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.
Functions Performed by Channel Partners
Learning Objectives
- Describe the activities performed in channels.
- Explain which organizations perform which functions.
Different organizations in a marketing channel are responsible for different value-adding activities. The following are some of the most common functions channel members perform. However, keep in mind that "who does what" can vary, depending on what the channel members actually agree to in their contracts with one another.
Disseminate Marketing Communications and Promote Brands
Somehow
wholesalers, distributors, retailers, and consumers need to be informed
- via marketing communications - that an offering exists and that
there's a good reason to buy it. Sometimes, a push strategy is used to
help marketing channels accomplish this. A push strategy is one in which
a manufacturer convinces wholesalers, distributors, or retailers to
sell its products. Consumers are informed via advertising and other
promotions that the product is available for sale, but the main focus is
to sell to intermediaries.
Figure 8.12 A Push versus a Pull Strategy

The
problem with a push strategy is that it doesn't focus on the needs of
the actual users of the products. Coca-Cola used a push strategy for
years before realizing that instead of focusing on moving beverages
through a retailer's back door and into their warehouse, it needed to
help them sell to shoppers through the retailer's front door". College textbook publishers are in a similar position today.
Traditionally, they have concentrated their selling efforts on
professors and bookstore managers. (Has a textbook company ever asked
you what you want out of a textbook?) It's no secret that the price of
textbooks is climbing and students are purchasing fewer of them. Like
Coca-Cola, textbook publishers are probably going to have to rethink
their sales and marketing channel strategies.
Figure 8.13

Entrepreneurs
Jeff Shelstad and Eric Frank launched Unnamed Publisher, the publisher
of this textbook. Shelstad and Frank believe they have found a way to
add more value to the textbooks you buy. One of their strategies is to
deliver their products via a marketing channel that's different from
those used to sell traditional textbooks.
By
contrast, a pull strategy focuses on creating demand for a product
among consumers so that businesses agree to sell the product. A good
example of an industry that utilizes both pull and push strategies is
the pharmaceutical industry. Pharmaceutical companies promote their
drugs to pharmacies and doctors, but they now also run ads designed to
persuade individual consumers to ask their physicians about drugs that
might benefit them.
In
many cases, two or more organizations in a channel jointly promote a
product to retailers, purchasing agents, and consumers and work out
which organization is responsible for what type of communication to
whom. For example, the ads from Target, Walmart, and other retailers you
see in the paper on Sunday are often a joint effort between
manufacturers and the retailer. Coupons are another joint form of
promotion even when offered directly by the manufacturer, joint in the
sense that the retailer still has to accept the coupon and process it.
The actual forms and styles of communication will be discussed more in
the promotions and sales section of the book.
Sorting and Regrouping Products
As
we explained, many businesses don't want to receive huge quantities of a
product. One of the functions of wholesalers and distributors is to
break down large quantities of products into smaller units and provide
an assortment of different products to businesses.
For
example, cranberry farmers have large crops to sell. You don't want to
buy large amounts of cranberries, make your own juice or cranberry
sauce, or dry them into craisins for salads. So the farmers sell their
produce to a coop, which sorts the berries by size; large ones become
craisins while others are destined to become either juice or sauce,
depending on their liquid content. Those are then sold to the juice and
sauce producers.
Storing and Managing Inventory
If
a channel member has run out of a product when a customer wants to buy
it, the result is often a lost sale. That's why most channel members
stock, or "carry," reserve inventory. However, storing products is not
free. Warehouses cost money to build or rent and heat and cool;
employees have to be paid to stock shelves, pick products, ship them,
and so forth. Some companies, including Walmart, put their suppliers in
charge of their inventory. The suppliers have access to Walmart's
inventory levels and ship products when and where the retailer's stores
need them.
Storing
and managing inventory is not just a function provided for retailers,
though. Storage also involves storing commodities like grain prior to
processing. Gigantic grain elevators store corn, wheat, and other grains
until processors, like Oroweat, need them. You can buy fresh bread in
your grocer every day because the wheat was stored first at a grain
elevator until it was needed.
Video Clip
Warehouse Robots at Work
Not all warehouses utilize humans to pluck products from shelves. Some of them use robots, as this video shows. Robots cost money, too, though.
Distributing Products
Physical
goods that travel within a channel need to be moved from one member to
another and sometimes back again. Some large wholesalers, distributors,
and retailers own their own fleets of trucks for this purpose. In other
cases, they hire third-party transportation providers - trucking
companies, railroads, and so forth - to move their products.
Being
able to track merchandise like you can track a FedEx package is
extremely important to channel partners. They want to know where their
products are at all times and what shape they are in. Losing inventory
or having it damaged or spoiled can wreak havoc on a company's profits.
So can not getting products on time or being able to get them at all
when your competitors can.
Assume Ownership Risk and Extend Credit
If
products are damaged during transit, one of the first questions asked
is who owned the product at the time. In other words, who suffers the
loss? Generally, no one channel member assumes all of the ownership risk
in a channel. Instead, it is distributed among channel members
depending on the contracts they have with one another and their free on
board provisions. A free on board (FOB) provision designates who is
responsible for what shipping costs and who owns the title to the goods
and when. However, the type of product, the demand for it, marketing
conditions, and the clout of the various organizations in its marketing
channel can affect the contract terms channel members are willing to
agree to. Some companies try to wait as long as possible to take
ownership of products so they don't have to store them. During the
economic downturn, many channel members tried to hold as little
inventory as possible for fear it would go unsold or become
obsolete.
Share Marketing and Other Information
Each
of the channel members has information about the demand for products,
trends, inventory levels, and what the competition is doing. The
information is valuable and can be doubly valuable if channel partners
trust one another and share it. More information can help each firm in
the marketing channel perform its functions better and overcome
competitive obstacles.
That
said, confidentiality is a huge issue among supply chain partners
because they share so much information with one another, such as sales
and inventory data. For example, a salesperson who sells Tide laundry
detergent for Procter & Gamble will have a good idea of how many
units of Tide Walmart and Target are selling. However, it would be
unethical for the salesperson to share Walmart's numbers with Target or
Target's numbers with Walmart. Many business buyers require their
channel partners to sign nondisclosure agreements or make the agreements
part of purchasing contracts. A nondisclosure agreement (NDA) is a
contract that specifies what information is proprietary, or owned by the
partner, and how, if at all, the partner can use that information.