CHAPTER 13: DISTRIBUTION AND
PRICING
Right Product, Right Person, Right Place,
Right Price
DISTRIBUTION: GETTING YOUR
PRODUCT TO YOUR CUSTOMER
Distribution is a key element of the marketing mix
Where should the product be sold?
How will it get to the location(s) from the factory?
Channel of Distribution
the network of organizations and processes
that links producers to consumers
DISTRIBUTING DIRECTLY TO THE
CONSUMER
Direct Channel
Distribution process that links the
producer and the customer with
no intermediaries.
CHANNEL INTERMEDIARIES
Channel Intermediaries
informally called middlemen. They
facilitate the movement of products
from the producer to the consumer.
DISTRIBUTORS: STREAMLINING
CONSUMER TRANSACTIONS
Grocery
Store
THE ROLE OF DISTRIBUTORS:
ADDING VALUE (Utility)
THE MEMBERS OF THE CHANNEL
Wholesalers
distributors that buy
products from producers
and sell them to other
businesses or
non-final users.
Retailers the
distributors that sell
products directly to
the ultimate users
WHOLESALERS: SORTING OUT THE
OPTIONS
Merchant Wholesalers
Take legal possession/title
Full-service
Limited Service
Drop
Shippers
Cash and Carry
Truck Jobbers
Agents/Brokers
Dont take title of the goods
RETAILERS: THE CONSUMER
CONNECTION
Store Retailers
Non-Store Retailers
Online
Direct Response
Direct Selling
Vending
DISTRIBUTION STRATEGY
Price / Product
MULTICHANNEL RETAILING
Store
Retailers are
encouraging
consumers to buy
through multiple
channels
PHYSICAL DISTRIBUTION:
PLANES, TRAINS, AND MUCH,
MUCH
Determining
theMORE
best distribution
channels for your product is only half
the distribution strategy.
Supply Chain Management
planning and coordinating the
movement of products along
the supply chain
Logistics focuses on
the tactics involved in
moving the products
How will the product flow through the
ELEMENTS OF THE SUPPLY
CHAIN
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
DECISIONS
Warehousing
Materials Handling
Inventory Control
Order Processing
Customer Service
Transportation
Security
TRANSPORTATION DECISIONS
MODES OF TRANSPORTATION:
Mode
Percent
age of
U.S.
Volume
Speed
On-Time
Dependab
ility
Flexibili
ty in
Handlin
g
Frequen
cy of
Shipme
nts
Cost
Availabil
ity
Rail
39.5%
Medium
Slow
Medium
Medium
Low
Extensive
Truck
28.6%
High
Fast
High
Medium
High
Most
Extensive
Ship
12.0%
Lowest
Slowest
Lowest
Highest
Lowest
Limited
Plane
0.3%
Highest
Fastest
Medium
Low
Medium
Medium
Pipelin
e
19.6
Low
Slow
Highest
Lowest
Highest
Most
Limited
PRICING : A HIGH STAKES GAME
Pricing plays a key role in the demand
for products
Price is a tough variable
Legal constraints
Intermediary pricing
Stable pricing is not the norm
Prices must constantly be evaluated
PRICING OBJECTIVES AND
STRATEGIES
Building Profitability
Matching the
Competition
Creating Prestige
Skimming Pricing
Boosting Volume
Penetration Pricing
Every-day-low Pricing
High/Low Pricing
Loss Leader Pricing
AMAZON STIRS UP A PRICE
WAR
Revamped Kindle Tablets Undercut Apple's iPad
Amazon's new tablets are the latest move to expand into
the hardware market by competing on price. While Apple has
typically priced its products at a premium, Amazon plunged into the
tablet market last year with a Kindle Fire for $199, which at the time was
one of the lowest prices in the market.
Amazon's prices are a differentiator in an increasingly crowded
tablet market. "Amazon did what it has to do to compete with Apple,
Google and other tablet makers," said Colin Sebastian, a Robert W. Baird &
Co. analyst. "This will put some pressure on them, particularly on price."
Mr. Bezos suggested Amazon may break even or even lose
money on the sale of its devices. The company expects to recoup
the money later through the sale of apps and services such as its annual
$79 Prime fast-shipping membership.
"We want to make money when people use our devices, not
when they buy our devices," Mr. Bezos said at Thursday's event.
Source: Wall Street Journal September 7, 2012
SLIPPERY FINGER ONLINE PRICING
GOOFS
Free flights from Los Angeles to Fiji.
Round-trip tickets from San Jose, California,
to Paris for $27.98.
$1,049 televisions wrongly listed for $99.99
on Amazon.
$588 Hitachi monitors mistakenly priced at
$164.
$379 Axim X3i PDAs wrongly priced at $79
on Dells site.
PRICING IN PRACTICE
Breakeven analysis
the process of determining the number of units that must be sold to
cover costs.
Total fixed cost (FC)
Breakeven Point (BP) =
Price/Unit (P) Variable cost/unit (VC)
Businesses make decisions to adjust the price and/or costs.
Raise prices
Decrease variable costs
Decrease fixed costs
FIXED MARGIN PRICING
Profit Margin the gap
Cost-Based
between cost and the price
per product.
Pricing
Demand-Based Pricing
CONSUMER PRICING PERCEPTIONS:
THE STRATEGIC WILD CARD
Consumer price perceptions can defy
logic!
The link between price and perceived
quality can be powerful
Consumers will use price as a quality
indicator
Does odd pricing like $196 or $199
always mean a bargain?
PSYCHOLOGICAL PRICING
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CHAPTER 18: OPERATIONS
MANAGEMENT
Putting It All Together
OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT: IT ISNT
GLAMOROUS, BUT IT MATTERS.
Operations
Operations Management
Management planning,
planning,
organizing,
organizing, leading
leading and
and controlling
controlling all
all the
the
activities
activities in
in creating
creating value
value by
by producing
producing goods
goods
and
and services
services and
and distributing
distributing them
them to
to customers
customers
Good
Good Operations
Operations Management:
Management:
Most
Most efficient
efficient and
and effective
effective processes
processes
Produce
Produce the
the right
right goods
goods and
and services
services
Produce
Produce the
the right
right quantities
quantities
Distribute
Distribute products
products to
to the
the right
right customers
customers at
at the
the
right
right time
time
EFFECTIVENESS VS.
EFFICIENCY
There is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which
should not be done at all
- Peter Drucker
GOODS
VS.
SERVICES
WHAT DO OPERATIONS
MANAGERS DO?
FACILITY LOCATION
GOING OVERSEAS
Low-wage labor is a key reason firms
focus overseas but, low wages do not
always translate into low cost
There are a variety of opportunities in
rapidly growing foreign markets
Key to balance advantages with
drawbacks:
Different laws and customs
Inadequate infrastructure
Inexperienced workers
Political instability
PROCESS SELECTION AND FACILITY
LAYOUT
Flow Shops
Produce Large Batches
Standardized Products
Specialized Machinery
Standardized Tasks
Assembly Line is a Flow Shop Process
Job Shops
Produce Small Batches
Variety of Products
General-purpose Machinery
Flexible Processes
TECHNOLOGY OF OPERATIONS
AUTOMATION: LET THE MACHINES DO IT
Automation replacing
human operations and
control of machinery
and equipment with some
Robot a
form of programmed control.
programmable machine that
is capable of manipulating
materials in order
to perform tasks.
ROBOTS
Robots are well
suited for
dangerous, tedious,
dirty and physically
demanding tasks.
Robots dont get
tired
Robots are flexible
INVENTORY CONTROL: DONT JUST SIT
THERE
Why hold
inventories
Smooth out
production
schedules
Meet
demand
increases
Reduce
switching
costs
Why not
Unsold
inventory
ties up funds
Inventory
must be
warehoused
and
managed
Risk of
losses due to
spoilage,
REDUCING INVESTMENT IN
INVENTORY: JUST-IN-TIME TO THE
RESCUE
Produce goods and services to meet
actual demand. Minimize
inventories
at all stages of the supply chain
through coordination.
MANAGING PROJECTS
Production of some products are
projects
Projects are usually complex and
expensive
New House/Building
Filming a Movie
Managers use Gantt charts and critical
path method to manage projects
PROJECT SCHEDULING
Activity
Operations Managers
must manage and
schedule projects
Scheduling starts with
identifying the required
activities, the time
required and the order
in which they must
happen
Immedia
te
Predeces
sor
Time
(Wee
ks)
None
B. Determine site for
Arena
C. Preliminary Design
Developed
D. Obtain Major
Donation for Funding
B,D
F. Select Architect
G. Establish Budget
H. Obtain Remaining
Financing
F,G
10
A. Survey of Needs
E. Obtain Board
Approval
GANTT CHART
CRITICAL PATH METHOD
The essential technique for using CPM is to construct a model
of the project
that includes the following:
A list of all activities required to complete the project
The time (duration) that each activity will take to completion
The dependencies between the activities.
MANAGING SUPPLY CHAINS
Supply chains can be
complex
Wide range of functions
Involve many firms
Heavy use of technology
RFID
Chips
Internet has provided great
tools for supply chain
management
TRADE-OFF BETWEEN VERTICAL
INTEGRATION AND OUTSOURCING
Vertical
Integration
Gain control over
supply chain
Begin producing
its own parts
Buying suppliers
Outsourcing
Use outside firm
for producing
supplies
Focus on key
production areas
Cost savings
The trend has been to rely more on outsourcing
which has become a controversial issue.
FOCUS ON QUALITY
Quality improves effectiveness
and efficiency
Quality helps achieve competitive
advantage
Lower costs, increases value
Poor quality costs
DEMING CHAIN REACTION
Improve Quality
W. Edwards Costs decrease because of less rework,
Deming, viewed fewer mistakes, fewer delays and snags,
and better use of time and materials
as the father of
the quality
Productivity Improves
movement, first
proposed the
Capture the market with better
relationship
quality and lower price
between quality
Stay in business
and business in
the early 1950s.
Provide jobs and more jobs
HOW AMERICAN FIRMS
RESPONDED TO THE QUALITY
CHALLENGE
Total Quality Management:
Customer Focus
Build quality throughout the organization
Empowerment of employees
Focus on prevention of errors
Long-run commitment to continuous
improvement
QUALITY APPROACH: SIX SIGMA
Single unifying measure: to reduce defects of
operation to a level of no more than 3.4 million
Organization-wide focus on quality
Prevention rather than correction
Rigorous and challenging goal
Rely on employee training and expert
guidance
Advanced techniques, high level of expertise
INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATION FOR
STANDARDIZATION
Founded in 1947
Network of national standards institutes
in 150 nations
ISO 9000 Certification
Generic quality standards
Updated and modified, latest version is ISO
9000:2005
Environmental management focused
standards: ISO 14000
THE BALDRIGE NATIONAL QUALITY
PROGRAM
Created by Congress in 1987
to encourage global
competition
Participating firms are
extensively evaluated
Detailed reports of company
strengths and weaknesses
The 2012 Baldrige Award recipients listed by Industry categoryare:
Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control, Grand Prairie, Texas (manufacturing)
MESA Products Inc., Tulsa, Okla. (small business)
North Mississippi Health Services, Tupelo, Miss. (health care)
City of Irving, Irving, Texas (nonprofit)