Basic Marketing: A Global Managerial Approach

(Nandana) #1
Perreault−McCarthy: Basic
Marketing: A
Global−Managerial
Approach, 14/e


  1. Implementing and
    Controlling Marketing
    Plans: Evolution and
    Revolution


Text © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2002

place


price


promotion


product


http://www.mhhe.com/fourps


545


http://www.mhhe.com/fourps


545


ct


received but were producing

slim profit margins. So man-
agement asked employees
throughout the company to
make suggestions on ways to
improve how the firm was

implementing its strategy.
They came up with a variety of
suggestions.
For example, Allegiance
carries over 100,000 products.

Some it manufactures, but it
also sells products produced
by thousands of other suppli-
ers. It seemed that this variety
was what hospitals needed.

Yet many of the employee
concerns were related to the
massive assortment of goods.
Moreover, when marketing
managers did a careful analy-

sis of sales by region and

product line they found that
the company’s profitable level
of sales was masking a prob-
lem: 57 percent of the
products accounted for just

2 percent of sales. Further
analysis showed that these
same products accounted for
a larger than average share of
the total costs. While they

were waiting to be ordered,
they were sitting in ware-
houses all over the country,
running up storing costs. By
analyzing sales within product

categories, marketing man-
agers were able to see where
there was duplication and
what they could drop. After all,
they probably didn’t need to

give hospitals a choice among

47 different types of bedpans.
Then they worked to make
distribution of the products
they kept more efficient.
Products that hospitals

order frequently—popular
styles of gloves, caps, nee-
dles, and sutures—are
stocked in the 68 regional
distribution centers close to

customers. Items that hospi-
tals order somewhat less
frequently—like odd sizes of
surgical gloves—are shipped
nationwide from a single distri-

bution center in Illinois. The
changes allowed the firm to
cut out 30 local warehouses
and still offer hospitals a
just-in-time delivery program
Free download pdf