12 Marketing Channels Delivering Customer Value

Chapter Preview

We now look at the third marketing mix tool—distribution. Companies rarely work alone in engaging customers, creating customer value, 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 chapterexplores the nature of marketing channels and the marketer’s channel design and management decisions. We then examine physical distribution—or logistics—an area that has grown dramatically in importance and sophistication. In the next chapter, we’ll look more closely at two major channel intermediaries: retailers and wholesalers.

We start by looking at Uber, the fast-growing, app-based car-hailing service that has recently sprouted up in cities around the world. Uber has radically reinvented urban transportation channels, posing a serious threat to conventional taxicab and car service companies. As Uber grows, traditional competitors must innovate or risk being pushed aside.

Photo shows a well-dressed man holding up a mobile phone towards the reader. The screen shows a street map.

Uber lets passengers hail the nearest cab from any location using its smartphone app, then track the vehicle on a map as it approaches.

PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP/Getty Images

Objectives Outline

  1. Objective 12-1 Explain why companies use marketing channels and discuss the functions these channels perform.

  2. Objective 12-2 Discuss how channel members interact and how they organize to perform the work of the channel.

  3. Objective 12-3 Identify the major channel alternatives open to a company.

  4. Objective 12-4 Explain how companies select, motivate, and evaluate channel members.

  5. Objective 12-5 Discuss the nature and importance of marketing logistics and integrated supply chain management.

AS THE UBER STORY SHOWS, good distribution strategies can contribute strongly to customer value and create competitive advantage for a firm. But firms cannot bring value to customers by themselves. Instead, they must work closely with other firms in a larger value delivery network.

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