0% found this document useful (0 votes)
89 views

Mod 1 - Retail Classifications

The document outlines various types of retail outlets classified by their strategic mix of food/groceries and general merchandise. It discusses convenience stores, supermarkets, combination stores, box stores, warehouse clubs, hypermarkets, and their characteristics. It also covers department stores, discount stores, specialty stores, category killers, off-price retailers, flea markets, and membership clubs in India. Finally, it distinguishes between service and goods retailers.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
89 views

Mod 1 - Retail Classifications

The document outlines various types of retail outlets classified by their strategic mix of food/groceries and general merchandise. It discusses convenience stores, supermarkets, combination stores, box stores, warehouse clubs, hypermarkets, and their characteristics. It also covers department stores, discount stores, specialty stores, category killers, off-price retailers, flea markets, and membership clubs in India. Finally, it distinguishes between service and goods retailers.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 40

Session Objectives Amity School of Business

• Classification of retail outlets by strategic mix (Food


& Groceries and Gen. Merchandise)
• Non-store retailing
• Characteristics of these different outlet types
• Their advantages and drawbacks
• Overview of these retail stores types in the Indian
context
Amity School of Business

-FOOD ORIENTED RETAILERS-


CONVENIENCE Amity School of Business

STORE
• Relatively small stores – 3000 – 8000 sq foot
• Limited variety and assortment
• High turnover convenience products
• Prices above average
• Long hours and 24/7
• ‘Convenience’ – location, traffic flow, billing
CONVENTIONAL Amity School of Business

SUPERMARKET

• Self-service
• Groceries, Meat/ produce & house hold
maintenance

FOOD BASED Amity School of Business

SUPERMARKET
• Larger + more diversified than a conventional
supermarket
• 25 – 50,000 sq feet
• 2 0 – 25% revenue from general merchandise
• Carry full range of grocery
COMBINATION Amity School of Business

STORE
• Supermarket + general merchandise
• General merchandise >= 40% of sales
• Identity of food + drug store: one stop shopping
• 30 – 100,000 sq ft
BOX Amity School of Business

(LIMITED LINE) STORE


• Food based discount store
• Limited variety, services, stock
• Limited no. of national brands, more of private labels prices
20 – 30% below MRP
• Refrigerated perishables not available

Bargains in A
Box –
Wheeling,
USA
Amity School of Business

Aldi Stores
Australia, US, UK, Europe
WAREHOUSE Amity School of Business

STORES
• Warehouse showrooms
• Catalog showrooms
• Hypermarket
• Warehouse clubs
HYPERMARKET Amity School of Business

• Scale is critical to their price model


• Supply chain plays a major role in this
• Wide assortment and depth of food products
• Stock fresh fruit and vegetables as well as staples
• Significant non-food product range as well, the
extent of which differs among retailers
• Focus on quality products and standards
• Prices discounted below market rates due bulk
sourcing and SCM
WAREHOUSE CLUB Amity School of Business

• Limited assortment of food and general


merchandise
• Often sell only large pack sizes
• Low prices

Amity School of Business

THE INDIAN EXPERIENCE

• Convenience store
• Supermarket
CONVENIENCE STORE Amity School of Business

• Refurbished neighbourhood stores/ petrol pump


outlets
• Average assortment
• 500-2500 SKUs
• Packaged staples
• Major FMCG brands
• Home delivery, STD/PCO
• Cash/Credit, but unlikely to accept Credit cards
• Uniform lookSUPERMARKET
and feel
Amity School of Business

• Wide assortment and depth


• Staples, limited fresh vegetables, and FMCG
products
• Offer both packaged as well as conventional options
for staples
• Lower prices due centralized procurement
• IT enabled
• Offer full credit facilities
Amity School of Business

-GENERAL MERCHANDISE RETAILERS-


Classification Amity School of Business

• Department Stores
• Discount Stores
• Specialty Stores
• Category Killers
• Off Price Retailers
– Close Outlet Store
– Outlet Store
– Single Price Retailers
• Flea Market
Non Store Retailers
Amity School of Business

• Traditional Non – Store


• Traditional Non – Store
– Video Kiosks
– Video Catalog
– E-Commerce/ E-tailers
DEPARTMENT STORES Amity School of Business

• Departmentalized operations
• Broad variety & Deep assortment
• Full range of services
• Emphasis on displays and layout
• Special Promotions
• Often the Anchor store
• Store size between 15,000 and 60,000 sq ft
• Stock between 20,000 and 50,000 SKUs
• Merchandise assortment and depth much less than
for international stores
DEPT STORE Amity School of Business
DEFINITION (US)
• Must employ at least 50 people
• At least 20% of sales from apparel and soft goods
• Assortment must include furniture, home furnishings,
appliances, TV sets, family apparel, household linen,
dry goods
• If annual sales <US$10 million, upto 80% of sales
can be from any one line
DEPT STORE Amity School of Business

Classification (US)
• US Bureau of Census
• Traditional Dept. Store
– Merchandise of avg. quality, above avg. price, minimum
customer service
• Full line discount Dept. Store
– Broad assortment, high volume, low cost, fast turnover
– Well known brands at competitive prices; usually pvt. labels for
non durables and well known for durables
– Centralized checkout, self service
– low cost model: low rent area, modes layout, equipment/
fixtures etc.
DEPT STORE
Amity School of Business
LAYOUT

• Each department within the store has


– A specific selling space allocated to it
– A point-of-sale (POS) terminal to record a sales
transaction
– Specific sales personnel assigned to assist customers
• A department store is thus akin to a collection of
specialty stores
Department Stores
Amity School of Business
- India

• Ebony
• Lifestyle
• Globus
• Pantaloon
• Pyramid
• Shoppers Stop
• Westside
DISCOUNT Amity School of Business

STORE
• High-vol, low-cost, fast turnover outlet selling a broad
assortment for lower prices
• Full product range of dept stores
• Self-service, minimal assistance
• Pvt brands for non-durables
• Manufacturers brands for durables
• Less fashion-sensitive merchandise
• Functional layout
• Centralized checkout
• Vishal Megamart is an example of a general
merchandise discount store
SPECIALTY Amity School of Business

STORE
• Concentrates on one goods or service line
• Carries a narrow but deep assortment
• Tailors strategy to selective mkt segments
• Enables dominance in chosen category
• Vulnerable to seasonality, or decline in category popularity
– APPAREL
– PERSONAL CARE
– AUTO SUPPLY
– HOME IMPROVEMENT
– ELECTRONICS
– BOOKS
– TOYS
– JEWELRY
– SPORTING GOODS
CATEGORY
Amity School of Business
KILLERS

• These are very large specialty stores


• Enormous selection in chosen category
• Relatively low prices
• Self-service approach
• Wide geographic network of consumers
• Ikea is a global example of a category killer
Amity School of Business
OFF-PRICE Amity School of Business

RETAILERS
• Low pricing for brand-name products – excess
inventory
• Inconsistent assortment, High inventory turnover
• Opportunistic merchandising: procurement during off
season/ deep discount/ less successful – not many
promotional offers
• Classification
– Outlet stores
– Close outlet retailers
– Single-price retailers
OUTLET STORES Amity School of Business

Factory outlets – manufacturer owned


• Irregulars
• Production overruns
• Returned/ Canceled merchandise
• Liquidate excess inventory – quick cash flow
• Some examples in India are Raymonds, Indigo Nation,
Reebok, Nike factory outlet stores
Store outlets
• Excess merchandise
• Example is Pantaloon store outlet, Lindsay Street
Amity School of Business
CLOSE OUTLET Amity School of Business

STORES

• Not restricted to any particular manufacturer or


store
• Have broad but inconsistent assortment of general
Amity School of Business
Amity School of Business

SINGLE-PRICE
• Close outlet stores that
sell all merchandise at a
single price-point
• Typical price is $1!
• The Indian equivalent
are stores selling
products at Rs 99
MEMBERSHIP CLUB/ WAREHOUSE
Amity School of Business

CLUB
• Whole sale centers – ‘Cash and Carry’
• Large stores, little/no advertising, wide aisle, plain fixtures
• Members –
annual fee,
large purchases

Costco, Sam’s
Club
FLEA MARKET Amity School of Business

• Literal translation of French – marche aux puces


• Outdoor/ indoor facilities renting space to vendors offering
merchandise, services and other goods which satisfy the
legitimate needs of the customers
• Low investment, good assortment, discount prices, high
concentration of people, specific market days
Amity School of Business

Flea
Markets
Service vs Goods Amity School of Business

Retail Mix
• Service Retail – Sale of an intangible activity which usually
cannot be stored/transported but fulfills the needs of the
customer
 Services without goods – hospitals, salons
 Services with goods
• Rental goods service (rent of consumer durables)
• Owned goods services (restaurant)
• Non – goods services (services provided by retailers to
customers shopping at stores, non – essential)
Non Store Retailer Amity School of Business

• Traditional
– Direct Marketing
– Direct Selling
• Party Plan ( sales ppt to groups rather than individuals)
• Person to Person ( Eureka Forbes)
• Multilevel/ Network Marketing (Oriflame/ Amway)
– Vending Machines
– Catalog Marketing
– Telemarketing
– TV home shopping
– Airport Stores
Non Store Retailer Amity School of Business

• Non traditional non store


– E- commerce (Web Based)
– M-commerce
– Video Kiosks: free
standing interactive
computer terminals
– Video Catalog: Catalog on
CDs
Multi Channel Amity School of Business

Retailing
• Multi-channel retailing entails the parallel use by retailing
enterprises of several sales channels.
• Several store formats/ distribution channels used at the same
time
• Clicks/ Bricks & Mortar/ Sheets (mail)
– Wal-Mart
– Café Coffee Day
– Oriflame
Rural Retailing Amity School of Business

• Rural Consumers - Concept of ‘Bottom of the Pyramid’


– Differences in Urban and Rural Consumers (in terms of Market
infrastructure, Demographics, Psychographics and Behavioristics -
usage patterns)
• Kashyap’s – 4A model for Rural Markets
– Availability, Affordability, Adaptability, Awareness
– Their impact on marketing mix strategies – especially promotion and
product development
• Initiatives by organizations – E-Choupal (ITC), Project Shakti
(HUL), Chotukool (Godrej)

You might also like