Basic Marketing: A Global Managerial Approach

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


  1. Distribution Customer
    Service and Logistics


Text © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2002

place


price


promotion


product


http://www.mhhe.com/fourps


329


http://www.mhhe.com/fourps


329


ct


distribution on target. In the
United States, computer sys-

tems show Coke managers
exactly what’s selling in each
market; that allows Coke to
plan inventories and deliveries.
Coke also operates a 24-hour-

a-day communications center
to respond to the two million
requests it gets from channel
members each year. Orders
are processed instantly—so

sales to consumers at the end
of the channel aren’t lost
because of stock-outs. And
Coke products move effi-
ciently through the channel. In

Cincinnati, for example, Coke
built the beverage industry’s
first fully automated distribu-
tion center. Forklifts were
replaced with automatically

guided vehicles that speed up
the product flow and reduce

labor costs.
Coke’s strategies in interna-
tional markets rely on many of
the same ideas. But the stage of
market development varies in

different countries, so Coke’s
emphasis varies as well. To
increase sales in France, for
example, Coke must first make
more product available at retail

stores; so Coke is installing
thousands of soft-drink coolers
in French supermarkets. In
Great Britain, Coke is using mul-
tipacks because it wants to

have more inventory at the point
of consumption—in consumers’
homes. In Japan, by contrast,
single-unit vending machine
sales are very important—so

Coke uses an army of truck
drivers to constantly restock its
870,000 vending machines,
more per capita than anywhere
else in the world. Coke is even

testing vending machines that
raise the price when it’s hot or
when few cans are left. In less-
developed areas, the Place
system is not always so sophis-

ticated. In China, for example,
the Communist Party won’t let
Coke control all of the details,
but a local manager struck a
deal. For some cash, the Com-

munist Party keeps inventories
in some of its local offices. Then
retired party members use
bicycle-powered pushcarts to
sell the Coke inventory at

densely populated housing
projects.
Free download pdf