RM Assignment
RM Assignment
RM Assignment
Q.1 What do you mean by Retail and Retailing? How many types of
retailers are found in the market?
Ans. Retailing encompasses the business activities involved in selling
goods and services to consumers for their personal, family, or
household use. It includes every sale to the final consumer— ranging
from cars to apparel to meals at restaurants to movie tickets.
Retailing is the last stage in the distribution process. All
of the businesses and people involved in the physical movement and
transfer of ownership of goods and services from producer to
consumer. Retailers often act as the contact between manufacturers,
wholesalers, and the consumer. Retailers collect an assortment from
various sources, buy in large quantity, and sell in small amounts. This
is the sorting process.
Another job for retailers is communicating both with
customers and with manufacturers and wholesalers. Shoppers learn
about the availability and characteristics of goods and services, store
hours, sales, and so on from retailer ads, salespeople, and displays.
Manufacturers and whole- salers are informed by their retailers with
regard to sales forecasts, delivery delays, customer complaints,
defective items, inventory turnover, and more. Many goods and
services have been modified due to retailer feedback.
Retailers also complete transactions with customers. This
means having convenient locations, filling orders promptly and
accurately, and processing credit purchases. Some retailers also
provide customer services such as gift wrapping, delivery, and
installation. To make themselves even more appealing, many firms
now engage in multi-channel retailing, whereby a retailer sells to
consumers through multiple retail formats (points of contact). Most
large retailers operate both physical stores and Web sites to make
shopping easier and to accommodate consumer desires. Some firms
even sell to customers through retail stores, mail order, a Web site,
and a toll-free phone number. For these reasons, products are usually
sold through retailers not owned by manufacturers (wholesalers). This
lets the manufacturers reach more customers, reduce costs, improve
cash flow, increase sales more rapidly, and focus on their area of
expertise. Three factors that most differentiate retailing from other
types of business are:
1. The average amount of a sales transaction for retailers is much
less than for manufacturers. This low amount creates a need to
tightly control the costs associated with each transaction (such
as credit verification, sales personnel, and bagging); to
maximize the number of customers drawn to the retailer, which
may place more emphasis on ads and special promotions; and to
increase impulse sales by more aggressive selling.
2. Final consumers make many unplanned or impulse purchases.
Surveys show that a large percentage of consumers do not look
at ads before shopping, do not prepare shopping lists (or do
deviate from the lists) once in stores, and make fully unplanned
purchases. This behaviour indicates the value of in-store
displays, attractive store layouts, and well-organized stores,
catalogs, and Web sites. Candy, cosmetics, snack foods,
magazines, and other items are sold as impulse goods when
placed in visible, high-traffic areas in a store, catalog, or Web
site. Because so many purchases are unplanned, the retailer’s
ability to forecast, budget, order merchandise, and have
sufficient personnel on the selling floor is more difficult.
3. Retail customers usually visit a store, even though mail, phone,
and Web sales have increased. Despite the inroads made by
nonstore retailers, most retail transactions are still con- ducted in
stores—and will continue to be in the future. Many people like
to shop in person; want to touch, smell, and/or try on products;
like to browse for unplanned purchases; feel more comfortable
taking a purchase home with them than waiting for a delivery;
and desire privacy while at home. This store-based shopping
orientation has implications for retailers; they must work to
attract shoppers to stores and consider such factors as store
location, transportation, store hours, proximity of competitors,
product selection, parking, and ads.
Together, there are four principles that form the retailing concept
which should be understood and applied by all retailers:
1. Customer orientation: The retailer determines the attributes and
needs of its customers and endeavors to satisfy these needs to the
fullest.
2. Coordinated effort: The retailer integrates all plans and activities to
maximize efficiency.
3. Value driven: The retailer offers good value to customers, whether
it be upscale or discount. This means having prices appropriate for the
level of products and customer service.
4. Goal orientation: The retailer sets goals and then uses its strategy to
attain them.
The retailing concept is straightforward. It means communicating
with shoppers and viewing their desires as critical to the firm’s
success, having a consistent strategy (such as offering designer
brands, plentiful sales personnel, attractive displays, and above-
average prices in an upscale store); offering prices perceived as “fair”
(a good value for the money) by customers; and working to achieve
meaningful, specific, and reachable goals.
Type of Retailers:
There are nine types of retailers. These are:
1. Speciality Store: A speciality store is one which focuses on one
or two specific categories. They have a very narrow product
line. However, the advantage of a speciality store is that you
will find many things in that store related to that speciality
which you might not find on the open market.
2. Department store: Departmental stores are generally located
within malls and they may not have their own independent
stores. Department stores have a lot of products under their roof.
They will sell clothing, men’s and women’s accessories,
children’s toys, home furnishing and many different things.
They generally have separate sections for separate categories.
However, the number of categories are not exhaustive. These
stores might not deal in as many categories as Supermarkets or
hypermarkets. They will not sell FMCG items like Soap or
Shampoo. Even if they sell that, they will limit the categories by
some other means.
3. Supermarkets: They are known to be vast marketplace with a
wide variety of categories available. Most of these categories
deal in the residential market segment by dealing in a lot of food
varieties, necessary and useful products, groceries, bakery
products, laundry, etc. More than consumer durables, these
types of supermarkets focus on the FMCG products. Many
customers in the supermarket are looking to refill their home
inventory and the best place to do that is the supermarket
because you can fill up with a lot of stuff in very less time.
Product assortment is a speciality of supermarket because the
products need to be displayed in such a manner that the
customers gets attracted to them and they sell faster. Normally,
Supermarkets are also preferred because they have a lot of
variants of the same product. You can find a lot of different
varieties of soaps and shampoos at your local supermarket
which you won’t find in your local convenience store. As
consumer grow, supermarkets are becoming smarter and smarter
and bringing various price incentives to shop with them.
4. Convenience stores: A store in your locality which provides the
most basic material to you in a timely manner and which is
available to you for all basic needs is a convenience store. These
are small stores which do not have too many categories or too
much depth in their product line. They will have 2-3 types of
each product and the volume too will be lesser. The shop is a
small shop giving super-fast service with a focused approach.
5. Drug stores: Drug stores are the ones which sell medicines and
are specialized in it. They can be a form of specialized store
itself but let’s face it – drug stores are now wider and longer
than any specialized store because of the population and the
number of medicines we need in day to day life. But drugstores
now sell many other things besides pharmaceuticals. They have
become another form of specialized retail stores where many
things can be bought like Health and beauty products, basic
snacks, protein supplements, small medical equipment as well as
other personal care and healthcare products.
6. Discount Stores: Ever heard of the words “Every day low
prices”. If you have not, that is the tagline which Walmart used
to great effect to sell off its wares and to become one of the
leading retail stores in the market. Walmart can be categorized
in two different kind of retail stores – The Supermarkets or
Discount stores. However, due to its pattern of discounting and
attracting customers on the basis of discounts, it is more apt to
place Walmart as a Discount store. Discount stores sell all
products at a good discount which attracts the customers. They
do this by buying the products in huge volumes from the
company. On the front end, they also establish a huge number of
supermarkets and hypermarkets so that they can liquidate these
products to the customers by passing on the margins.
7. Off-price/used goods store: Ebay started in this business very
well and sold many products at a good discount because they
were products which had some small defect, or they were
leftover goods from the manufacturers who did not find the
goods up to the mark. Another market which is booming right
now is the used goods store. The market of Used goods or resale
Is so big that even brands like Audi or others are now offering
support and ratings for the sale of used goods so that consumers
are happy even with the used products. Off-price stores are
stores which sell items that have a minor defect during the time
of manufacturing or which have a small defect due to handling.
The sale of off-price goods is on the rise because of the
establishment of E-commerce portals like Amazon and Alibaba.
When you sell on these portals, there is a small percentage of
products which gets damaged during transit. Such products are
directly sold to the off-price type of retail stores which sell it to
the end consumers.
8. Super stores or Hypermarkets: Superstores are retail stores
which are huge in size and have many many different categories
under their belt. Think of a Superstore having everything under
its roof – all the products that you can buy as a “residential
consumer”. These retail stores are not found in malls. Rather
they are malls by themselves. A superstore or a hypermarket
does a good job of balancing the cheap the good, the quality as
well as the premium. Basically, you will find low level, mid-
level and even high-level quality of products in a hypermarket.
Hence it is known as a “complete market”. This category is
being affected most heavily since the advent of E-commerce
because there is huge cost associated with running a superstore
or a hypermarket.
9. Ecommerce stores: Without a doubt, E-commerce is the future
of retail. Even now, Amazon has a huge market share of retail
and has a top positioning in the customer’s mind. If you don’t
get a product anywhere offline, you will definitely find it online
because the sellers from all across the country sell products
online and there is even an option to import the product from
another country. This reduces the cost of distribution of product
and increases the total number of products available to the end
customers. Not only Amazon or Alibaba, there are many small
E-commerce retail stores popping up as well. Every specialized
retailer or even convenience goods salesperson is launching his
or her website and directly selling products from their website
which is nothing but a type of E-tailing. In the future, we can see
almost all brands having their own online retail stores and
cutting the middlemen by directly selling to end customers.
Q.2 Share the importance of Retail Market Strategy. How this can
gain sustainable competitive advantage?
Ans. The importance of developing and applying a retail strategy:
A retail strategy is the overall plan guiding a retail firm. It influences
the firm’s business activities and its response to market forces, such
as competition and the economy. Any retailer, regard- less of size or
type, should utilize these six steps in strategic planning:
1. Define the type of business in terms of the goods or service
category and the company’s specific orientation (such as full
service or “no frills”).
2. Set long-run and short-run objectives for sales and profit, market
share, image, and so on.
3. Determine the customer market to target on the basis of its
characteristics (such as gender and income level) and needs
(such as product and brand preferences).
4. Devise an overall, long-run plan that gives general direction to
the firm and its employees.
5. Implement an integrated strategy that combines such factors as
store location, product assortment, pricing, and advertising and
displays to achieve objectives.
6. Regularly evaluate performance and correct weaknesses or
problems when observed.
Q.3 How price of product affect Retail Business? What are the
various factors which affect pricing in Retail Business?
Ans. Retail price setting can take one of several approaches. Some
retailers offer deep discounts and no-frills shopping (think Costco),
others offer everyday low pricing (think Wal-Mart), others offer mid-
level prices and promote special sales (think Macy’s), and still others
set prices that are rarely discounted (think Apple stores). A new
entrant to the retail pricing mix is the “real-time deal,” whereby online
firms, usually driven by social media, offer deals for consumers
willing to make a purchase during a defined—and short—time period.
Pricing Strategies:
Everyday Low Pricing: This strategy emphasises continuity of
retail prices at a level somewhere between the regular non-sale
price and the deep-discount sale price of the retailer’s
competitors. The term everyday low pricing is therefore
somewhat of a misnomer. Low doesn’t necessarily mean the
lowest.
High-Low Pricing: In a high/low pricing strategy, retailers offer
prices that are sometimes above their competitor’s everyday low
prices (EDLP), but they use advertising to promote frequent
sales. Retail stores which follow this strategy provide a high
fixed utility to customers with a convenient format, high quality
service and a good assortment of products. Customers visit such
stores frequently as they buy in small quantities. Since the price
often fluctuates in such stores customers defer the purchase of
high priced products till the price falls. When the price falls they
stock up on the item.
Mark-up Pricing: Markup on cost can be calculated by adding a
pre-set (often industry standards) profit margin or percentage, to
the cost of the merchandise. Markup on retail is determined by
dividing the dollar markup by retail.
Vendor Pricing: Manufacturer Suggested Retail Pricing (MSRP)
is a common strategy used by the smaller retail shops to avoids
price wars and still maintain a decent profit. Some suppliers
have minimum advertised prices but also suggest the retail
pricing. By pricing products with the suggested retail prices
supplied by the vendor, the retailer is out of decision making
process.
Competitive Pricing: Consumers have many choices and are
generally willing to shop around to receive the best price.
Retailers considering a competitive pricing strategy will need to
provide outstanding customer service to stand above the
competition.
o Pricing below competition simply means pricing products
lower than the competitor’s price. This strategy works well
if the retailer negotiates the best prices, reduces costs and
develops a marketing strategy to focus on price specials.
o Prestige pricing or pricing above competition, may be
considered when location, exclusivity or unique customers
service can justify higher prices. Retailers that stock high-
quality merchandise that isn’t available at any other
location may be quite successful in pricing their products
above competitors.
Psychological Pricing: Psychological pricing is used when
prices are set to a certain level where the consumers perceives
the price to be fair. The most common method is odd-pricing
using figures that end in 5, 7 or 9. It is believed that consumers
tend to round down the price of $9.95 to $9, rather than $10.
Skim Pricing: Skim pricing attempts to “skim the cream” off the
top of the market by setting a high price and selling to those
customers who are less price sensitive. Skimming is a strategy
used to pursue the objective of profit margin maximization.
Penetration Pricing: Penetration pricing pursues the objective of
quantity maximization by means of low price. It is most
appropriate when:
o Demand is expected to be highly elastic; that is, customers
are price sensitive and the quantity demanded will increase
significantly as price declines
o Large decreases in cost are expected as cumulative volume
increases
o The product is of the nature of something that can gain
mass appeal fairly quickly
o There is a threat of impending competition
Leader Pricing: Here, retailers price one or more products at
substantially low cost to attract customers and increase the sale
of complementary products in the store. Usually, these products
are regarded as loss leaders. The products selected for leader
pricing should be those that are frequently bought by target
customers.
Price Bundling: Here distinct items, generally from different
lines of merchandise are offered together at a special price. This
can increase the volume of sales, as well as the traffic at the
retail stores.
Retail Image:
Q.2 Retail formats are of diverse nature. Explain the formats which
are prominently in India. How Indian retail formats are different from
the formats available in other countries?
Ans. India is growing at a great pace and the retail sector is also
developing with it. Big Indian business houses are entering into retail
sector and are adopting various retail formats for their business which
are best suited to them. We can divide Indian retail market in three
forms which are mentioned below:
Store Retailers
Non-store retailers
Service retailers
1. Store Retail Formats:
o Mom-and-pop Store: These are family owned stores which
provide small quantity of merchandise or goods to the
customers. They are individually run and target the smaller
sections of the society. These stores provide high standard
services. They provide home delivery and credit facility without
any interest to its customers.
o Convenience Store: Convenience is offered in a lot of ways to
the customers through easily accessible store locations and small
store size that allows the customers to do quick shopping and
fast checkout. The product selection offered by these retailers is
very limited and the price of the products can be high.
o Supermarkets: Supermarket is another popular retail format in
India. A supermarket is a grocery store which deals in food and
household goods. They offer a fairly huge range of products and
self-service. People usually go to the supermarkets to buy goods
in large quantities so that they can stock those goods for later
consumption. They provide products for reasonable prices and
of medium to high quality.
o Department Store: Department stores are classified as general
merchandisers. Some carry a more selective product line. For
instance, while Sears carries a wide range of products from
hardware to cosmetics, Nordstrom focuses their products on
clothing and personal care products.
o Kiosks: Kiosks are box-like shops which sell small and cheap
items like cigarettes, toffees, newspapers and magazines, water
packets, tea and coffee. These are most commonly found on
every street in a city and target primarily to the local residents.
o Malls: Malls are the largest retail format in India. These are the
largest retail format in India. Malls provide everything that a
person wants to buy under one roof. From clothes and
accessories to food or cinemas, malls provide all of this, and
more. Examples include Spencers Plaza in Chennai, India,
Alpha one in Amritsar and Viva collage in Jalandhar.
3. Service Retailers:
Ans. (a) Today’s successful retailer is the one making the most
profitable use of every square foot of available space in the store.
Because space is costly, you need to have a strategy for its use.
Strategic floor patterns, location of merchandise, amounts of
merchandise and appropriate displays are all key factors to consider.
(viii) Remove the clutter behind the cash counter. Tidy up the back
room.
(ii) Make your signs short and sweet. You have only few seconds to
tell the customer what you want them to hear.
(iii) It should be clear and understandable.
(iv) Only post positive signs about your policies. If it’s negative,
either change it or don’t post it.
6. Shelving and Displays: High margin and profit items get the best
space. Research shows that eye level and just slightly below is the
best shelves to sell from.
Q.4 (a) What are the different stages a customer goes through while
selecting a retailer?
(b) Explain how a retailer can handle customer complains
effectively?
Ans. Besides identifying target market characteristics, a retailer
should know how people make decisions. This requires familiarity
with consumer behavior, which is the process by which people
determine whether, what, when, where, how, from whom, and how
often to purchase goods and services. Such behavior is influenced by
a person’s background and traits. The consumer’s decision process
must be grasped from two different perspectives:
(1) what good or service the consumer is thinking about buying
and
(2) where the consumer is going to purchase that item (if the
person opts to buy).
A consumer can make these decisions separately or jointly. If made
jointly, he or she relies on the retailer for support (information,
assortments, and knowledgeable sales personnel) over the entire
decision process. If the decisions are made independently—what to
buy versus where to buy—the person gathers information and advice
before visiting a retailer and views the retailer merely as a place to
buy (and probably more interchangeable with other firms). In
choosing whether or not to buy a given item (what), the consumer
considers features, durability, distinctiveness, value, ease of use, and
so on. In choosing the retailer to patronize for that item (where), the
consumer considers location, assortment, credit availability, sales
help, hours, customer service, and so on. Thus, the manufacturer and
retailer have distinct challenges: The manufacturer wants people to
buy its brand (what) at any location carrying it (where). The retailer
wants people to buy the product, not necessarily the manufacturer’s
brand (what), at its store or nonstore location (where).
The consumer decision process has two parts: the process
itself and the factors affecting the process. There are six steps in the
process: stimulus, problem awareness, information search, evaluation
of alternatives, purchase, and post-purchase behavior. The consumer’s
demographics and lifestyle affect the process.
The best retailers assist consumers at each stage in the process:
stimulus (newspaper ads), problem awareness (stocking new models),
information search (point-of-sale displays and good salespeople),
evaluation of alternatives (clearly noticeable differences among
products), purchase (acceptance of credit cards), and post-purchase
behavior (extended warranties and money- back returns). The greater
the role a retailer assumes in the decision process, the more loyal the
consumer will be.
Each time a person buys a good or service, he or she goes through a
decision process. In some cases, all six steps in the process are
utilized; in others, only a few steps are employed. For example, a
consumer who has previously and satisfactorily bought luggage at a
local store may not use the same extensive process as one who has
never bought luggage.
Stimulus: A stimulus is a cue (social or commercial) or a drive
(physical) meant to motivate or arouse a person to act. When a person
talks with friends, fellow employees, and others, a social cue is
received. The special attribute of a social cue is that it involves an
interpersonal, non- commercial source. A commercial cue is a
message sponsored by a retailer or some other seller. Ads, sales
pitches, and store displays are commercial stimuli. Such cues may not
be regarded as highly as social ones by consumers because they are
seller-controlled. A third type of stimulus is a physical drive. It occurs
when one or more of a person’s physical senses are affected. Hunger,
thirst, cold, heat, pain, or fear could cause a physical drive. A
potential consumer may be ex- posed to any or all three types of
stimuli. If aroused (motivated), he or she goes to the next step in the
process. If a person is not sufficiently aroused, the stimulus is ignored
—terminating the process for the given good or service.
Problem Awareness: At problem awareness, the consumer not only
has been aroused by social, commercial, and/or physical stimuli but
also recognizes that the good or service under consideration may
solve a problem of shortage or unfulfilled desire. It is sometimes hard
to learn why a person is motivated enough to move from a stimulus to
problem awareness. Many people shop with the same retailer or buy
the same good or service for different reasons; they may not know
their own motivation, and they may not tell a retailer their real reasons
for shopping there or buying a certain item.
Recognition of shortage occurs when a person discovers
a good or service should be repurchased. A good could wear down
beyond repair, or the person might run out of an item such as milk.
Service may be necessary if a good such as a car requires a repair.
Recognition of unful- filled desire takes place when a person becomes
aware of a good or service that has not been bought before or a
retailer that has not been patronized before. An item (such as contact
lenses) may improve a person’s lifestyle, self-image, and so on in an
untried manner, or it may offer new performance features (such as a
voice-activated computer). People are more hesitant to act on
unfulfilled desires. Risks and benefits may be tougher to see. When a
person becomes aware of a shortage or an unfulfilled desire, he or she
acts only if it is a problem worth solving. Otherwise, the process ends.
Information Search: If problem awareness merits further thought,
information is sought. An information search has two parts:
(1) determining the alternatives that will solve the problem at hand
(and where they can be bought) and
(2) ascertaining the characteristics of each alternative.
First, the person compiles a list of goods or services that address the
shortage or desire being considered. This list does not have to be
formal. It may be a group of alternatives the person thinks about. A
person with a lot of purchase experience normally uses an internal
memory search to determine the goods or services—and retailers—
that are satisfactory. A person with little purchase experience often
uses an external search to develop a list of alternatives and retailers.
This search can involve commercial sources such as retail
salespeople, noncommercial sources such as Consumer Reports, and
social sources such as friends. Second, the person gathers information
about each alternative’s attributes. An experienced shopper searches
his or her memory for the attributes (pros and cons) of each
alternative. A consumer with little experience or a lot of uncertainty
searches externally for information.
The extent of an information search depends, in part, on the
consumer’s perceived risk regarding a specific good or service. Risk
varies among individuals and by situation. For some, it is
inconsequential; for others, it is quite important. The retailer’s role is
to provide enough information for a shopper to feel comfortable in
making decisions, thus reducing perceived risk. Point- of-purchase
ads, product displays, and knowledgeable sales personnel can provide
consumers with the information they need.
Once the consumer’s search for information is completed,
he or she must decide whether a current shortage or unfulfilled desire
can be met by any of the alternatives. If one or more are satisfactory,
the consumer moves to the next step in the decision process. The
consumer stops the process if no satisfactory goods or services are
found.
Evaluation of Alternatives: Next, a person selects one option from
among the choices. This is easy if one alternative is superior on all
features. An item with excellent quality and a low price is a certain
pick over expensive, average-quality ones. However, a choice may
not be that simple, and the person then does an evaluation of
alternatives before making a decision. If two or more options seem
attractive, the person determines the criteria to evaluate and their
importance. Alternatives are ranked and a choice is made.
The criteria for a decision are those good or service attributes that are
considered relevant. They may include price, quality, fit, durability,
and so on. The person sets standards for these characteristics and rates
each alternative according to its ability to meet the standards. The
importance of each criterion is also determined, and attributes are
usually of differing importance to each person. One shopper may
consider price to be most important while another places greater
weight on quality and durability.
At this point, the person ranks alternatives from most
favorite to least favorite and selects one. For some items, it is hard to
rate attributes of available alternatives because they are technical,
intangible, new, or poorly labeled. When this occurs, shoppers often
use price, brand name, or store name as an indicator of quality and
choose based on this criterion. Once a person ranks alternatives, he or
she chooses the most satisfactory good or service. In situations where
no alter- native is adequate, a decision not to buy is made.
Purchase Act: A person is now ready for the purchase act—an
exchange of money or a promise to pay for the ownership or use of a
good or service. Important decisions are still made in this step. For a
retailer, the purchase act may be the most crucial aspect of the
decision process because the consumer is mainly concerned with three
factors:
1. Place of purchase—this may be a store or a nonstore location.
Many more items are bought at stores than through nonstore retailing,
although the latter are growing more quickly. The place of purchase is
evaluated in the same way as the good or the service: alternatives are
listed, their traits are defined, and they are ranked. The most desirable
place is then chosen. Criteria for selecting a store retailer include store
location, store layout, service, sales help, store image, and prices.
Criteria for selecting a nonstore retailer include image, service, prices,
hours, interactivity, and convenience. A consumer will shop with the
firm that has the best combination of criteria, as defined by that
consumer.
2. Purchase terms—these include the price and method of payment.
Price is the dollar amount a person must pay to achieve the ownership
or use of a good or service. Method of payment is the way the price
may be paid (cash, short-term credit, long-term credit).
3. Availability—this relates to stock on hand and delivery. Stock on
hand is the amount of an item that a place of purchase has in stock.
Delivery is the time span between placing an order and receiving an
item and the ease with which an item is transported to its place of use.
If a person is pleased with all aspects of the purchase act, the good or
service is bought. If there is dissatisfaction with the place of purchase,
the terms of purchase, or availability, the consumer may not buy,
although there is contentment with the item itself.
Post-Purchase Behavior: After buying a good or service, a consumer
may engage in post- purchase behavior, which falls into either of two
categories: further purchases or re-evaluation. Sometimes, buying one
item leads to further purchases and decision making continues until
the last purchase is made. For instance, a car purchase leads to
insurance; a retailer using scrambled merchandising may stimulate a
shopper to make further purchases after the primary good or service is
bought.
A person may also re-evaluate a purchase. Is performance as
promised? Do actual attributes match the expectations the consumer
had? Has the retailer acted as expected? Satisfaction typically leads to
contentment, a repurchase when a good or service wears out, and
positive ratings to friends. Dissatisfaction may lead to unhappiness,
brand or store switching, and unfavorable conversations with friends
and negative online postings. The latter situation (dissatisfaction) may
result from cognitive dissonance—doubt that the correct decision has
been made. A consumer may regret that the purchase was made at all
or may wish that another choice had been made. To overcome
cognitive dissonance and dissatisfaction, the retailer must realize that
the decision process does not end with a purchase. After-care (by
phone, a service visit, or E-mail) may be as important as anything a
retailer does to complete the sale. When items are expensive or
important, after-care takes on greater significance because the person
really wants to be right. Also, the more alternatives from which to
choose, the greater the doubt after a decision is made and the more
important the after-care. Department stores pioneered money-back
guarantees so customers could return items if cognitive dissonance
occurred.
Realistic sales presentations and ad campaigns reduce post-sale
dissatisfaction because consumer expectations do not then exceed
reality. If overly high expectations are created, a consumer is more apt
to be unhappy because performance is not at the level promised.
Combining an honest sales presentation with good customer after-care
reduces or eliminates cognitive dissonance and dissatisfaction.
(b) A retailer can handle consumer complaints effectively by
following ways:
3: Thank Your Customer: The old saying "kill them with kindness"
could not be more true in a situation with a customer complaining.
But rather than smile and pretend to care, genuinely let them know
you are thankful they are sharing with you their complaint or concern.
For example, you can tell them right off the bat that you appreciate
them taking the time to talk to you about their concern and you want
to make sure you understand exactly what they are saying. This opens
up the opportunity for you to further listen to them, while hopefully
giving them the understanding that you want to actually hear what
they have to say.
10: Move On: When all is said and done, you can't dwell on customer
complaints in order to move on and forward with your next tasks on
hand. Most businesses are bound to get them every now and again
since very simply, you can't please everyone. This said, if customer
complaints are a normal routine for your business, you need to dwell
on them. All businesses, however, should have a plan of attack - no
pun intended - to help navigate how to handle customer complaints as
seamlessly, professionally and graciously as possible. In return?
Customers who give you another chance and tell their friends, family,
co-workers and more about the strong customer care they received
from your team.
Q. 5 Explain the challenges a retailer faces in handling human
resources. What are the necessary skill sets required for getting
employed in a retail setup? Draw the organization structure of a chain
of departmental store.
Ans. The challenges faced by a retailer in handling human resource
are:-
1. Employee Tracking: Most of the retailers have there store pan-
India and have a lot of different store in a same geographical area
so tracking of employee productivity is a tedious task.
2. Manpower Planning As Per Infrastructure: Each retail store has
different sections for fulfilling the demand of the consumer base, a
study had shown that if a retail customer specialist is trained well
it will automatically increase the profit of the store and also it
creates a good customer experience.
For examples – If there is a demand for the milk-related product in
your store in morning and daily needs item on weekdays you need
to have more trained employee in this section so that service will
be fast and that section will not be overcrowded.
Constant monitoring will help management to know where
they are lacking manpower planning and can help to train the
employees to achieve the organizational objective.
3. Seasonal Demand: During the festival, there are always rush on
retail stores.so employee demands are more and workforce needed
to be more organised during this time to handle this volume of
customers.
4. Lack Of Formal Education: There is the requirement of qualified
and talented manpower to look after the day to day operations and
cater to the wide spectrum of customer desires. As there is lack of
formal vocational institutes where the employee can be trained,
most of the retailers in India depend on in-house training or
fulfilling their training needs with small institutes.
5. Bad Loans: Bad loans are the big problem in the retail sector as
workers in this industry take a lot of loans from the company and
as well as from bank so proper tracking is required for maintaining
the balance.
6. Women In Retailing: There are a lot of women in retailing and its
also scientifically proven that women increase the productivity of
retail store if they are working properly as they have the ability to
pursue people and they have genetical ability to work with
perfection and multitasking.
They can be easily trained and they can maintain a store more
properly than men.
Some policies need to be made by the organisation for giving
women some extra privilege like maternity leave, sharing working
hours e.t.c.
7. Threat of Poaching: Employee poaching is also very high both in
organized as well as an unorganized retail industry. Skilled
manpower is scarce in this industry and as such attracting the
employees of competitors by offering them better salaries is a
rather easy option.
A lot of capital is invested in each individual for his training and
development, so if any employee leaves its a loss of organisation.
So you have to always retain good employee because they are
assets of your organisation.
8. Career Advancement: A lot of employees in the retail industry
even don’t know the path for growth in their careers.
Proper goal management and training are required so that they will
grow and their growth will also help the organisation to grow,
Goal completion rewards are one of the initiatives that can be done
by the organisation.
Some training like proper communication classes, personality
development classes, Packing Techniques, Technical training are
few of the things organisation may adopt for growth.
9. Stressful Environment: The working pattern of the retail industry
requires employee to put in long hours of work which generally
cause fatigue and result in lower motivation among employees.
Besides this, in part-time and casual jobs there is less job security,
flexible shifts, unlimited working hours, lower salary and benefits
& poor working conditions resulting into stress.
10. Analytics Overview: As there are the vast number of employees
working in a single organisation Management level people rely
only on data that is shown in there databook or screen to address
the problems some common problems may be employee
attendance, individual store productivity, retention of employees
analyzing this data can figure out problem area so that they can act
on that before its too late.