INMA_A01.QXD

(National Geographic (Little) Kids) #1
Market mapping and developing channel chains is a powerful technique recommended
by McDonald and Wilson (2002) for analysing the changes in a marketplace introduced by
the Internet. A market map can be used to show the flow of revenue between a manufac-
turer or service provider and its customers through traditional intermediaries and new
types of intermediaries. For example, Thomas and Sullivan (2005) give the example of a
US multi-channel retailer that used cross-channel tracking of purchases through assigning
each customer a unique identifier to calculate channel preferences as follow: 63% bricks-
and-mortar store only, 12.4% Internet-only customers, 11.9% catalogue-only customers,
11.9% dual-channel customers and 1% three-channel customers.
A channel chain is similar โ€“ it shows different customer journeys for customers with dif-
ferent channel preferences. It can be used to assess the current and future importance of
these different customer journeys. An example of a channel chain is shown in Figure 2.10.

CHAPTER 2ยท THE INTERNET MICRO-ENVIRONMENT


Figure 2.9From (a) original situation to (b) disintermediation or (c) reintermediation or
countermediation

Intermediary

Company Customer

(a)

Disintermediation

Countermediation

Company Customer

(b)

Intermediary

Company Customer

(c)

Figure 2.10Example of a channel chain map for consumers selecting an estate agents
to sell their property

Word-of-mouth Search engine

Mixed-mode journey

Estate agents
site
vs vs

At home

Phone/e-mail

Search engine

Online journey

Portal:
Rightmove

Book online

E-mail/text

Local property
paper

Offline journey

Go to agents

At home

Monthly letter

Awareness
of agent

Search and
select agents

Negotiation

Viewings
feedback
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