International Distribution Systems
International Distribution Systems
International Distribution Systems
In International Distribution
The firm sells to its customers:
directly through its own sales force indirectly through independent intermediaries indirectly through an outside distribution system with regional or global coverage
Intermediaries
Sources for Finding Intermediaries
Distributor inquires Governmental agencies
Commerce Departments Trade Opportunities Program U.S. Exporters Yellow Pages
Private sources
Trade directories
Screening Intermediaries
Performance Professionalism
Selection of Intermediaries
Agents Foreign (Direct)
Domestic (Indirect)
Domestic wholesalers EMCs ETCs Complementary marketers
Domestic (Indirect)
Real Physical Distribution Costs Between Air and Ocean Freight - Singapore to the United States
In this example, 44,000 peripheral boards worth $7.7 million are shipped from a Singapore plant to the U.S. West Coast. Cost of capital to finance inventories is 10 percent annually; $2,109 per day to finance $7.7 million.
Ocean Air
Transport costs
In-transit inventory financing costs Total transportation costs Warehousing inventory costs Singapore and U.S. Warehouse rent Real physical distribution costs
$ 133,487
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
SOURCE: Adapted from: "Air and Adaptec'c Competitive Strategy, International Business, September 1993, p.44.
International Logistics
V. International Logistics - the designing and managing of a system that controls the flow of materials into, through, and out of the international corporation.
Major decision areas: locating plants and warehouses; choice of transportation mode; managing inventory; packaging.
Choice of modes
Transit time, predictability, cost, noneconomic factors
Noneconomic Factors
Government involvement, the UNCTAD and the 40/40/20 concept
International Logistics
VI. Inventory Management Considerations
Carrying costs Order cycle time Order cycle consistency Difficulty in applying service rules