PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING 1... Note
PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING 1... Note
PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING 1... Note
A. Marketing Overview
Marketing is the business function that deals with satisfying the needs and wants of specific
which companies deliver solutions to customers’ problems in return for payment. Successful
firms are those that consistently satisfy the needs and wants of customers better than their
superior value and to keep and grow current customers by delivering satisfaction. This goal can
enables specific groups, individuals or organizations to; understand customer preferences, design
appropriate products for selected customers and to determine appropriate methods for
Definition of Marketing
Marketing is defined in several ways by numerous scholars, writers and associations. It has no
universal definition, because it covers a wide range of functions and ideologies. Some scholars
stresses customer’s satisfaction. The American Marketing Association (AMA) has consistently
In 1935, AMA defined marketing as the performance of business activities that direct the flow of
goods and services from producers to consumers. The origins of the marketing discipline extend
from the distribution function, in which merchants, that is, intermediaries have historically
played a dominant role. The preoccupation of marketing with distribution can be observed in the
In 1985, AMA defined marketing as the process of planning and executing the conception,
pricing, promotion, and distribution of ideas, goods, and services to create exchanges’ that
satisfy individual and organizational objectives. There is a growing consensus that exchange
forms the core phenomenon for the study of marketing when the word “exchange” made it into
Correspondingly, in 2004, AMA defined marketing as the organizational function and a set of
processes for creating, communicating and delivering value to customers and for managing
customer relationships in ways that benefit the organization and its stakeholders (AMA, 2004).
The distinctive difference between the 1985 and the 2004 American Marketing Association
definitions of marketing is the lack of exchange. In the new definition, a focus on creating and
delivering value through customer relationships permeates over creating satisfactory exchanges.
Also, in 2013 the American Marketing Association (AMA) defined Marketing as the activity, set
of institutions and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings
that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large. This revised definition
maintains a stakeholder perspective, and it does not limit the scope of marketing to
organizations. The roles of institutions and processes, as well as marketing’s impact on society,
are clearly acknowledged. Furthermore, the revised definition refrains from stating that
view (the exchange paradigm) and the current one (the value creation paradigm).
clothing, warmth and safety; social needs for belonging and affection; and individuals’ needs for
2. Wants: are the form human needs take as they are shaped by culture and individual
personality.
3. Demands: are human wants that are backed by buying/purchasing power (money).
4. Market: is the set of actual and potential buyers of a product. These buyers share a particular
5. Exchange; is the act of obtaining a desired object from someone by offering something in
return.
C. Evolution of Marketing
Marketing has changed over the centuries, decades and years. Marketing has taken the modern
shape after going through various stages since last the end of 19th century. The various stages of
1. Production Era:
2. Product Era:
3. Sales Era:
4. Marketing Era:
This concept holds that consumers will prefer products that are widely available and affordable.
concentrate on achieving high production efficiency, low costs, and mass distribution. Marketers
also use the production concept when a company wants to expand the market. The prevailing
attitude and approach of the production orientation era was -“consumers favor products that are
available and highly affordable” . The mantra for marketing success was to “Improve production
and distribution”. The rule was “availability and affordability is what the customer wants”.
The attitude changed slowly and approach shifted from production to product and from the
quantity to quality. The prevailing attitude of this period was that consumers favor products that
offer the most quality, performance and innovative features and the mantra for marketers was ‘A
good product will sell itself’. The product concept proposes that consumers favor products that
offer the highest quality, performance and innovative features. Managers in these organizations
focus on making superior products and improving them over time. This philosophy led a poet
and philosopher called Ralph Emerson to state his philosophy of ‘better mouse-trap fallacy”.
This fallacy states that ‘if a man writes a better book, preaches a better sermon or makes a better
mousetrap than his neighbor, ‘though that man builds his house in a bush, the whole world would
make a beaten part to his house’. This concept can lead to marketing myopia. A new or improved
The increased competition and variety of choices / options available to customers changed the
marketing approach and now the attitude was “Consumers will buy products only if the company
promotes/ sells these products”. This era indicates rise of advertising and the mantra for
marketers was “Creative advertising and selling will overcome consumers’ resistance and
convince them to buy”. The selling concept holds that consumers and businesses, if left alone,
won’t buy enough of the organization’s products. The organization must, therefore, undertake an
aggressive selling and promotion effort. The selling concept is practiced most aggressively with
unsought goods, that is, goods that buyers normally do not think of buying, such as insurance,
encyclopedias, and cemetery plots. Most firms also practice the selling concept when they have
overcapacity. Their aim is to sell what they make, rather than make what the market wants.
However, marketing based on hard selling carries high risks. It assumes that customers who are
coaxed into buying a product will like it, and that if they don’t, they not only won’t return or
bad-mouth it or complain to consumer organizations, but they might even buy it again.
The shift from production to product and from product to customers later manifested in the
Marketing Era which focused on the “needs and wants of the customers” and the mantra of
marketers was ” ‘The consumer is king! Find a need and fill it’. The approach is shifted to
delivering satisfaction better than competitors are. The marketing concept states that achieving
organizational goals depends on knowing the needs and wants of target markets and delivering
the desired satisfaction better than competitors do. Instead of a product-centered ‘make and sell’
philosophy, the marketing concept is a customer centered ‘sense and respond’ philosophy.
Therefore, the marketing task is not to find the right customers for a product or service, but to
target market, before delivering superior value to customers in a way that maintains or improves
D. Marketing Environment
The environment of a firm may be defined as the sum of all the elements and forces present in
its immediate and remote surroundings, which has a potential impact on its ability to achieve its
objectives. A company’s marketing environment affects its ability to build and maintain
successful relationships with target customers. The environment of the firm can be divided into
The micro environment of business refers to all factors or forces that have a more direct impact
on the daily activities of the company. The main factors in the micro-environment are;
Customers
The customers expect the management to provide them with quality products and services at
reasonable prices which allow appropriate rates of return to its owners. Management on the other
hand, seeks to win customers’ loyalty through factual information about their products which
have been designed and developed, keeping in view, the customers’ expectations.
Suppliers
Suppliers refer to firms and individuals that provide the resources needed by the company and its
competitors to produce goods and services. Inferior or sub-standard quality of raw materials or
delayed supply of raw materials will obstruct the production process thereby increasing the cost
of finished goods. Management must purchase quality raw materials from reliable suppliers, and
Competitors
These are companies that offer similar or alternative products and services. In pursuit of survival
and growth, organizations must compete with one another. The presence of competition and
rivalry forces each organization to offer quality products at minimum prices. Therefore, to be
successful a company must provide greater customer value and satisfaction than its competitors
do. Competition indeed brings out the best in an organization and requires the management to
Shareholders
These are owners of the firm who can influence the policies and procedures of the firm. They do
this by exercising their voting rights. Bearing in mind the degree of the influence of
shareholders, company directors and managers are now becoming more conscious of the
decisions they make and how they carry out their responsibilities.
Financial Institutions
These include banks, insurance companies, and other financial organizations. Firms depend on
these financial organizations to provide them with capital to carry out their business activities.
Employees
The organization’s labor force comprises of all the individuals who are employed by the
organization. Employees are responsible for work in an organization. The firm must take care of
the needs of its employees by providing a work environment that is conducive for them.
Stakeholders
Stakeholders are groups or individual who are directly or indirectly affected by an organization’s
pursuit of its goals. In essence, they are all the people who stand to gain or lose by the policies
The external environment of a business refers to the major forces outside the organization that
have the potential to significantly influence the success of the firm. They consist of primary
forces that shape opportunities and pose threats to the company. These factors include; physical,
Physical Environment
These include the supply and availability of resources and raw materials. Availability of
resources affects the location of the industries. Constraints in the physical environment
Political-Legal Environment
This is the legal framework within which businesses operate. This comprise of the laws and
regulations that are passed by the government to control the business activities. These laws act as
Economic Environment
This consists of factors that affect the economic growth and business activities within the
country. Business enterprises, being economic institutions are directly influenced by many
economic factors such as level of unemployment, rate of growth of the economy, level of
investment, level of government and consumer spending, inflation rate etc. These economic
factors can affect the operation of a firm both on the revenue side and the cost side.
Technological Environment
This refers to forces that create new technologies, thereby, creating new products and market
opportunities. Examples include the internet, biotechnology, cellular and mobile services.
new methods of production and new materials for manufacturing goods. The firm is also able to
The social element of a country has an impact on the business of a firm. The products and
services that a firm provides depend very much on the composition of the population and its
demographics, values and attitudes that people have and the culture of the society. Whether a
product or service succeeds or fails depends on the society’s customs and ways of life. The
E. MARKETING ELEMENTS
PRODUCT
A product can be defined as anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition,
use, or consumption that might satisfy a want or need. Broadly, a product is anything that can be
offered to a market to satisfy a want or need. A product is more than a tangible offering it
Market leaders generally offer products and services of superior quality that provide matchless
customer value. Marketing-mix planning begins with building an offering that brings value to
target customers. This offering becomes the basis upon which the company builds profitable
customer relationships. The product is a key element in the marketing offerings. It is usually the
first and most basic marketing consideration. Product planner needs to address three product
levels, namely; core customer value, actual product and augmented product. Consumers see
products as complex bundles of benefits that satisfy their needs. When developing products,
marketers must first identify the core customer value that consumers seek from the product. Then
they must design the actual product and find ways to augment it, in order to create the customer
This is the fundamental level that points to the service or benefit the customer is really buying.
When designing products, marketers must first define the core, problem-solving benefits or
b. Actual Product
At this level, the product planners must turn the core benefit into an actual product. They need to
develop product and service features, design, a quality level, a brand name, packaging and other
c. Augmented Product
Product planners must build an augmented product around the core benefit and actual product by
offering additional consumer services and benefits. The product planner must prepare an
A product can be classified into two broad classes based on the types of consumers that use
them- that is, consumer products and industrial products. It can also be classified based on its
Consumer products: are products and services bought by final consumers for personal
consumption. The vast array of goods that consumers buy can be classified on the basis of their
shopping habits. Consumer products include convenience products, specialty products, and
unsought products.
a) Convenience products: are consumer products that customers usually buy frequently,
immediately, and with a minimum of comparison and buying effort, e.g detergents,
candy, magazines e.t.c Convenience products are usually low priced, and marketers
place them in many locations to make them readily available when customers need them.
b) Shopping products: are less frequently purchased consumer products and services that
customers compare carefully on suitability, quality, price and style. When buying
shopping products, consumers spend much time and effort in gathering information and
purchase effort. Buyers normally do not compare specialty products. They invest only the
time needed to reach dealers carrying the wanted products. Examples include specific
knows about but do not normally think of buying. Examples include; life insurance, pre-
planned funeral services e.t.c. Unsought products require a lot of advertising, personal
Industrial products: are products purchased by individuals and organizations for further
processing or for use in conducting a business. The difference between a consumer product
and an industrial product is based on the purpose for which the product is bought. The three
groups of industrial products and services include; materials and parts, capital items, and
Based on its durability and tangibility, products can be classified into durable goods, non-durable
goods and services. Durable goods: are tangible goods that normally survive many uses. Durable
products normally require more personal selling and service, command a higher margin, and
require more seller guarantees. Nondurable goods: are tangible goods normally consumed in one
or a few uses. Because these goods are purchased frequently, the appropriate strategy is to make
them available in many locations, charge only a small markup, and advertise heavily to induce
trial and build preference. Services: are intangible products. As a result, they normally require
Companies products are born, grow, mature, and then decline, just as living things do. To remain
vital, the firm must continually develop new products and manage them effectively through their
life cycles. Product Life Cycle (PLC) is the course of a product’s sales and profits over its
lifetime. It involves five distinct stages, namely; product development, introduction, growth,
maturity, and decline. Product development begins when the company finds and develops a new
product idea. During product development, sales are zero and the company’s investment costs
mount.
The introduction stage: is a period of slow sales growth as the product is introduced in the
market. Profits are nonexistent in this stage because of the heavy expenses of product
introduction. It starts when the new product is first launched. Introduction takes time, and sales
growth is apt to be slow. In this stage as compared to other stages, profits are negative or low
because of the low sales and high distribution and promotion expenses. Much money is needed
to attract distributors and build their inventories. Promotion spending is relatively high to inform
The Growth Stage: is a period of rapid market acceptance and increasing profits. This stage is
characterized by rapid sales growth and strong product acceptance. If the new product satisfies
the market, it will enter a growth stage, in which sales will start climbing quickly. The early
adopters will continue to buy, and later buyers will start following their lead, especially if they
hear favorable word of mouth. Attracted by the opportunities for profit, new competitors will
enter the market. They will introduce new product features, and the market will expand. The
increase in competitors leads to an increase in the number of distribution outlets, and sales jump
just to build reseller inventories. Prices remain where they are or fall only slightly. Companies
keep their promotion spending at the same or a slightly higher level. Educating the market
remains a goal, but now the company must also meet the competition.
Profits increase during the growth stage as promotion costs are spread over a large volume and as
unit manufacturing costs fall. The firm uses several strategies to sustain rapid market growth as
long as possible. It improves product quality and adds new product features and models. It enters
new market segments and new distribution channels. It shifts some advertising from building
product awareness to building product conviction and purchase, and it lowers prices at the right
The Maturity Stage: is a period of slowdown in sales growth because the product has achieved
acceptance by most potential buyers. Profits level off or decline because of increased marketing
outlays to defend the product against competition. At some point, a product’s sales growth will
slow down, and the product will enter a maturity stage. This maturity stage normally lasts longer
than the previous stages, and it poses strong challenges to marketing management. Most products
are in the maturity stage of the life cycle, and therefore most of marketing management deals
with the mature product. The slowdown in sales growth results in many producers with many
products to sell. In turn, this overcapacity leads to greater competition. Competitors begin
marking down prices, increasing their advertising and sales promotions to find better versions of
the product. These steps lead to a drop in profit. Some of the weaker competitors start dropping
Although many products in the mature stage appear to remain unchanged for long periods, most
successful ones are actually evolving to meet changing consumer needs. At this stage product
managers should consider modifying the market, product, and marketing mix. In modifying the
market, the company tries to increase the consumption of the current product. It may look for
new users and new market segments. The manager may also look for ways to increase usage
among present customers. The company might also try modifying the product- changing
characteristics such as quality, features, style, or packaging to attract new users and to inspire
more usage. It can improve the product’s styling and attractiveness. It might improve the
product’s quality and performance- its durability, reliability, speed, and taste. Finally, the
company can try modifying the marketing mix- improving sales by changing one or more
marketing mix elements. The company can offer new or improved services to buyers. It can cut
prices to attract new users and competitors’ customers. It can launch a better advertising
campaign or use aggressive sales promotions. In addition to pricing and promotion, the company
can also move into new marketing channels to help serve new users.
The Decline Stage: is the period when sales fall off and profits drop. Not all products follow this
product life cycle. Some products are introduced and die quickly; others stay in the mature stage
for a long, long time. Some enter the decline stage and are then cycled back into the growth stage
through strong promotion or repositioning. This is the product life-cycle stage in which a
product’s sales decline. Sales decline for many reasons, including technological advances, shifts
in consumer tastes, and increased competition. As sales and profits decline, some firms withdraw
from the market. Those remaining may prune their product offerings. They may drop smaller
market segments and marginal trade channels, or they may cut the promotion budget and reduce
Keeping weak products delays the search for replacements, creates a lopsided product mix, hurts
current profits, and weakens the company’s foothold on the future. For these reasons, companies
need to pay more attention to their aging products. A firm’s first task is to identify those products
in the decline stage by regularly reviewing sales, market shares, costs, and profit trends. Then,
management must decide whether to maintain, harvest, or drop each of these declining products.
Management may decide to harvest the product, which means reducing various costs and hoping
that sales hold up. If successful, harvesting will increase the company’s profits in the short run.
Or management may decide to drop the product from the line. It can sell it to another firm or
G. PRICE
Price is the amount of money charged for a product or service, or the sum of the values that
customers exchange for the benefits of having or using the product or service. Price plays a key
role in creating customer value and building customer relationships. Smart managers treat
pricing as a key strategic tool for creating and capturing customer value. Price is one of the most
flexible marketing mix elements. It is the only element in the marketing mix that produces
revenue; all other elements represent costs. Unlike product features and channel commitments,
One frequent problem of pricing is that companies are too quick to reduce prices in order to get a
sale rather than convincing buyers that their product’s greater value is worth a higher price.
Other common mistakes include pricing that is too cost oriented rather than customer-value
oriented, and pricing that does not take the rest of the marketing mix into account. Customers’
perception of product value set the upper limit for prices and costs set the lower limit. If
customers perceive that the price is greater than the product’s value, they will not buy the
product and if the company prices the product below its costs, company profits will suffer. In
setting its price between these two extremes, the company must consider a number of other
internal and external factors. Internal factors affecting pricing include the company’s overall
marketing strategy, objectives, and marketing mix, as well as other organizations considerations.
External factors include the nature of the market and demand, competitors’ strategies and prices,
Pricing strategies usually change as the product passes through its life cycle. The introduction
stage is usually challenging. Companies bringing out a new product face the challenge of setting
prices for the first time. They can choose between two broad strategies namely; market-
Market-skimming Pricing: This deals with setting high price for a new product to obtain
a) Where the product’s quality and image support its higher price.
b) Where the costs of producing a smaller volume cannot be so high that they cancel the
c) Where competitors are not able to enter the market easily and undercut the high price.
However, rather than setting a high initial price to skim off small but profitable market
Market-penetration Pricing: This deals with setting a low price for a new product in order to
attract a large number of buyers quickly and win a large market share.
The high-sales volume results in falling costs, allowing the companies to cut their prices even
further.
Several conditions to be met for this low-price strategy to work include the following;
a) The market must be highly price sensitive so that a low price produces more market
growth.
price position.
H PROMOTION
Promotion consists of all activities intended to make a company communicate with its present
with its actual and potential customers. These promotional activities are also known as
advertising, sales promotion, personal selling, publicity, public relations among others.
Promotion involves the dissemination of information about a product, product line, brand or
company to a target market. It highlights the marketing activities undertaken in order to increase
the likelihood that consumers will buy and become committed to a product. A well-designed
product that meets customers’ needs is important for effective marketing, but it is not sufficient
for achieving organizational goals and objectives. Therefore, it is equally important that
customers must know that the product is available and understands its benefits, unique qualities
and advantages. Promotion is responsible for informing and reminding existing and prospective
The business term “push” and “pull” originated in logistics and supply chain management, but it
is also widely used in marketing. A push-pull system in business describes the movement of a
product or information between two subjects. The consumers usually “pull” the goods or
information they demand for their needs, while the suppliers “push” them towards the
his product too many times and it gets stamped on the viewers’ minds, while the pull strategy
implies the manufacturer to stop promoting his product for some time so that consumers feel the
need to look for the product or seek information about it. Another dimension of the push and pull
strategy depends on the medium of communication between the seller and the buyer. The
have elements of both the push and pull promotional methods. Most firms combine the two type
of promotional strategy while only few firms depend entirely on one or the other strategy.
Pull strategy: is define as a promotional effort by the seller to stimulate final-user demand, in
such a way that, the final user or consumers exert pressure on the distribution channel to make
provision for the goods or services; thereby pulling it through the marketing channel. When
marketing intermediaries’ stock many competing product and show little interest in any one of
them, a pulling strategy may be necessary to motivate them to give preference to a particular
product. The objective of the pull strategy is to build consumer demand by motivating consumers
to request for a particular product when they go shopping in retail store. Advertising and sales
promotional tools are mostly used for implementing a pull strategy. The pull strategy has been
viewed as a shift in power from advertisers to consumers. Hence, it requires a more adoptive
approach by marketers.
channels to stimulate personal selling of the goods and services, thereby pushing it through the
marketing channels. In contrast to the pull strategy, the push strategy relies more heavily on
personal selling promotional strategy. In this case, the objective is to promote the product to the
members of the distribution channel rather than to the final consumers. In a nutshell, it focuses
on how the product will get to the end-user or customer. Similarly, new businesses often adopt a
push strategy for their product in order to generate exposure and a retail channel. This can be
done through co-operative advertising allowances, trade-discount, personal selling effort by the
firms sales-force and other dealer support. Such strategy is designed to gain marketing success
for the firms’ product by motivating wholesalers and the retailers to spend extra time and extra
I PLACE
In the early stages of trade, it is possible for producers and their customers to meet face-to-face
to exchange goods and services as in the situation where the farmer takes the produce to the local
market. However, when trade becomes more sophisticated, the services of various intermediaries
along the supply chain may need to be used to ensure that the goods or services reach the
consumer in the right manner at the right place, time and price.
The channels of distribution used within the market place have evolved to match the needs of the
users of these services and they continue to be adapted to meet those needs. The objective of the
channels of distribution is to move the goods or services efficiently, with the lowest possible
number of intermediaries between the producer and the end user. Ideally, the producer aims to
exchange the products directly with the consumer. However, as the physical distance between
the two parties and the volume of goods to be exchanged increases, it becomes necessary for
producers to use the help of others to complete the movement of the goods associated with the
transaction. These are the intermediaries within the channels of distribution, or the ‘value chain’,
as it is termed. This is particularly the situation for producers supplying the consumer mass
market, where it becomes impracticable to exchange products directly between the producer and
the consumer.
The selection of the distribution channel, and the intermediaries to use, are influenced by several
factors, such as; the characteristics of the product, customer, company, environment in which the
firm operates, the competitor approaches to distribution and the type of intermediaries that
A. Product Characteristics
Perishability: Products have differing degrees of perishability that influence the type of
storage and warehousing required and the distance that such products can be moved.
Highly perishable products such as fresh food require different warehousing conditions
from products such as vegetable oil, lubricating oil and toilet paper. Some products need
to have temperature controlled chilled or freezing conditions; others are better stored at
room temperature. Safety of dangerous products also necessitates special storage, e.g.
Bulk : Products vary in the weight and volume per unit value, e.g. toilet paper occupies a
high volume for its weight and unit value whereas computer components have much
smaller volumes compared with their weights and unit values. Management will endeavor
to reduce the distances that high-volume products are transported, but for smaller volume
selection of the intermediaries within the channels of distribution. The more standardized
the product the more likely it is that a standardized route through the channel
intermediaries can be achieved; conversely, the more individualized the product, the
Service support requirements: The degree of service support that a product requires
influences the selection of the channel intermediaries. For example, if limited support is
required, as with the sale of tinned soup, where the purchaser takes the tin and determines
how it will be consumed, then the selected channel has merely to ensure that the product
reaches the end of the channel, the retailer’s outlet, in sound condition. The retailer will
be required to give minimum customer services apart from ensuring availability of the
product for the consumer to purchase. However, should the consumer expect the product
to be supplied with extra service provision, e.g. for a car, a dishwasher or a life assurance
policy, the purchaser will expect such service support from the car dealer, electrical
product retailer or assurance adviser. These intermediaries will be required to have the
Unit value: Products with higher unit values may require and justify more expensive
channel support than those with lower unit values. The supplier of designer clothes such
boutiques located in high-status locations. The supplier of mass market clothes will target
several small shops in any location. The channel intermediaries required to support these
B. Customer Characteristics
Number: The number of customers that a producer targets influences the selection of the
intermediaries used within the supply channel. In situations where the producer is serving
the mass market there may be millions of consumers, as in the UK, with up to 60m
individual customers and 24m households. Such numbers make it difficult to resource
personal individual selling to each potential customer. Yet if, as in an industrial market,
the producer is supplying a small number of customers, e.g. a few component suppliers
within the car industry, it is feasible that the component suppliers could use their own
Geographical dispersion: As the geographical distance between the supplier and the
consumer increases, the process of moving the goods within the supply chain becomes
challenges related to legal, regulatory and fiscal issues as well as the obvious cultural and
Purchasing patterns: Customer purchasing patterns of goods differ. For example, within
the mass consumer market, some people buy foodstuffs on a daily, weekly, fortnightly or
even monthly basis, depending on the needs and the resources of the individual.
Customers vary in the frequency with which they shop and the volumes of products that
they purchase, so that some customers purchase small quantities of products frequently,
while others purchase larger quantities of the same products but on a less frequent
schedule. Customer segmentation can categorize key types of purchasing patterns, e.g.
heavy and light consumers of a particular product. Within the industrial market
purchasing patterns differ, depending on the organization concerned and its particular
culture.
Buyer susceptibility to different selling methods: Customers may prefer one form of sales
approach to another and not all customers have the same preferences. For example, older
customers may prefer to purchase banking services through the branch’s bank manager,
but younger customers may find purchasing the same services using the Internet and
C. Company characteristics
Size of organization: The resources of the supplier of the product or service, influences
the selection of the channels of distribution. Such resources include finance, the number
of employees and the geographical spread of the organization’s operations. For example,
the MNC is likely to have access to a more extensive range of channel intermediaries
than the smaller firm, and the MNC could use a combination of different intermediary
Product mix: The range of products that an organization supplies affects the channel
necessity, will be likely to operate more complex channel systems than the firm
Past channel mix experience: The channel mix used evolves over time and is influenced
by the experience of past practice. If, traditionally, a product has been distributed by a
supplier using wholesalers and retailers, and that system has worked effectively, then the
supplier will probably continue to use the same system. It is when the system fails, or
when the cost of using such channels becomes excessive, or the competition becomes
Channel networks take various forms and may use intensive, selective or exclusive
Intensive distribution
that consumers have the convenience of being able to purchase the products whenever
they wish. This strategy is used for lower-priced convenience items, e.g. confectionery,
snack foods, tobacco and soap. Producers of these types of goods use a range of outlets of
varying status, including railway kiosks, multiple high-street shops and retail superstores.
Selective distribution
Rather than intensive distribution, producers may select their preferred outlets to match
their marketing strategies by targeting particular market segments. For example, the
producer of digital cameras may select electrical goods retailers that are located in prime
shopping places and in airport duty-free zones, rather than use all the available electrical
goods retailers. In this way, the digital camera producer can concentrate efforts on
Exclusive distribution
Should the producer have an exclusive range of products, e.g. Omega watches or Gucci
fashion clothes, it is appropriate to distribute the products through exclusive retail outlets
and to limit the number of intermediaries handling the company’s goods or services.
Exclusive distribution is used when the producer wants to maintain control over the
service level offered. Frequently it involves exclusive dealer arrangements in which the
distribution relates to the nature of the products or services being marketed, and the
distribution methods appear to be mutually exclusive, yet there are pressures to move
towards intensive intermediary coverage. Often the user of exclusive and selective
distribution is under pressure to widen the outlet coverage, especially in times of falling
sales. However, the greater coverage can reduce the image of exclusivity, thereby losing
the advantages associated with the established outlets. The situation has to be monitored
Throughout the selection of the most effective distribution network, the channel design
has to consider the demands of the manufacturer, i.e. the need to move the goods or
services from the location where they are produced, through the intermediaries, to the
consumer. At the same time the pressures of the customer on the supplier of the goods or
services must be considered. Compounding this situation, the retailer places pressures on
the channel network, obliging the supplier to meet the retailer’s demands. The demands
_ Push from the manufacturer pushing production on to customers through the channel
intermediaries.
_ Pull from customers exerting product stocking pressure on retailers and manufacturers