Perreault−McCarthy: Basic
Marketing: A
Global−Managerial
Approach, 14/e
- Retailers, Wholesalers
and Their Strategy
Planning
Text © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2002
372 Chapter 13
Department
stores
Variety stores
Supermarkets
Discount department stores
Mass-merchandisers
Fast-food outlets
Catalog showrooms
Supercenters
Single-line mass-merchandisers
Internet merchants
100 years
60 years
30 years
20 years
20 years
15 years
15 years
15 years
15 years
8 years
1850 1870 1890 1910 1930 1950 1970 1990 2010
Exhibit 13-4
Retailer Life Cycles—Timing
and Years to Market Maturity
We’ve seen that consumers’ needs help explain why some kinds of retailers devel-
oped. But we can apply the product life cycle concept to understand this process
better. A retailer with a new idea may have big profits—for a while. But if it’s a
really good idea, the retailer can count on speedy imitation and a squeeze on profits.
Other retailers will copy the new format or scramble their product mix to sell prod-
ucts that offer them higher margins or faster turnover. That puts pressure on the
original firm to change or lose its market.
Some conventional retailers are in decline as these life and death cycles con-
tinue. Recent innovators, like the Internet merchants, are still in the market growth
stage. See Exhibit 13-4. Some retailing formats that are mature in the United States
are only now beginning to grow in other countries.
Some manufacturers have always
had outlet stores near their
factories, but outlet malls are
emerging as a new retailing
format that is popular with some
consumers.
Product life cycle
concept applies to
retailer types too