception of risk by having risk-free return or
exchange policies.
Manage Expectations: The e-tailer will need to manage customers’
expectations so that they are not disappointed or frustrated by the shopping
experience. The expectations may be as simple as those about availability of
the item or shipping time or the total cost.
Satisfaction: The e-tailer, after having educated its customers, hedged their
risk and set their expectations, needs to follow through with online customer
service. A study in found that U.S. businesses lost more than $6.1 billion in
potential Internet sales in 1999 because of poor online customer service and
44
Ibid.22
45
Efraim Turban, Jae Leel, David King H and Michael Ching (2000), “Electronic Commerce: A
Managerial Perspective”, Prentice Hall, p.86,
46
Ibid.26
47
Ibid.30
48
Ibid.26 p.202
estimated that an industry wide failure to resolve the problem could lead to at
least $ 173 billion in lost revenues through 2004. Additionally, 7.8 percent of
online transactions initiated by customers are abandoned because of poor
customer service
49
. Thus, customer service must integrate seamlessly not only
with the company’s existing Web site, but the company’s entire operations,
online and offline.
4. Generating customer traffic:
E-tailers adopt one of two approaches to generate traffic: Impulse Driven and Serious
Shopper Approach. Impulse purchases are defined as purchases that signify with high
emotional activation, low cognitive control and largely reactive behaviour
50
. This
occurs when consumers experience a sudden and often powerful and persistent urge to
buy something immediately even though they she had no prior intention of doing so.
Under this approach the e-tailer generates high traffic
51
. The more often a customer
visits a site, the more likely they are to spend an increasing amount of money and thus
generate profits for the e-tailer. For instance, in apparel, the average repeat customer
spends 67% more overall in the third year of shopping relationship with an online
vendor than in the first six months. And over three years, customers referred by online
grocery shoppers spent an extra 75% above what the original shopper spent
52
.
Products that are generally bought on impulse purchases usually have several of the
following characteristics:
o Their price is considered average or acceptably low enough by the consumers;
o They are low involvement goods;
o They are related to entertainment activities and hobbies;
o They are used as gifts to friends and relatives;
o They are considered “trendy” or popular items;
o They are personalised versions of common products;
o They are related to holidays or important festivals or occasions
In order to take advantage of such shopping online retailers should offer products that
can be bought on impulse. They also need to emphasis product presentation and
placement to reinforce the emotions that motivate consumer purchase decisions. They
could choose some of the following to generate higher traffic:
Ease of access: Impulse purchases can be made without requiring the customer to
leave their home in order to see the product on display.
Low touch: Most products likely to be bought on an impulse do not require “touching”
or “tying on” which makes them appropriate for on-line retailing.
Dynamic displays: customers can be presented with such products while navigating
through the online shop; different items can be shown on each page to maximize the
likelihood of purchase; items which are related or complimentary to those in the
section of the catalogue currently viewed can be displayed.
49
Ibid.26
50
England Debra, Retailing on the Internet Aparoopa, Kozyrakis Christoforos, Singh Ena and
Wemhoener Nils (1999), “Retailing on the Internet: Beyond Commoditization”, Strategic Computing
and Communication Technology, Spring
51
Ibid.21
52
Ibid.30
Personalised displays: on line technology allows personalising the items advertised to
the customer during navigation which can be done based on the customer preferences
or demographic information (if membership is an option) or purchase history.
Personalised reminders: members or previous customers can be sent or presented
reminders about coming holidays or popular items (best sellers) in categories they
have expressed interest or made purchases in, in the past.
Personalisation opportunities: customers can easily be presented with opportunities to
personalise common products (e.g. print a name on a cup) that can initiate impulse
purchases.
Advanced visualisation techniques: graphics technology (animation, sound / image
effects) gives many opportunities to present a product in a way that will impress the
consumer and motivate them to buy it.
Purchase expediting: on line retailing allows on–click purchasing (for registered
customers or members) which leaves virtually no time for second thoughts or
reasoning about the purchase of product.
In case of the Serious Shopper Approach, the e-tailer builds a relationship based on
service levels and quality of products. The e-tailers have to proactively anticipate and
handle consumer expectations and ensure that what’s being delivered is better than
what users expect
53
. So retailers constantly need to analyse their product/service
category’s relationship with consumers and ensure that their own business isn’t
becoming disconnected from general expectations
54
.
5. Customer Retention
E-business is redefining the way the e-tailers manage customer relationships and place
new demands for customer support throughout the sales cycle and thereafter. This task
has been made more complex by individualisation of customers. The e-tailers cannot
afford to ignore even an individual customer because word -of- mouth spreads very
fast on the Internet. User groups, communities, web chat and e-mail each have enough
individual power to drain away revenues or create bad publicity. Only personalised
support and sophisticated customer interaction can help the e-tailer convert more
‘browsers’ into buyers, resulting in higher revenues per customer
55
. Also, it costs
about five to eight times more to acquire a new customer than to keep an existing one.
Therefore, it is essential for the e-tailers to build loyalty, aim to achieve zero error
operation, to create continuing excitement at the stores and have a mix of impulse and
need based products to induce customers to visit the site often
56
. Some notable
consumer-driven e-commerce site content already in use
57
:
i. Testimonial pages: Testimonials are a powerful tool to establish credibility,
which is especially important for a website in the early stages of existence
and/or in the early stages of developing any individual consumer relationship.
A web site can also request feedback for testimonials from happy customers
and opinion leaders.
ii. Awards: This is another credibility tool as well as a tactic to increase traffic.
iii. Extensive and useful links or resource pages.
53
Ibid.26
54
Ibid.21 p.67
55
Ibid.26 p.194
56
Ibid.30
57
Ibid.23
iv. Contests, sweepstakes, sign-ups to get visitors to voluntarily opt for future
marketing efforts targeting their specific consumer interests.
v. Information: according to an MSN Sidewalk survey, 74% of Internet users
seek information
vi. Reviews/ Opinions, especially product related.
vii. Learning networks/communities: through forums, chats, interactive software
mailing lists and newsletters. This is particularly relevant to complex and/or
non–commoditised products.
viii. A niche network of related sites: reciprocal links, banner ads, sponsorships.
New releases and articles can be sent to publications focused on various
products or product–user niches.
6. Earning Customer E-loyalty
Customer loyalty is a key driver of profitability for on line companies. Consumers are
motivated to buy more goods online when security features were enhanced and
personal information kept private. Increased loyalty can bring cost savings to a
company in many ways: lower marketing costs, lower transaction costs (such as
contract negotiation and order processing), customer turnover expenses and lower
failure costs such as warranty claims and so on. During the past decade, customer
loyalty in general has been decreasing. The introduction of electronic commerce
accelerated this trend because customers’ ability to shop, compare and switch is
extremely fast and inexpensive, given the aid of search engines, mall directories and
intelligent agents
58
. A study found that 75% of online customers who participated in
loyalty programmes say that it is not the loyalty factor that motivates them to make
online purchases. Instead, e-commerce providers should fill functionality gaps or face
losing customers to competitors. Only 22% of 1,200 online consumers said loyalty
programmes served as an incentive to buy online. The survey highlighted that loyalty
programmes must go beyond giving out points and should reward loyalty with
improved service such as priority service, personalised offers and e-mail updates. 72%
of the respondents said that customer service is a critical factor in shopping
satisfaction and only 41% indicated they were satisfied with the service they had
experienced as evident from Figure – 5.
59
Managing privacy is an important issue in
building loyalty. It is becoming a major concern as technology gets better and
companies collect large customer data and start trading it in the market. As a business,
e-tailers would need to clearly communicate their privacy policies to build trust with
customers
60
.
7. Managing Technology
In e-tailing business, size is no longer a determining factor for success. The critical
metric is the speed of decision-making, customer service, response time, etc which are
all shortening, owing to the technological revolution
61
. Up-to-date, intelligent and
user-friendly technology also communicates professionalism, a vital quality in
building trust
62
. Indian retailers are gradually but steadily upgrading their IT
58
Ibid.21 p.50
59
Ibid.21p.40
60
Ibid.33
61
Ibid.30
62
Ibid.21p.92
infrastructure. Companies are willing to increase their IT spending from 1 percent of
sales at present to 5 percent and expect clear benefits in vital areas like inventory
management and customer interfaces
63
. In India, Shoppers Stop has one of the most
advanced IT systems in place. In a recent Economic Times survey the company was
recognised as among the most IT-savvy companies in India. It has already pumped in
over 10 crores in to IT systems - merchandise management systems, inventory
management, CRM package etc, and has futuristic plans to continue its spate of
investments. The main aim of the company is to see that the time spent by their
merchandisers on mundane functions is minimised and they can spend more time on
strategy related issues
64
. However, e-tailers should not fall prey to becoming a slave to
technology. In the aftermath of the dotcom blowout and the downturn in the economy
e-tailers are reviewing strategies, processes and questioning IT spending as they strive
to improve performance and boost profits in a difficult economic climate
65
. It is more
critical to have a robust, reliable and scalable software platform than have bells and
whistles
66
. Therefore e-tailers should not try to attract customers with flashy
technology with fancy graphics, animations and sound effects but should offer more
product information
67
. A recent survey found that visitors were twice as likely to
return to a site with faster loading pages than they were to sites that provided rich
media. It also found that 59 percent of those surveyed would be more likely to return
to a site that offered more product information
68
.
New Retailing Formats
The practice of retailing is continuously evolving. New formats are born and old ones
die. Incessant pressure to improve efficiency and effectiveness and a continual effort
to serve the customer better forces the retailers to find new ways of doing business.
This has also resulted in a shortened lifecycle for retail formats. For example, in the
late 1980s most retail experts agreed that hypermarkets would be retailing’s success
story of the 1990s. However, despite their overwhelming success in Europe and their
limited success in the United States, these mega stores were retailing’s biggest failure
in the 1990s. The customers were unnerved by the sheer size of these stores. In
addition, category killers offered greater selection and wholesale clubs offered better
prices, while supermarkets and discounters offered more convenient locations.
Another retail format that didn’t achieve the success predicted was the off-price
retailer because the regular merchants, including discounters, became more price-
competitive on the brands the off-pricer was currently selling. Although these
retailing formats have not lived up to expectations, many other new formats are
emerging.
Supercentres:
Supercentres, which is a one-stop combination of supermarket and discount
department store that carries from 80,000 to more than 100,000 products (ranging
from televisions to peanut butter to fax machines), are new the format for the mass
63
Ibid.19 p.9
64
Ibid.19 p71-72
65
Friedman Tom, "The Future of Retail IT: Keys to the Technological Payoff ",
66
Ibid.30
67
Ibid.23
68
Ibid.23
merchants
69
. These stores offer the customer the convenience of one-stop shopping
without sacrificing service and variety. They are capable of drawing customers from a
60 to 80 mile radius in some rural areas. Hence they seem to be a perfect answer to
today’s time-pressed consumer needs. The supercentre concept has even branched out
in to the automobile market. The supermarkets are implementing strategies to
counteract the supercentres. They are joining the discounters in letting the customers’
purchasing habits determine their purchasing and inventory decisions. By using “just-
in-time”(JIT) methods grocers are now reordering only when and what their
computer, which is connected to their in-store bar-code scanners, deems necessary.
This way supermarkets try to reduce costs and meet the discounters’ prices head on.
Recycled Merchandise Retailers:
Recycled merchandise retailers are a product of great depression, which sell cast-off
clothes; furniture, sporting goods and computers. They include pawnshops, thrift
shops, consignment shops and even flea markets. Due to their very small numbers just
a decade ago, recycled merchandisers have experienced the fastest growth of any
retail format over the past five years. Even as a record number of retailers were
seeking bankruptcy protection in the mid–1990s, these recycled merchandise retailers
were growing at 10 percent a year. Recycling is not just an American phenomenon; it
is also big in Europe and Latin America. However, it is growing fastest in Japan
where this retail format is expanding at nearly a 20 percent annual rate. Japanese
companies from kimono stores to catalogue retailers have jumped on the second-hand
bandwagon. One of the most popular stores in Japan is called “Per Gram Market”,
which sells items at eight cents a gram. Thus, a second-hand T-shirt would cost
around $ 8.50, but a silk scarf would sell for $2.80
70
. Recyclers have developed to
serve specific markets, such as pregnant women, large sizes or children, or even
specific merchandise such as toys, sporting goods (including camping and
backpacking equipment), outwear, CDs, tools or jewellery. The apparel group
accounting for the lowest resale and thrift store sales is men’s clothing. The reason
being that men hang onto their clothes longer than women and children do, leaving
much less available for resale.
Liquidators
Liquidators are a retail format that comes in and liquidates leftover merchandise when
an established retailer shuts down or downsizes. They make their money by seldom
paying more than 30 cents on the wholesaler price for the closeout retailers. They are
often called retailing’s undertakers or vultures. Retailers utilise the services of
liquidators because running closeouts requires some special retailing skills.
Liquidators have a talent for pricing merchandise and estimating the expense of
everything from ad budgets and payrolls to utility bills. Liquidators also have to
develop special incentive plans to make it more profitable for store personnel to stay
and work rather than quit or walk off with merchandise
71
.
69
Dunne Patrick M,. Lusch Robert F, Griffith David A. “Retailing - Future Changes in Retail
Competition”
70
“Used Products Are Hot as Japanese discover the joy of Buying Second –Hand”, Wall Street Journal,
June 22, 2000, A1
71
“Everything Must Go-To The Liquidators,” Business Week, January 15,1996, 52
Video Kiosks
The video kiosk is a freestanding, interactive, electronic computer terminal that
displays products and related information on a video screen. It often uses a touch
screen for consumers to make selections. Video kiosks can be situated anywhere
(from a store aisle to the lobby of a college dormitory to a hotel lobby). They require
enable consumers to place orders, complete transactions (typically with a credit card)
and arrange for products to be shipped. Kiosks can be linked to retailers’ computer
networks or tied in to the web. Many shopping centres and individual store-based
retailers are setting up video kiosks in open hallways.
At the beginning of 1999, there were about 250,000 video kiosks, in use through out
the United States. It is estimated that there will be 1.7 million U.S. kiosks by the end
of 2003. It is also forecast that video kiosk sales will rise from $830 million in 1999 to
$3 billion in 2003. Worldwide, nearly 80 percent of kiosks are involved with retail
related transactions. North America accounts for 59 percent of kiosk sales, the Pacific
Rim for 20 percent, Europe for 16 percent and the rest of the world for 5 percent
72
.
Car Boot Sales
Car boot sales are becoming increasingly popular, where often a vehicle is modified
for the sale of a variety of merchandise like books, magazines, clothes, music
cassettes, export surplus and/or rejects, fast food items. The boot sale boom has given
software pirates, for example, "an ideal outlet and quick getaway". It also provides
opportunities for small traders who may lack the capital for permanent premises. They
are often situated near the university campus and commercial areas. Its target
audience is lower middle and middle class customers looking for “value for money
products.”
Mobile Vans are modified vehicles usually poultry and meat products, library books,
etc. They move from location to location, for fixed periods of time, thus providing
convenience by coming closer to customers.
A Value Based Model of Format Choice
It is evident that each of the formats offers some unique benefit that helps in attracting
shoppers. What is also interesting is that even with the proliferation of formats, each one of
them is surviving. Shoppers have spread their purchases across formats. In some cases,
different merchandise is bought through specific channels. So, while books and music are
being bought in large volumes through the Internet, grocery and high value purchases are
being bought through store-based formats. Some shoppers are also buying similar
merchandise through separate formats. Due to the choices available to shoppers, there is an
effort to optimise the value derived and hence split purchases between formats. However, it is
also noticed that shoppers tend to make one of the formats their primary choices and make
most of their purchases from that format. It is, therefore, imperative that a retailer should
select the value and then choose the format that delivers the value to the fullest. A format is
defined as the system for delivering the value promised to the shoppers so as to create a
sustainable competitive advantage as described in Figure - 6.
72
Frost & Sullivan (1999), “Interactive Kiosk Markets”, San Francisco
Define Value Proposition:
The first step in deciding the format is to identify and select the value proposition that the
store would like to offer to shoppers. Shoppers have several reasons for choosing their
stores
73
. A study conducted in India indicated that proximity and merchandise were the
primary reasons. More than 70% of respondents indicated these as their strongest reason for
choice. The third reason was ambience (8%) and patronised store (8%). Only 40% could
provide as many as three reasons. Seventy percent had at least two reasons. This indicates that
shoppers generally have just one good reason, and at most two reasons for visiting a particular
store. A store would thus build a value proposition based on its target customers, competition
and company objectives. Each retailer would need to vary its offering by different
combinations of the elements of value mix, called Retail Value Proposition.
74
Identify enablers and Deterrents:
Each of the formats would yield optimum results only when certain conditions are fulfilled. A
store needs to identify these conditions and the variables causing them. These variables then
need to be classified as enablers or deterrents. Enablers are factors that could be utilised to
manage the format successfully. Deterrents consist of variables that would impede the
successful working and growth of the format. Toys R Us found that in entering Japan their
biggest challenge was finding space for large size stores. The largest stores in Japan were
about 1/3 of the existing stores of TRS. TRS is a category killer. It drives the value from
focusing on one category and offering price and depth. The store needs to conduct a thorough
analysis of the macro and microenvironment that is impinging on its business.
Find out what its take to Deliver the Values
Based on the value identified and the environmental factors, retailers develop a mix by using
the following five elements:
a) Variety and assortment of merchandise: Variety is the number of different merchandise
categories a retailer offers. Assortment is the number of different items in a merchandise
category. Each different kind of merchandise is called an SKU (stock keeping unit). For
example, department stores, discount stores and toy stores all sell toys. However,
department stores sell many other categories of merchandise in addition to toys. (They
have greater variety). The toy stores stock more types of toys (more SKUs). For each type
of toy, such as dolls, the specialty toy retailer will offer more assortment (more models,
sizes, brands and deeper assortments) than general merchants such as department or
discount stores. Elements like product quality, uniqueness and reliability can also be
clubbed with this factor of the retail mix
75
.
b) Customer Service and Facility: Services provided by retailers to facilitate the shopping
process for customers are called customer services. It includes easy access to product and
price information, employing in-store sales people, parking, accepting modes of payment
suitable to customers, express checkouts, home delivery, gift wrapping, rest and
refreshment facility, child care facility etc.
c) Store design, Display and Ambience: Ambience can be described as non-visual,
background condition in the store environment including elements like temperature,
73
Sinha, Piyush Kumar; Banerjee, Arindam and Uniyal Dwarika Prasad (2002), "Deciding Where to
Buy: Store Choice Behaviour of Indian Shoppers", Vikalpa, Vol 27, No 2, pp. 13-28.
74
Stevenson, Lawrence N; Schlesinger Joseph C and Pearce Michael R (1999), Power Retail, Canada:
McGraw-Hill, pp. 58 – 84.
75
Ibid .1
lighting, music, noise levels, air quality, and scent
76
. Display and design factors are the
environmental elements that are more visible in nature than ambient factors. These
include layout, width of aisles, equipment, furnishing, cleanliness etc. Kotler
77
has
proposed atmospherics as an important part of retail marketing strategy. Shoppers also
determine the value of the merchandise based on monetary as well as non-monetary
costs
78
. The shopping experience, as created by the store environment plays an important
role in building store patronage. Along with the merchandise, it triggers affective
reaction among shoppers
79
and contributes to creating store patronage intentions
80
.
d) Pricing: It is one of the strategic decisions and plays a vital role in store selection. Pricing
decisions like Premium Pricing, Everyday Low Pricing (EDLP), Hi-Low (HILO) pricing,
Discount Pricing are some of the pricing considerations offered to the customer. The
shopper may also evaluate each of the situations in the light of the cost incurred and the
utilities derived out of shopping. These costs can be classified as fixed and variable costs
of shopping
81
. The variable cost is related to the basket size or the list and hence is likely
to change with every trip. The fixed costs, such as location of the store or the price
format, would remain unchanged over list size. It is suggested that these costs can be
converted into utilities for each of the shoppers by the store. In a study of the two price
formats, EDLP and HILO, it was found that the store could influence the choice of
shoppers by enhancing the perceived utilities
82
. It is also argued that the shopper may
evaluate a shopping situation in the light of cost incurred and utilities derived out of
shopping
83
.
e) Accessibility: It is the convenience component of the retail mix. Store location, travelling
time, parking facility, service hours are considered as important elements. The first
decision is the store - location choice problem. The second is the shopping trip incidence
problem relating to the timing of shopping trips. The two decision processes are
correlated. It is found that, on an overall basis, shoppers give prominence to proximity of
the store, merchandise and service provided by the store
84
.
Decide on Brick or Click or Brick and click
76
Spenberg, E.R; Crowley, A.E and Henderson, P.W (1996), "Improving the store environment: Do
olfactory cues affect evaluation and behaviours”, Journal of Marketing, Vol. 60, No. 2, pp. 67 – 80.
77
Kotler Philip (1973), “Atmospherics as a Marketing Tool”, Journal of Retailing, Vol. 49 Winter, pp.
48 – 64.
78
Zeithaml V (1988), “Consumer Perception of Price, Quality and Value: A Means-End Model and
Synthesis of Evidence”, Journal of Marketing, Vol. 52 (July), pp. 2 – 22.
79
Baker J, Grewal D and Levy (1992), “An Experimental Approach to Making Retail Store
Environmental Decisions”, Journal of Retailing, Vol. 68, Winter, pp. 445 – 60.
80
Baker J, Grewal D, Parasuraman A and Glenn B (2002), “The Influence of Multi-Store
Environmental Clues on Perceived Merchandise Value and Patronage Intentions”, Journal of
Marketing, Vol. 66, April, pp. 120 – 41
81
Bell, David R; Ho, Teck-Hua and Tang, Christopher S (1998), "Determining Where to Shop: Fixed
and Variable Costs of Shopping," Journal of Marketing Research, Vol. XXXV, August, pp 352-369
82
Tang, Christopher S; Bell, David R; Ho, Teck-Hua (2001), "Store Choice and Shopping Behaviour:
How Price Format Works," California Management Review, Vol. 43, No. 2, Winter, pp. 56 – 74.
83
Messinger, Paul R and Narasimhan, Chakravarthi (1997), "A Model of Retail Formats Based on
Consumers' Economising on Shopping Time", Marketing Science, Vol. 16, No. 1, pp. 1 – 23; Sinha,
Piyush Kumar; Banerjee, Arindam and Uniyal Dwarika Prasad (2002), "Deciding Where to Buy: Store
Choice Behaviour of Indian Shoppers", Vikalpa, Vol 27, No 2, pp. 13-28; Leszczyc, Peter Popkowski,
T L; Sinha, Ashish and Timmermans, Harry J P (2000), "Consumer Store Choice Dynamics: An
Analysis of Competitive Market Structure for Grocery Stores," Journal Of Retailing, Vol. 59, No.2,
Summer, pp. 75-105; Van Kenhove, Patrick; De Wulf, Kristof; Van Waterschoot, Walter (1999), The
Impact of task Definition on Store Attribute Salience and Store Choice Journal of Retailing, Spring,
Vol. 75, pp. 125 – 135.
84
ibid.7
Offline retailer have taken cognisance of the online model’s ability to drive an expansion in
customer base that would never have been possible in a pure offline-retailing model and with
much lesser investment to boot. The Click model also enables retailers to offer a lot of value
added services to their customers, which perhaps will be the only differentiation, factor in the
emerging global market place
85
. For the pure play online retailers such alliances offer a
chance to leverage the extensive distribution infrastructure, credibility and stability of the
established offline players. It also helps in customer acquisition because experience has
shown that shoppers are more comfortable in making online purchase if their familiar offline
retailers have an online presence.
Many offline retailers realised that it is not always viable to venture alone into the online
market place. This has given rise to several alliances. Offline retailers can include their web
addresses in their communication. Moreover, they can also tie their store loyalty cards and
catalogue circulation lists to their mailing lists in order to increase awareness and usage of the
online channel. They can find out new shoppers to their site and their conversion. Traditional
retailers can leverage their "physical" assets to build strong "bricks and clicks" organisations
that are able to deliver seamless offerings across multiple channels to build and strengthen
customer loyalty.
However, integrating offline and online store operations is a complex process. Initially there
were concerns for the pure plays about mergers between offline and online retailers because
pure plays were concerned about erosion in their valuations due to merger with the
conservative offline ventures. On the other hand offline retailers were concerned about the
potential cannibalisation of the sales from their traditional offline outlets. But the advantages
outweigh the disadvantages.
In integrating click and brick retail models the executives need to decide on integrating or
keeping them separate. Integrating them offers the benefits of cross promotions, shared
information and purchasing leverage and distribution economies. Figure 7 highlights some
points that a retailer needs to keep in mind while deciding on this issue. The primary concern
in integration is the cultural fit. The two types of retailer represent different business and
retailing environment. The shoppers behave differently, the technology is different and so are
the processes.
Meaning Of Utility
Utility is a concept used to denote the subjective pleasure, usefulness or satisfaction derived
from consuming goods. It is an analytical construct used to explain how consumers divide
their limited income among goods that provide them satisfaction or utility. When economists
describe about utility, they also proclaimed the law of diminishing marginal utility, which
states that total utility increases with increase in consumption. However, as consumption
increases, total utility grows at a slower and slower rate. A consumer with a fixed income and
facing given market prices of goods can come to a point (or equilibrium) of maximum
satisfaction or utility only by acting in the following manner. Each product is demanded up to
the point where the marginal utility for every unit of money spent on it is exactly the same as
the marginal utility of the spent on any other good. This fundamental condition of consumer
equilibrium can be written in terms of Marginal Utilities (MU) and Prices (P) of the different
goods in the following compact way.
MU Good1 = MU Good 2 = MU Good3 = Common MU per unit of income.
P1 P2 P3
85
Meyer Harvey (2000), "Building a Click and Mortar World”, Journal of Business Strategy, Mar/Apr,
Vol. 21 (2), pp. 20 - 25
In Victorian days, philosophers and economists talked blithely of “utility” as an indicator of a
person’s overall well being
86
. Utility was thought of as a numeric measure of a person’s
happiness. Given this idea, it was natural to think of consumer’ making choices so as to
maximize their utility, that is, to make themselves as happy as possible. The trouble with this
definition was that classical economists never described how to measure utility or quantify the
“amount” of utility associated with different choices. Is one person’s utility the same as
another’s? What would it mean to say that an extra candy bar would give me twice as much
utility as an extra carrot? Does the concept of utility have any independent meaning other than
its being what people maximize? Because of these conceptual problems, economists have
abandoned the old fashioned view of utility as being a measure of happiness. Instead the
theory of consumer behaviour has been reformulated entirely in terms of consumer
preferences and utility is seen only as a way to describe preferences.
Economists gradually came to recognize that all that mattered about utility as far as choice
behaviour was concerned was whether one bundle has a higher utility than another – how
much higher didn’t matter. Originally preferences were defined in terms of utility, to say a
bundle (x
1
, x
2
) was preferred to a bundle (y
1
, y
2
) meant that the x-bundle had a higher utility
than the y bundle. A utility function is a way of assigning a number to every possible
consumption bundle such that more preferred bundles get assigned larger numbers than less
preferred bundles. That is bundle (x
1
, x
2 )
is preferred to a bundle (y
1
,y
2
) if and only if the
utility of (x
1
,x
2 )
is larger than the utility of (y
1
,y
2
). The only property of a utility assignment
that is important is how it orders the bundle of goods. The magnitude of the utility function is
only important in so far as it ranks the different consumption bundles. The size of the utility
difference between any two consumption bundles doesn’t matter. Because of this emphasis on
ordering of bundles of goods, this kind of utility is referred to as ordinal utility.
In studying the Consumer Behaviour Model the value or worth of a good or service, its utility
is the prime determinant of individual demand
87
. Utility is a number that represents the level
of satisfaction that the consumer derives from a particular market basket
88
. Individuals are
viewed as attempting to maximize the total utility or satisfaction provided by the goods and
services they acquire and consume. This optimisation process requires that consumers
consider the marginal utility of acquiring additional units of a given product and of acquiring
one product as opposed to another. Product characteristics, individual preferences (tastes) and
resources are important determinants of direct demand. Utility is maximized when products
are purchased at levels such that relative prices equal the relative marginal utility derived
from consumption. Therefore utility concept works as a measure of satisfaction or well-being
derived from consumption. The utility functions are shaped both by the tastes and preferences
of consumers and the quantity and quality of available products. The utility derived from
consumption is intangible. However, the consumers reveal their preferences through purchase
decisions and thus provide tangible evidence of the utility they derive from various products.
The utility function of a consumer is simply a function from the commodity space to a real
line, which preserves the ordering of the indifference curves in the commodity space
89
. The
consumer’s preferences among commodity bundles can also be represented by an index,
showing the degree of his satisfaction associated with each commodity bundle. Such an index,
called the utility index function or simply the utility function, assigns a real number say u (x)
for each point x of the commodity plane so that, for commodity bundles x' and x" whenever x'
> x".
86
Varian Hal R, “Intermediate Microeconomics - A Modern Approach”, 3
rd
Edition, affiliated East
West Press, New Delhi.
87
Pappas James L, and Hirshey Mark, “Fundamentals of Managerial Economic”, Third Edition,
Dryden Press, Chicago
88
Mansfield Edwin, “Essential Microeconomics”, W W Norton & Co, New York, London
89
Kogiku K.C (1971), “Micro Economic Models”, Harper International Edition, Harper & Row
Publishers, New York
U (x') ? U (x")
That is the utility function need only preserve the ranking by the consumer’s preferences. In
this sense the utility function is ordinal and defined by the preference relation on the
commodity plane.
Utility can be defined as an individual’s perception of his or her satisfaction from consuming
any specific bundle of goods and services
90
. We can write a utility function in the form of
U = f (X
1,
X
2
,X
3
…………..,X
n
)
Where X, is the amount of the i-th good or service to be consumed. If U is some index, the
value of this index depends upon the quantities of goods one through n consumed. For
example, let’s assume that the consumer chooses among bundles consisting of only among
goods (or services) X and Y. The utility function can be written as
U = f (X, Y)
Where X and Y are respectively the levels of consumption of the two commodities.
A utility function is a mathematical representation of individual’s tastes, preferences and
morals
91
. An individual utility function takes the form U = U (x
1
,x
2
,……x
n
), the amount of
utility that a person has is some function of the level of goods x
1
,…….x
n
consumed. The more
x
1
or x
2
there is, the higher the utility indicator. The utility numbers are meaningless, unless
the scale is known. The level of the numbers does not indicate quantitative amounts of
happiness. Instead it only compares two states and indicates whether one is better than the
other. It is impossible to say that a person enjoys one thing a lot more than something else. All
we can say is that a person prefers one bundle or situation to another. The higher the utility
indicator, the happier is the customer. It is important, however to remember that this
formulation of consumer preferences does not allow for interpersonal utility comparisons nor
does it permit cardinal quantification.
Maximizing Utility
Economic theory assumes the consumers’ objective is to maximize utility. People want to be
as happy as possible. However the limited income restricts the ability to achieve maximum
happiness or satiation. In other words income constrains the choice of goods. As a
mathematical problem, the consumer maximizes a utility function, U (x
1
,x
2
,…….x
n
) subject to
the constraint that total expenditures on goods do not exceed the amount of income or money
available, M. If the expenditures for a particular is expresses as E
1
= P
1
.x
1
, then
n
M = ?? x
i
p
i
i =1
So the Utility Function can be written as
Maximize U = U (x
1
,x
2
,……x
n
)
Subject to
n
90
Meuve Charles S, Smithson Charles W(1985), “Managerial Economics”, 2
nd
Edition, Irwin
Publication, Homewood Illinoids
91
McCormick Robert E (1993), “Managerial Economics”, Prentice Hall , Englewood Cliffs
M = ?? x
i
p
i
i =1
This is a mathematical problem that can be solved using a technique called LaGrange
Multipliers. Solving this problem is equivalent to finding the appropriate levels of each x
i
to
maximize happiness given the prices of the goods and the amount of money available. In
simple terms, the consumer has a fixed amount of money to allocate among many different
products in a way that gets the greatest level of happiness from the expenditure. The
mathematical conditions necessary to maximize U, subject to the budget constraint M are
U
i
/ U
j
= P
i
/ P
j
for all i and j
Where U
i
is ? U/ ?x
i ,
the marginal utility of all the ith good. The marginal utility of every
good divided by the marginal utility of each other good is equal to the relative price ratio of
the goods. Alternatively, U
i
/ P
i
= U
j
/ P
j
By dividing both sides by P
i
and multiplying both
sides by U
j.
The second expression is analytically equivalent to the first but the interpretation
is slightly different; the extra happiness a consumer gets from every unit of money spent must
be the same for all goods. Regardless of the equation, to maximise utility subject to a budget
constraint, the consumer purchases an amount of each good such that the ratio of the marginal
utilities is equal to the ratio of their prices. The ratio of the marginal utilities of the two
products is the consumers’ personal evaluation of one product versus the other, the
consumers’ own feelings about the merits of one good compared to the other. The price of the
first product p
1
divided by the price of the second p
2
, is the price of the first good in the
market place in terms of the second good. It represents the sellers’ relative evaluation of one
good versus the other. Since the consumer can choose the quantities to buy, equilibrium is
only achieved when the consumer chooses goods in proportion that makes the consumer’s
evaluation equal to the seller’s posted evaluation. The ratio of the marginal utilities of the two
goods must equal the ratio of the prices. In essence, to maximise utility the consumer must
select goods from a limited budget in such a way that the personal evaluation of the products
is the same as the market evaluation. Otherwise there is a profit opportunity, a chance for the
buyer to increase happiness. The ratio of the marginal utilities of any two goods is called
marginal rate of substitution. Utility maximisation requires that the consumer arrange
expenditures so the marginal rate of substitution is equal to the ratio of prices for all goods.
Transaction Utility Theory
The basic tenet of the theory is that a consumer’s notion of value depends not only on the
value of goods and services available relative to the respective prices, but also on the
perception of the quality of the financial deal.
92
This theory was developed based on the
Prospect Theory as explained by Khanmen and Tversky.
93
Later the concept of Transaction
Utility was modelled depending on the difference between the selling price and reference
price.
94
To explain this he postulated reference price, which is the amount of money that a
customer expects to pay for a good or service. It is suggested that any purchase occasion is
associated with two utilities: acquisition utility and transaction utility. Acquisition utility
represents the economic gain or loss from the transaction. Where as transaction utility is
associated with purchase or (sale) and represents the pleasure (or displeasure) of the financial
deal per se and is function of the difference between the selling price (p) and the reference
92
Thaler, Richard (1983), “Transaction Utility Theory”, Advances in Consumer Research, Vol. 10, pp.
229 – 232.
93
Khanmen, Daniel and Tversky, Amos (1979), “ Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision Under
Risk”, Econometrica, Vol. 47, March, pp. 263 – 291.
94
Thaler, Richard (1985), “Mental Accounting and Consumer Choice”, Marketing Science, Vol. 4,
No.3, pp 199-214.
price (q). The situation where p > q, the transaction utility is negative (rip-off situation);
conversely when p < q, the transaction utility is positive (bargain situation). The total utility
of a purchase is just sum of acquisition utility and transaction utility. The implication is that
an individual may not buy a product if acquisition utility is offset by loss in transaction utility
when the price is sufficiently larger than reference price.
This theory has found uses in several contexts. One of the studies investigated the
determinants of consumers’ purchase probabilities towards recycled products. It concluded
that the psychological benefits derived out of purchase might be more significant than the
product itself.
95
Transaction Utility Theory, in the context of social exchange, explored the
concept of fair price on relationship and perspective between buyer and seller as well as
legitimacy of profits.
96
This theory has also been used to understand the difference between
coupon proneness and value consciousness of customers.
97
However, even though this theory exemplifies a purchase situation, it has not been applied in
a retailing perspective. Given the basic tenet, it is felt that acquisition utility and transaction
utility can be used to explain the shoppers’ choice of a format. The theory may require
modifications. Acquisition utility can be extended to include not only the price of the
merchandise but also other costs associated with shopping such as, cost of product search,
cost of information, size of purchase, and cost of access to the store. Shopping, being
essentially a process that occurs in a context of a store, may have a close association with the
transaction utility. The perceived value delivered through the transaction could include all
non-monetary aspects of the 'deal' that may include ambience and service at the retail point
for explaining the transactional utility of the format. The theory also suggests that the two
utilities are not mutually exclusive. It is imperative that any format decision would have to
take a holistic view and incorporate both sets of utilities.
Research Agenda
A framework of store choice developed in Indian context (Figure - 8) suggests that customers
use three broad dimensions in choosing a store that could be utilised to classify the formats as
(a) formats that reduce the risk of purchase, (b) formats that enhance the choice and (c)
formats that enhance shopping experience.
98
Based on this the utility of a format could be
expressed as
U
Fi
= U
Pi
+ U
Di ------------
(1)
Where,
U
Fi
= Utility of Format i
U
Pi
= Utility of Price at format i
U
Di
= Utility of Deal at format i
95
Bei, Lien Ti; Simpson, Ethil M (1995), “The Determinants of Consumers’ Purchase Decision for
Recycled Products: An Application of Acquisition – Transaction Utility Theory”, Advances in
Consumer Research, Vol. 25, pp. 257-261.
96
Boza, M. E; Diamond, W (1998), “The Social Context of Exchange: Transaction Utility,
Relationship and Legitimacy”, Advances in Consumer Research, Vol.25, 557 – 562.
97
Lichtenstein, Donald R, Netemeyer Richard G and Burton Scot (1999), “Distinguishing Coupon
Proneness from Value Consciousness: An Acquisition-Transaction Utility Theory Perspective”, Journal
of Marketing, Vol. 54, July, 54 – 67.
98
Sinha P K and Banerjee A (2004), “Sore Choice in an Evolving Market”, International Journal of
Retail and Distribution Management (Forthcoming)
U
Di
could take the form of Risk Reduction (rr
i
), Choice Enhancing (ce
i
) and Experience
Enhancing (ee
i
). While a store would consist of all the three dimensions, generally one of
them is chosen to develop the value proposition. Therefore, for three formats that plan to
deliver different utilities, Equation 1 can be written for primary utility drivers as
U
F1
= U
P1
+ U
rr1 ------------
(2a)
OR
U
rr
= U
Prr
+ U
(proximity + merchandise quality + personal relationship) ------------
(2a')
In equation 2a, the reference for determining the deal and the price, for formats that position
based on Risk Reduction, would be determined by proximity of the store, its quality of the
merchandise and the personal relationship developed with the customers.
Similarly, the reference for determining the deal and the price for the formats that deliver the
Choice Enhancing value more than others would be determined by convenience in terms of
timings, deliveries and payments, and width and depth of the merchandise.
U
F2
= U
P2
+ U
ce2 ------------
(2b)
U
ce
= U
Prr
+ U
(timing + home delivery + payment terms + merchandise width + merchandise depth) ------------
(2b')
The reference for determining the deal and the price for the formats that deliver the
Experience Enhancing value more than others would be determined by ambience, customer
service and entertainment provided at the store.
U
F3
= U
P3
+ U
EE3 ------------
(2c)
U
ce
= U
Prr
+ U
(ambience + service + entertainment) ------------
(2c')
Inferring from the above expressions, several hypotheses could be generated for the research.
It is assumed in each case, in line with the Transactional Utility Theory, that customers would
trade-off between price and deal and patronise store where U
Pi
< U
Di
. It is not desirable to
compare the utilities of different formats and, by themselves, they are different. Also the total
utilities of each of the formats are a function of their own primary value drivers. However, if
it is assumed that the price of a merchandise remain same across formats, the deal utilities can
be the main drivers of value. Such situations exist in cases where products are subject to MRP
restrictions.
The role of the price of the merchandise in selecting a format is interesting. It is likely that its
importance in customers' decision making for each of the formats would be different and
would reduce in a manner such that U
P1
> U
P3
> U
P3.
In the same manner, the deal factors can
also be expressed in an orderly fashion as given in Figure - 9.
Summary
The retail canvass is dotted with several formats. These are broadly classified into store and
non-store formats and on the basis of their ownership. Each format has a specific driver that
makes it succeed. This is called the Retail Value Proposition. This proposition is a
combination of the variables of the retail mix that consists of merchandise, display, pricing,
accessibility and service. A retailer needs to identify one aspect that would provide
sustainable competitive advantage. The selection is dependent on the target customers,
competition and the objectives of the retailers.
Based on the market the retailer wishes to target, the mix could be decided using the
Transaction Utility Theory as proposed by Thaler. The elements of mix could be divided into
price and non-price factors. An approach for the same is described in this paper. The study
could use either Conjoint or structural equation based models to understand format choice
behaviour of the customers.
______________
Food –oriented
Retailers
Figure 1: A Classification Method for Retail Institutions
I
Ownership
II
Store-based
Retail Strategy
Mix
III
Source: Berman Barry and Evans Joel R, "Retail Management - A Strategic Approach",
Prentice Hall India, Eighth Edition
• Independent
• Chain
• Franchise
• Leased department
• Vertical marketing system
• Consumer cooperative
• Convenience store
• Conventional supermarket
• Food -based superstore
• Combination store
• Box (limited line) store
• Warehouse store
• Specialty store
• Variety store
• Traditional department store
• Full –line discount store
• Off-price chain
• Factory outlet
• Membership club
• Flea market
Non store-based
Retail strategy mix and
Nontraditional retailing
• Direct marketing
• Direct selling
• Vending machine
• World Wide Web
• Other emerging retail
formats
General
Merchandise
Retailers
Figure – 2: Vertical Marketing Systems: Functions and Ownership
Type of Channel Channel Functions Ownership
Source: Berman Barry and Evans Joel R, "Retail Management - A Strategic Approach",
Prentice Hall India, Eighth Edition
Independent
Manufacturer
Independent
Wholesaler
Independent
Retailer
Partially
Integrated
Systems
II.
I
Manufacturing
Wholesaling
Retailing
Two channel
members
have all
facilities and
perform all
functions
Independent
Systems
Manufacturing
Wholesaling
Retailing
III
Fully
Integrated
Systems
Manufacturing
Wholesaling
Retailing
All production
and distribution
functions are
performed by
one channel
member.
Figure – 3: Store Based Retailers
TYPE LOCATION ASSORTMENT SERVICES PRICES AND
PROMOTIONS
Traditional
department Store
Business district
shopping centre Or
isolated store
Extensive width and
depth of assortment;
average to good quality
Good to
excellent
Average to high
Prices Heavy ad
and catalogue use,
direct mail;
personal selling
Full –line discount
store
Business district
shopping centre Or
isolated store
power strip centres
Extensive width and
depth of assortment;
average to good quality
Slightly
below
average-to-
average
Low Prices; Heavy
use of newspapers,
price oriented,
moderate sales
force
Speciality store Business district
Or shopping centre
Regional malls
Very narrow width of
assortments; extensive
depth of Assortments;
average to good quality
Average to
high
excellent
High Prices, Heavy
use of displays;
extensive sales
force
Hypermarkets Stand-alone Average Low Low
Variety Store Business district
shopping centre Or
isolated store
Good width and depth
of assortment; below
average to average
quality
Below
Average
Heavy use of
newspapers, self
service
Off-price Chain Business district,
suburban shopping
strip or isolated
store.
Moderate width, but
poor depth of
assortment; average to
good quality, low
continuity
Below
Average
Use of newspapers,
brands not
advertised; limited
sales force
Factory Outlet Out-of –the –way
site or discount
mall
Moderate width but
poor depth of
assortment; some
irregular merchandise;
low continuity
Very low
Little; self-
service
Membership Club Isolated store or
Secondary site
Moderate width but
poor depth of
assortment; low
continuity
Very low
Little; some direct
mail; limited sales
force
Flea market Isolated site, race
track
Or arena
Extensive width, but
poor depth of
assortment; variable
quality; low continuity
Very low Limited ; self
service
Drugstore Stand alone, strip
centres
Very deep Average Average to high
Home improvement
Centres
Stand-alone, power
strip centres
Very deep Low to high Low
Figure - 4: Internet Users
World wide Internet users
in million in September 2002
source Nua Internet Surveys
Africa, 6.31
Asia/Pacific, 187.24
Europe, 190.91
Middle East, 5.12
Canada & USA, 182.67
Latin America, 33.35
Africa
Asia/Pacific
Europe
Middle East
Canada & USA
Latin America
China, 22
India, 4.5
Japan, 27.06
Malaysia, 1.5
Singapore, 1.74
United Kingdom, 19.47
United States, 148
Taiwan, 6.4
other, 374.93
China
India
Japan
Malaysia
Singapore
United Kingdom
United States
Taiwan
other
Figure 5: A Comparison of E-tailing and Other Formats
MODEL COMPARISON FOR GROCERY
Hypermarket Supermarket Kirana Online Call-in
BENEFITS TO THE
RETAILER
Breakeven volumes High Medium Low Medium Medium
Scalability High High Low High Medium
Up front investment High Medium Low Medium Medium
GM based on volumes High High Low Medium Medium
End customer experience Medium High Low Medium Medium
BENEFITS TO
CUSTOMERS
Pricing Low High High High High
Services Low High Low High High
Atmosphere Medium High Low Medium Medium
Convenience Low Medium High High High
Range High Medium Low High Low
End customer experience Medium High Low Medium Medium
Comparison of Cost of Operation
Sales/Sq.ft Rs. 500 Rs. 750 Rs. 1000 Rs. 1250
Hypermkt 13.33% 10.23% 8.68% 7.75%
Supermkt 19.96% 14.52% 11.81% 10.18%
Kirana 7.60% 5.57% 4.55% 3.94%
SuperKirana 16.85% 11.68% 9.10% 7.55%
Sales/Location Rs. 14 Lac Rs. 18 Lac Rs. 26 Lac Rs. 38 Lac
Online* 13.29% 9.62% 8.03% 7.16%
Notes:
1. Online cost does not include Marketing and Technology costs.
2. Location is treated as mainly a large city when the store's service centre is located.
3. Lac = 1,00,000
Figure - 6: Process of Format Selection
Define Value Proposition
Find out the Enablers and Deterrents in the Environment
Find out what it takes to deliver the Value Proposition
Size Merchandise Display Service Price Location
Decide on Store or Non-Store Format and their Derivatives
Shoppers
Retailer’s
Objectives
Competitors
Figure 7: Click, Click and Brick and Brick and Mortar
Factors Pure Play Click and Brick Brick & Mortar
Ease of Distribution Low High High
Scalability High Moderate Low
Market Valuation High Moderate Low
Inventory Costs Low High High
Infrastructure Cost Low High High
Security of Payment Low Mixed High
Variable Costs High Low Low
Consumer Tracking Easy Easy Difficult
Channel Conflict Low High Low
Brand Equity Low High High
Customer Acquisition Cost High Moderate Low
Figure - 8: Store Choice Model for Evolving Markets
Figure - 9: Assumed Utilities of Formats
Format 1 Format 2 Format 3
U
i
t
l
i
t
y
Price Risk Reduction Choice Enhancing Experience Enhancing
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