Read this chapter, which explains that a direct marketing channel consists of just two parties: the producer and the consumer. By contrast, a channel that includes one or more intermediaries (wholesalers, distributors, brokers, or agents) is an indirect channel. Firms often utilize multiple channels to reach more customers and increase their effectiveness. Some companies find ways to increase their sales by forming strategic channel alliances. Other companies look for ways to cut out the middlemen from the channel, known as disintermediation. Direct foreign investment, joint ventures, exporting, franchising, and licensing are some of the channels by which firms attempt to enter foreign markets.
Channel Dynamics
Learning Objectives
- Explain what channel power is and the types of firms that wield it.
- Describe the types of conflicts that can occur in marketing channels.
- Describe the ways in which channel members achieve cooperation with one another.
Channel Power
Strong
channel partners often wield what's called channel power and are
referred to as channel leaders, or channel captains. In the past, big
manufacturers like Procter & Gamble and Dell were often channel
captains. But that is changing. More often today, big retailers like
Walmart and Target are commanding more channel power. They have millions
of customers and are bombarded with products wholesalers and
manufacturers want them to sell. As a result, these retailers
increasingly are able to call the shots. In other words, they get what
they want.
Category
killers are in a similar position. Consumers like you are gaining
marketing channel power, too. Regardless of what one manufacturer
produces or what a local retailer has available, you can use the
Internet to find whatever product you want at the best price available
and have it delivered when, where, and how you want.
Channel Conflict
A
dispute among channel members is called a channel conflict. Channel
conflicts are common. Part of the reason for this is that each channel
member has its own goals, which are unlike those of any other channel
member. The relationship among them is not unlike the relationship
between you and your boss (assuming you have a job). Both of you want to
serve your organization's customers well. However, your goals are
different. Your boss might want you to work on the weekend, but you
might not want to because you need to study for a Monday test.
All
channel members want to have low inventory levels but immediate access
to more products. Who should bear the cost of holding the inventory?
What if consumers don't purchase the products? Can they be returned to
other channel members, or is the organization in possession of the
products responsible for disposing of them? Channel members try to spell
out details such as these in their contracts.
No
matter how "airtight" their contracts are, there will still be points
of contention among channel members. Channel members are constantly
asking their partners, "What have you done (or not done) for me lately?"
Wholesalers and retailers frequently lament that the manufacturers they
work with aren't doing more to promote their products - for example,
distributing coupons for them, running TV ads, and so forth - so they
will move off store shelves more quickly. Meanwhile, manufacturers want
to know why wholesalers aren't selling their products faster and why
retailers are placing them at the bottom of shelves where they are hard
to see. Apple opened its own retail stores around the country, in part
because it didn't like how its products were being displayed and sold in
other companies' stores.
Figure 8.16

Dr. Thunder is Walmart's store-brand equivalent of Dr. Pepper. Store brands create competition for "regular" manufacturers.
Channel
conflicts can also occur when manufacturers sell their products online.
When they do, wholesalers and retailers often feel like they are
competing for the same customers when they shouldn't have to. Likewise,
manufacturers often feel slighted when retailers dedicate more shelf
space to their own store brands. Store brands are products retailers
produce themselves or pay manufacturers to produce for them. Dr. Thunder
is Walmart's store-brand equivalent of Dr. Pepper, for example. Because
a retailer doesn't have to promote its store brands to get them on its
own shelves like a "regular" manufacturer would, store brands are often
priced more cheaply. And some retailers sell their store brands to other
retailers, creating competition for manufacturers.
Vertical versus Horizontal Conflict
The
conflicts we've described so far are examples of vertical conflict. A
vertical conflict is conflict that occurs between two different types of
members in a channel - say, a manufacturer, an agent, a wholesaler, or a
retailer. By contrast, a horizontal conflict is conflict that occurs
between organizations of the same type - say, two manufacturers that
each want a powerful wholesaler to carry only its products.
Horizontal
conflict can be healthy because it's competition driven. But it can
create problems, too. In 2005, Walmart experienced a horizontal conflict
among its landline telephone suppliers. The suppliers were in the
middle of a price war and cutting the prices to all the retail stores
they sold to. Walmart wasn't selling any additional phones due to the
price cuts. It was just selling them for less and making less of a
profit on them.
Channel
leaders like Walmart usually have a great deal of say when it comes to
how channel conflicts are handled, which is to say that they usually get
what they want. But even the most powerful channel leaders strive for
cooperation. A manufacturer with channel power still needs good
retailers to sell its products; a retailer with channel power still
needs good suppliers from which to buy products. One member of a channel
can't squeeze all the profits out of the other channel members and
still hope to function well. Moreover, because each of the channel
partners is responsible for promoting a product through its channel, to
some extent they are all in the same boat. Each one of them has a vested
interest in promoting the product, and the success or failure of any
one of them can affect that of the others.
Flash
back to Walmart and how it managed to solve the conflict among its
telephone suppliers: Because the different brands of landline telephones
were so similar, Walmart decided it could consolidate and use fewer
suppliers. It then divided its phone products into market segments -
inexpensive phones with basic functions, midpriced phones with more
features, and high-priced phones with many features. The suppliers
chosen were asked to provide products for one of the three segments.
This gave Walmart's customers the variety they sought. And because the
suppliers selected were able to sell more phones and compete for
different types of customers, they stopped undercutting each other's
prices.
One
type of horizontal conflict that is much more difficult to manage is
dumping, or the practice of selling a large quantity of goods at a price
too low to be economically justifiable in another country. Typically,
dumping can be made possible by government subsidies that allow the
company to compete on the basis of price against other international
competitors who have to operate without government support, but dumping
can also occur due to other factors. One goal of dumping is to drive
competitors out of a market, then raise the price. Chinese garlic
producers were accused of this practice in the early 2000s, and when
garlic prices soared due to problems in China, other countries'
producers were unable to ramp back up to cover the demand. U.S. catfish
farmers have recently accused China of the same strategy in that market.
While there are global economic agreements that prohibit dumping and
specify penalties when it occurs, the process can take so long to right
the situation that producers have already left the business.
Achieving Channel Cooperation Ethically
What
if you're not Walmart or a channel member with a great deal of power?
How do you build relationships with channel partners and get them to
cooperate with you? One way is by emphasizing the benefits of working
with your firm. For example, if you are a seller whose product and brand
name are in demand, you want to point out how being one of its
"authorized sellers" can boost a retailer's store traffic and revenues.
Oftentimes
companies produce informational materials and case studies showing
their partners how they can help boost their sales volumes and profits.
Channel partners also want to feel assured that the products coming
through the pipeline are genuine and not knockoffs and that there will
be a steady supply of them. Your goal is to show your channel partners
that you understand issues such as these and help them generate
business.
Sometimes
the shoe is on the other foot - retailers have to convince the makers
of products to do business with them instead of the other way around.
Beauty.com, an online retailer, is an example. Selling perfumes and
cosmetics online can be difficult because people want to be able to
smell and feel the products like they can at a department store. But
Beauty.com has been able to convince the makers of more than two hundred
upscale cosmetic brands that selling their products on its Web site is a
great deal and can increase their revenues. To reassure sellers that
shoppers can get personalized service, Beauty.com offers the site's
visitors free samples of products and the ability to chat live online
with skin and hair care consultants.
Figure 8.17

Boar's Head creates in-store displays like the banner shown here to help its channel partners sell its products.
Producing
marketing and promotional materials their channel partners can use for
sales purposes can also facilitate cooperation among companies. In-store
displays, brochures, banners, photos for Web sites, and advertisements
the partners can customize with their own logos and company information
are examples. Look at the banner in Figure 8.17. Although it looks like
it was made by the grocery store displaying it, it wasn't. It was
produced by Boar's Head, a meat supplier, for the grocer and others like
it.
Educating
your channel members' sales representatives is an extremely important
part of facilitating cooperation, especially when you're launching a new
product. The reps need to be provided with training and marketing
materials in advance of the launch so their activities are coordinated
with yours. Microsoft is a company that does a good job of training its
partners. Before launching operating systems such as Windows XP and
Vista, Microsoft provides thousands of its partners with sales and
technical training".
In
addition, companies run sales contests to encourage their channel
partners' sales forces to sell what they have to offer. Offering your
channel partners certain monetary incentives, such as discounts for
selling your product, can help, too.
What
shouldn't you do when it comes to your channel partners? Take them for
granted, says John Addison, the author of the book Revenue Rocket: New
Strategies for Selling with Partners. Addison suggests creating a
dialogue with them via one-on-one discussions and surveys and developing
"partner advisory councils" to better understand their needs.
You
also don't want to "stuff the channel," says Addison. Stuffing the
channel occurs when, in order to meet its sales numbers, a company
offers its channel partners deep discounts and unlimited returns to buy a
lot of a product. The problem is that such a strategy can lead to a
buildup of inventory that gets steeply discounted and dumped on the
market and sometimes on gray markets. This can affect people's
perceptions of the product and its brand name. And what happens to any
unsold inventory? It gets returned back up in the channel in the next
accounting period, taking a toll on the "stuffers'" sales numbers.
Lastly,
you don't want to risk breaking the law or engage in unfair business
practices when dealing with your channel partners". We have already discussed confidentiality issues.
Another issue channel partners sometimes encounter relates to resale
price maintenance agreements. A resale price maintenance agreement is an
agreement whereby a producer of a product restricts the price a
retailer can charge for it.
The
producers of upscale products often want retailers to sign resale price
maintenance agreements because they don't want the retailers to deeply
discount their products. Doing so would "cheapen" their brands,
producers believe. Producers also contend that resale price maintenance
agreements prevent price wars from breaking out among their retailers,
which can lead to the deterioration of prices for all of a channel's
members.
Both
large companies and small retail outlets have found themselves in court
as a result of price maintenance agreements. Although the U.S. Supreme
Court hasn't ruled that all price maintenance agreements are illegal,
some states have outlawed them on the grounds that they stifle
competition. In some countries, such as the United Kingdom, they are
banned altogether. The safest bet for a manufacturer is to provide a
"suggested retail price" to its channel partners.
Channel Integration: Vertical and Horizontal Marketing Systems
Another
way to foster cooperation in a channel is to establish a vertical
marketing system. In a vertical marketing system, channel members
formally agree to closely cooperate with one another. (You have probably
heard the saying, "If you can't beat 'em, join 'em"). A vertical
marketing system can also be created by one channel member taking over
the functions of another member; this is a form of disintermediation
known as vertical integration.
Procter
& Gamble (P&G) has traditionally been a manufacturer of
household products, not a retailer of them. But the company's long-term
strategy is to compete in every personal-care channel, including salons,
where the men's business is underdeveloped. In 2009, P&G purchased
The Art of Shaving, a seller of pricey men's shaving products located in
upscale shopping malls. P&G also runs retail boutiques around the
globe that sell its prestigious SK-II skin-care line.
Vertical
integration can be forward, or downstream, as in the case of P&G
just described. Backward integration occurs when a company moves
upstream in the supply chain - that is, toward the beginning. An example
occurred when Walmart bought McLane, a grocery warehousing and
distribution company. As much as physical facilities, Walmart also
wanted McLane's operating knowledge in order to improve its own
logistics.
Franchises
are another type of vertical marketing system. They are used not only
to lessen channel conflicts but also to penetrate markets. Recall that a
franchise gives a person or group the right to market a company's goods
or services within a certain territory or location. McDonald's sells meat, bread, ice cream,
and other products to its franchises, along with the right to own and
operate the stores. And each of the owners of the stores signs a
contract with McDonald's agreeing to do business in a certain way.
By
contrast, in a conventional marketing system the channel members have
no affiliation with one another. All the members operate independently.
If the sale or the purchase of a product seems like a good deal at the
time, an organization pursues it. But there is no expectation among the
channel members that they have to work with one another in the future.
A
horizontal marketing system is one in which two companies at the same
channel level - say, two manufacturers, two wholesalers, or two
retailers - agree to cooperate with another to sell their products or to
make the most of their marketing opportunities, and is sometimes called
horizontal integration. The Internet phone service Skype and the
mobile-phone maker Nokia created a horizontal marketing system by
teaming up to put Skype's service on Nokia's phones. Skype hopes it will
reach a new market (mobile phone users) this way. And Nokia hopes to
sell its phones to people who like to use Skype on their personal
computers (PCs)".
Similarly,
Via Technologies, a computer-chip maker that competes with Intel, has
teamed up with a number of Chinese companies with no PC-manufacturing
experience to produce $200 netbooks. Via Technologies predicts that the
new, cheaper netbooks the Chinese companies sell will quickly capture 20
percent of the market. Of course, the
more of them that are sold, the more computer chips Via Technologies
sells.