TAILIEUCHUNG - Lecture fundamentals of marketing - Lecture 18: Marketing channels: Delivering customer value

Companies rarely work alone in creating value for customers and building profitable customer relationships. Instead, most are only a single link in a larger supply chain and marketing channel. As such, a firm’s success depends not only on how well it performs but also on how well its entire marketing channel competes with competitors’ channels. The first part of this chapter explores the nature of marketing channels and the marketer’s channel design and management decisions. | Marketing Channels: Delivering Customer Value LECTURE-18 1 Supply Chains and the Value Delivery Network The Nature and Importance of Marketing Channels Channel Behavior and Organization Channel Design Decisions Channel Management Decisions Public Policy and Distribution Decisions Marketing Logistics and Supply Chain Management Topic Outline Companies rarely work alone in creating value for customers and building profitable customer relationships. Instead, most are only a single link in a larger supply chain and marketing channel. As such, a firm’s success depends not only on how well it performs but also on how well its entire marketing channel competes with competitors’ channels. The first part of this chapter explores the nature of marketing channels and the marketer’s channel design and management decisions. We then examine physical distribution—or logistics—an area that is growing dramatically in importance and sophistication. In the next chapter, we’ll look more closely at two major channel intermediaries: retailers and wholesalers. 2 Supply Chains and the Value Delivery Network Upstream partners: Include raw material suppliers, components, parts, information, finances, and expertise to create a product or service. Downstream partners: Include the marketing channels or distribution channels that look toward the customer. Supply Chain Partners Producing a product or service and making it available to buyers requires building relationships not only with customers but also with key suppliers and resellers in the company’s supply chain. This supply chain consists of upstream and downstream partners. Upstream from the company is the set of firms that supply the raw materials, components, parts, information, finances, and expertise needed to create a product or service. Marketers, however, have traditionally focused on the downstream side of the supply chain—the marketing channels (or distribution channels) that look toward the customer. Downstream .

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