Unit 1
Unit 1
Unit 1
RETAIL MANAGEMENT
• UNIT – I:
Introduction to retail marketing and retail
Environment-The wheel of Retailing-Retail
Formats-store and non- store Retailing, Factors
affecting retailing in India. Prospects of retailing
in India. Trends in retailing. Retail environment.
FDI in retail in India.
• UNIT – II:
• A French word
Retailers arepart
Retailers are partofofthe
the
distribution
distribution channel
channel
Product
Distribution Price
Promotion
Distribution Channel
PPT 1-4
Distribution Channel
Retailers are a Business Like Manufacturers
Manufacturer RETAILER
of D OF A, B, C,
D
CUSTOMER OF
PRODUCT
A
CUSTOMER OF
PRODUCT
B
CUSTOMER OF
RETAILER PRODUCT
C
OF
A, B, C, D CUSTOMER OF
PRODUCT
D
examples
BREAKING THE BULK
• PRODUCERS SELL IN LARGE
QUANTITIES AND CONSUMERS BUY
IN SMALL QUANTITIES.
PROVIDING SERVICES
• Credit to consumers
• Home delivery.
Retailing is a part of our life
In recent past buying and selling
has become more formal and
brand dominated
• The products must be well arranged on the assigned shelves according to size, color, gender, patterns
etc.
• The range of products available at the store must be divided into small groups comprising of similar
products. Such groups are called categories. A customer can simply walk up to a particular category
and look for products.
• A unique SKU code must be assigned to each and every product for easy tracking.
• Necessary labels must be put on the shelves for the customers to locate the merchandise on their own
without much assistance.
• Make sure the sales representatives attend the customers well. Assist them in their shopping. Greet
them with a smile the retailer must ensure enough stock is available at the store.
Effective Retail Management
• Make sure the store is kept clean. Don’t stock unnecessary furniture as it gives a cluttered
look to the store. The customers must be able to move freely.
• The store manager, department managers, cashier and all other employees should be trained
from time to time to extract the best out of them. They should be well aware of their roles and
responsibilities and customer oriented. They should be experts in their respective areas
• The store manager must make daily sales reports to keep a track of the cash flow. Use
software's or maintain registers for the same.
• Remove the unsold merchandise from the shelves. Keep them somewhere else.
Customer Service
Communication
Mix
Economic Significance of Retailing
To Today’s Retailer
Customer Location
Service
Communication Pricing
Mix
Wal-Mart’s Retail Mix
Location Strategy
Free-standing Stores
Customer
Service
Communication
Mix Pricing
Wal-Mart’s Retail Mix
Assortment Strategy
Customer
Service Location
Large Number
Store Design
and Display
of Categories
Few Items
Communication
Mix Pricing
in Each Category
Wal-Mart’s Retail Mix
Location
Pricing Strategy
Customer
Merchandise
Service
Assortment
Store Design
and Display
Communication
Mix Low, EDLP
Wal-Mart’s Retail Mix
Customer
Service Location
Communication Mix
Store Design Merchandise
and Display Assortment
Pricing
TV and Newspaper
Insert Ads
Wal-Mart’s Retail Mix
Customer
Service Location
Basic, Special
Merchandise
Displays Assortments
for Products
Communication
Mix Pricing
Wal-Mart’s Retail Mix
Customer Service
Limited
Location
Merchandise
Assortment
Store Design
and Display Pricing
Communication
Mix
Misconceptions About Careers in Retailing
Established Emerging
Traditional formats Formats
Formats Kirana shops Exclusive retail outlets
Itinerant Salesman Convenience/ Hypermarket
Haats department stores Internal retail
Melas PDS/ Malls / Specialty Malls
Mandis etc. fair price shops Multiplexes
Pan/ Beedi shops Fast food outlets
Service galleries
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The Marketing – Retail Equation
Wholesaler
Retailer
Feedback
Retailer
42
WHEEL OF RETAILING
“’Wheel of Retailing”
1. New retailers often enter the market place with low prices,
margins, and status. The low prices are usually the result
of some innovative cost-cutting procedures and soon
attract competitors.
45
46
PHASES OF WHEEL OF RETAILING
Independent
Retailers-one store
ownership
Chain Stores-many
stores but only one
owner
Franchises-many
owners of many
stores
BASIC FORMS OF FRANCHISING
Discount stores
Factory outlets
Warehouse clubs Exclusive stores
CLASSIFICATION BY PRODUCT
OFFERING
• Category Killers
• Scrambled Merchandising
Why do this?
MAJOR TYPES OF RETAILERS BY
PRODUCT OFFERING/ STORE RETAIL
FORMATS
Department Stores
Supermarkets
Mass
Malls Discounters
Street Vendors
Category Convenience
killers Stores
Convenience Stores
Discount Stores
Restaurants
DIRECT MARKETING
Direct Mail
Direct
Marketing needs
no personal Catalogs & Mail Order
interaction
Telemarketing
CHOOSING THE RETAIL MIX
Product Place
Promotion Presentation
CHOOSING THE RETAIL MIX
Product
Personnel Promotion
Target
Market
Presentation Place
Price
PRESENTATION (COMMUNICATION) OF
THE RETAIL STORE
Factors Sound
in
Creating Odors
Store’s
Atmosphere Visual Factors
PERSONNEL OF THE RETAIL STORE
How many
How knowledgeable
Factors
in Fit the image of the product
Personnel
decisions Good personal sellers
RETAILING STRATEGY - LOCATION
Multichannel Retailers
Retailing Mix
• Environmental Awareness
• Increase in Senior Population
• Social Media
• Online Shopping
Reasons of Growth
• The changing Indian consumers psyche.
• Greater per capita income
• Increase in disposable income of middle class households
• Growing high and middle income population.
• Affordability growth, falling interest rates, easier consumer credit .
• Greater variety and quality at all price points
• Urban consumers getting exposed to international lifestyles,
inclined to acquiring asset.
• No longer need-based shopping, shopping is more a family
experience.
• Changing mindset of consumers- Increasing tendency to spend.
• Greater levels of education
CHALLENGES FACING THE INDIAN
ORGANIZED RETAIL SECTOR
• The biggest challenge facing the Indian
organized sector is the lack of space.
• With real estate prices escalating due to
increase in demand from the Indian organized
retail sector, it is posing a challenge to its
growth.
• With Indian retailers having to shell out more
for retail space it is affecting their overall
profitability in retail.
• Trained manpower shortage is a challenge facing the organized retail
sector in India.
• The Indian retailers have difficulty in finding trained person and also have
to pay more in order to retain them.
• This again brings down the Indian retailers profit levels.
• The foreign direct investment (FDI) in the Indian retail sector to one
brand shops has made the entry of global retail giants to organized retail
sector in India difficult.
• But the global giants like TESCO, WAL-MART, and METRO AG are entering
the organized retail sector in India indirectly through franchisee
agreement and cash and carry wholesale trading.
• Many Indian companies are also entering the Indian organized retail sector
like Reliance Industries Limited, Pantaloons, and Bharti Telecoms. But they
are facing stiff competition from these global retail giants.
• As a result the discounting practice too brings down the profit of the
Indian retailers.
Division of Retail Industry –
Organised and Unorganised Retailing
The retail industry is mainly divided into:-
Unorganised Retailing
Organised Retailing
• Unorganised retailing, on the other
• Organised retailing refers to
hand, refers to the traditional
trading activities undertaken by
formats of low-cost retailing, for
licensed retailers, that is, those
example, the local kirana shops,
who are registered for sales tax,
owner manned general
income tax, etc.
stores, paan/beedi shops,
• These include the corporate- convenience stores, hand cart and
backed hypermarkets and retail pavement vendors, etc.
chains, and also the privately
owned large retail businesses.
FDI RETAIL IN INDIA
FDI
• FDI can be defined as a cross border
investment, where foreign assets are invested
into the organizations of the domestic market
excluding the investment in stock.
•
FDI..
Until 2011, foreign direct investment (FDI) was not allowed in multi-brand retail, forbidding
foreign companies from any ownership in supermarkets, convenience stores or any retail
outlets.
• Even single-brand retail was limited to 51 per cent ownership. In January 2012, India allowed
100 per cent FDI investment in single-brand stores, but imposed the requirement that the
single brand retailer would have to source 30 percent of its goods from India.
• On 7 December 2012, India allowed 51 per cent FDI in multi-brand retail.
Reasons for promotion of FDI in Retail
•
The major benefit of FDI is that it is both supplementary and complimentary with
regards to local investment.
• FDI lets a company gain better access to top class technology and supplementary
funds.
• They are also exposed to management practices in vogue around the world and also
get the chance to become a part of the global market system.
ICRIER submitted the report during 2008. The study hinted at the advantages that
the growth of organised retail will have for various participants like the consumers,
manufacturers, and farmers.
.
Reasons for promotion of FDI in
Retail
• The government decided on the basis of the results in other countries and the ICRIER
study that this decision would result in a greater influx of FDI in both back and front end
infrastructure. It was expected that the agricultural sector would become more efficient
and be in a better position to use technology.
It was also expected that this decision would result in more and better jobs being created
and the best practices around the world will be introduced in India. Both farmers and
consumers will see more convenient prices and higher quality in future and this will help
both the classes.
The government also put in an obligatory condition before foreign companies for
procuring 30 percent supplies from local producers in order to provide a fillip to the
manufacturing sector in India. Jobs are expected to be available in both rural and urban
areas thanks to greater back and frontal operations resulting from more FDI.
Domestic retail entities and traders are expected to pull up their socks and increase their
efficiency ever since this decision. Consequently, the consumers are expected to receive
better services and the producers who provide the source products also get better
payment
Process of FDI in Retail