营销 外文翻译 外文文献 英文文献 零售企业的营销策略.doc
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1、外文出处:PhilipKotler: Marketing Management.Prentice-Hall International(524-530)MARKETNG DECISIONS OF RETAILER Retailers today are anxious to find new marketing strategies to attract and hold customers. In the past they held customers by offering convenient location, special or unique assortments of goo
2、ds, greater or better services than competitors, and store credit cards. All of this has changed. Today, national brands such as Calvin Klein, Izod, and Levi are found in most department store, in their drive for volume , national-brand manufacturers have place their branded goods everywhere. The re
3、sult is that retail-store assortments have grown alike.Service differentiation also has eroded. Many department stores have trimmed services, and many discounters have increased services. Customers have become smarter shoppers. They do not want to pay more for identical brands, especially when servi
4、ce differences have diminished. Nor do they need credit form a particular store, because bank credit cards have become almost universal.In the face of increased competition for discount houses and specialty stores, department stores are waging a comeback war. Once located in the center of cities, ma
5、ny opened branches in suburban shopping centers, where parking is plentiful and family incomes are higher. Others run more frequent sales, remodel their stores, and experiment with mail-order and telemarketing. Facing competition form superstores, supermarkets have opened larger stores, carrying a l
6、arger number and variety of items, and upgraded their facilities. Supermarkets have also increased their promotional budgets and move heavily into private brands to increase profit margins.We will examine retailers marketing decisions in the areas of target market, product assortment and procurement
7、, services and store atmosphere, price, promotion, and price.Target MarketA retailers most important decision concerns the target market. Until the target market is defined and profiled, the retailer cannot make decisions on product assortment, store dcor, advertising messages and media, price, and
8、service levels.Some retailers have defined their target markets quite well:Wal-Mart. The late Sam Walton and his brother opened the first Wal-Mart discount store in Rogers, Arkansas, in 1962. It was a big, flat, warehouse-type store selling everything from apparel to automotive supplies to small app
9、liances at the lowest possible prices to small-town America. More recently, Wal-Mart has been building stores in larger cities. Today, Wal-Mart operates 2363 discount stores in the United States, including 454 supercenters, 444 Sams clubs, and 41 distribution centers. Its annual sales exceed $117 bi
10、llion, marketing it the worlds largest retailer. It is expending into the Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market supermarket-pharmacy business. Wal-Marts secret: Target small town America, listen to the customers treat the employees as partners, purchase carefully, and keep a tight rein on expenses. Signs rea
11、ding “Satisfaction Guaranteed” and “We sell for less” hang prominently at the store entrance, and customers are often welcomed by a “people greeter”. Wal-Mart is frequently cited as a retailing pioneer. Its use of everyday low pricing and EDI for speedy stock replenishment has been benchmarked by ot
12、her retailers, and it was the first U.S. megamerchant to take the plunge into global retailing. It already has over 600 stores over seasin Argentina, Brazil, China, South Korea, and Mexicoand is adding more.Product Assortment and Procurement The retailers product assortment must match the target mar
13、kets shopping expectations. The retailer has to decide on product-assortment breadth & depth. Thus a restaurant can offer a narrow and shallow assortment (small lunch counters), a narrow and deep assortment (delicatessen), a broad and shallow assortment (cafeteria), or a broad and deep assortment (l
14、arge restaurant). After deciding on the product-assortment strategy, the retailer must decide on procurement sources, policies, & practices. In the corporate headquarters of a supermarket chain, specialist buyers are responsible for developing brand assortments and listening to presentations by sale
15、spersons. In some chains, buyers have the authority to accept or reject new items. In other chains, they are limited to screening “obvious rejects” and “obvious accepts”; they bring other items to the buying committee for approval.Services and store atmosphere Retailers must also decide on the servi
16、ces mix to offer customers: Pre-purchase services include accepting telephone and mail orders, advertising, window and interior display, fitting rooms, shopping hours, fashion shows, trade ins. Post-purchase services include shipping and delivery, gift-wrapping, adjustments and returns, alterations
17、and tailoring, installations, engraving. Ancillary services include general information, check cashing, parking, restaurants, repairs, interior decorating, credit, rest rooms, and baby-attendant service. The services mix is a key tool for differentiating one store from another, so is atmosphere. Atm
18、osphere is another element in the store arsenal. Every store has a physical lay out that makes it hard or easy to move around. Every store has a look. The store must embody a planned atmosphere that suits the target market and draws consumers towards purchase. A funeral parlor should be quiet, sombe
19、r, and peaceful. A dance club should be bright, loud, and vibrating.Price decision Prices are a key positioning factor and must be decided in relation to the target market, the product-and-service assortment mix, and competition. All retailers would like to achieve high volumes and high gross margin
20、s. They would like high Turns x Earns, but the two usually do not go together. Most retailers fall into the high-mark up, lower volume group (fine specialty stores) or the low-mark up, higher volume group (mass-merchandisers and discount stores). Within each of these groups are further gradations. T
21、hus Bijans on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills prices suits starting at $1000 and shoes at $400. At the other extreme, Odd Lot Trading in New York City is a super-discounter that sells odd lots and closeouts at prices below those of normal discounters.Retailers must also pay attention to pricing tactics
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