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Retmant Reviewer

The document provides an overview of retailing, marketing, and customer needs and behavior. It discusses key aspects of retailing including the importance of customer satisfaction and the growing use of technology. It also examines retail strategies, formats, and the various factors that influence customer needs and buying decisions, such as cultural influences, reference groups, product characteristics, and psychological motivations.

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Hazel Lynn Chung
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
117 views6 pages

Retmant Reviewer

The document provides an overview of retailing, marketing, and customer needs and behavior. It discusses key aspects of retailing including the importance of customer satisfaction and the growing use of technology. It also examines retail strategies, formats, and the various factors that influence customer needs and buying decisions, such as cultural influences, reference groups, product characteristics, and psychological motivations.

Uploaded by

Hazel Lynn Chung
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

1 INTRODUCTION TO RETAILING

INTRODUCTION TO RETAILING
Retailing
- activities involved in selling goods and services to consumers for personal, family,
or household use
o sale of goods to end user (not for resale but for use and consumption)
- last stage in the distribution process
- organized to sell merchandise in small quantities
- selling without transformation and rendering services
Marketing
- activity for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have
value
- raise product awareness and persuades people
- GOAL: develop a relationship between client and product by creating a brand
identity
Retail management
- includes all steps required to bring the customer to the store and fulfill their needs
- Help customers shop without difficulty
o help customers procure desired merchandise from retail stores
o provide pleasurable experience
IE Perspective
1 INTRODUCTION TO RETAILING
IMPORTANCE OF THE STUDY OF RETAILING Commented [Office1]: Idk if need
Growing retail industry
- ~13% GDP contribution from retail industry
- 33% of the services sector
- Emerging trends:
o Growing entry of foreign brands
o Online shopping
o Franchising
o Awareness of global brands among young BPO crowd and overseas
travelling Filipinos

Customer satisfaction
- 89% of consumers have stopped doing business after poor customer service

Technology
- delivering expectations requires aligning organization and technology
- The store of the future must be:
o Mobile – offer ways of enhancing customer engagement (physical and
digital)
o Relevant – identify customers and knowing their purchase history
o Personal – leverage high touch aspect of instore shopping
o Ubiquitous – gather, analyze, and disseminate customer etc instantly and
across all channels
o Secure – ensures security of payment and personal data
- Top 5 inhibitors of adopting an omni-channel solution
o No singe view of customer across channels
o Inventory and order management are not integrated across all channels
o Store systems are too difficult to change
o Mismatches metrics and incentives slow acceptance
o IT systems not designed to incorporate customer insight

KEY ISSUES IN RETAILING


- How can we best serve our customers while earning?
- How can we stand out in a highly competitive environment where customers have
so many choices?
- How can we grow our business while retaining a core of loyal customers?
- IE Perspective:
o How can we design a retailing system that attains ALL stated goals
3 BUYER BEHAVIOR
RETAILING STRATEGY
Retailers vs Wholesalers
Retailers Wholesalers
Smaller quantities Larger quantities
More frequent
Open to general public Not over-the-counter
Higher per unit prices Use variable pricing (discounted)
One-price policy
Initial contact – customer Transactions are based on agents
More on external and internal Price > atmospherics
atmospherics

Retail strategy
1. Get customers into the store
2. Convert customers to buyers
3. Do at the lowest operating cost

Basic service of retail channels


- Integrators – provide assortment from different producers
- Stockists – stock products if needed
- Transporters – make products accessible to customers
- Experience provider – offer convenience to buyers

Retail formats
Traditional Non-traditional
- Mom and pop (sari-sari - Catalogue
store) - E-tailers
- Mass discounters - Vending machines
- Warehouse stores - Peddlers
- Category killer - Hawkers
- Department stores
- Boutiques
- Convenience
3 BUYER BEHAVIOR
CUSTOMER NEEDS
Right product
- Availability - Information
- Customization - Product testing

Right quantity
- Appropriate unit size
- Units/pack
- Unit measurement
- Right packaging
- Example: Turkish delights; pre-packed vegetables

Right place
- Market area: accessibility (regional, local, trading areas, site)
- Market coverage: availability (intensive coverage, selective, exclusive)
- Store layout and design (floor location, shelf position, in-store and display location)

Right time
- Demand patterns
- Availability
- Waiting and delays
- Inventory management
- Supply chain coordination and
management
- See life cycles:

Right price
- Supply chain management
- Operations cost
- Cross docking systems
- Example: Walmart

Right appeal
- Product mix
- Facility design and environment
- Service satisfaction
3 BUYER BEHAVIOR
BUYER BEHAVIOR
Buyer behavior
- analyzes purchasing habits for marketing purposes
 manner in which consumers act, function, and react (to purchasing a
good/service, or acceptance of an idea)
- includes an examination of:
 perception
 desire
 decision-making
 satisfaction

Buying process
1. Needs recognition
2. Information search
3. Evaluation
4. Choice
5. Visit
6. Loyalty

BUYER BEHAVIOR THEORY


Cultural
- Subculture – smaller, homogenous societies that have their distinct attitudes etc
- Social class – rank-ordered groupings (typical classes: occupation, education, etc)
Social
- Reference groups – provides a standard for individual’s behavior and attitudes
- Family – size of the family
- Roles – initiator, user, decision maker, decision influencer, purchasing agent
Personal
- Product life expectancy – durable goods, non-durable, services
- Product type
- Shopping effort – convenience goods, staples, impulse goods, emergency goods
- Shopping goods – products that consumers are willing to spend considerable time
and effort in evaluating
- Specialty goods – products that customers are willing to spend an extremely large
amount of effort, time, and money
- Lifestyle – pattern of living shaped by psychological influences and social experiences
 Survivors – struggle for survival, poor, price dominant
 Sustainers – compulsive, low income, price is impt, cautious buyers
3 BUYER BEHAVIOR
 Belongers – traditional, low-middle income, fads, middle to lower mass
markets
 Emulators – ambitious, good-excellent income, conspicuous
 Achievers – success, materialism, excellent income, top of the line
 I-am-me – individualistic, dramatic, young, experimental fads
 Experiential – drive to direct experience, process over product
 Societally conscious – societal responsibility, simple living, conservation
 Integrated – psychological maturity, good-excellent income, self
expression

Psychological
- Motivation – process by which consumers are moved or incited to action
 Stimuli – external cues and internal forces acting on basic needs
 Need – lack of something required for well being
 Motive – stimulated need that creates tension with the customer
 Drive – unfulfilled motive
 Behavior – manner in which the person acts, functions, reacts
-

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