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1

"Retailing vs. Wholesalingµ

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Course title: Principles of Marketing

Course Code: MKT 2123

Presentation on

Retailing vs. Wholesaling

Submitted to:

Ishtiaque Arif 

Lecturer

Southeast University

Submitted by:

Israt Zahan ID: 2008010000103

Kawsara Jafrin ID: 2008010000100

Momotaz Akther ID: 2008010000118

Husna Zannat ID: 2008010000095

Maksuda Islam ID: 2008010000227

18th

Batch, Section C

Southeast University

Date of Submission: 16 March 2009

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Retailing

What is retailing? Retailing is all the activities involved in selling goods and services directly to finals consumers

for their personal, non business use.

Retailer is a business whose sales come primarily from retailing.

Retailing consists of the sale of goods or merchandise from a fixed location, such as a

department store, or by post, in small or individual lots for direct consumption by the purchaser.

Retailing may include subordinated services, such as delivery. Purchasers may be individuals or 

businesses. In commerce, a retailer buys goods or products in large quantities from

manufacturers or importers, either directly or through a wholesaler, and then they sells smaller 

quantities to the end-user. Retail establishments are often called shops or stores. Retailers are

at the end of the supply chain. Manufacturing marketers see the process of retailing as a

necessary part of their overall distribution strategy.

Many institutions manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers do retailing, but most retailing is

done by businesses whose sales come primarily from retailing, for example Wal-Mart, Sears,

and Kmart are retailers.

 Although most retailing is done in retail stores, in recent year¶s non-store retailing -- selling by

mail, telephone (telemarketing), door-to-door contact, vending machines, and numerous

electronic means has grown tremendously.

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Types of retailers

There are mainly two types of retailers, Store retailers and Non-Store Retailers. Both types are

classified as per the table below:

Table 1: Types of Store and Non-Store Retailers (created by Author, SEU)

Types ofRetailers

Amount ofService

Self-service

Limitedretailers

Full service

Product lines

SpecialtyStores

DepartmentStores

Super-markets

ConvenienceStores

Superstores

Relative Priecs

Discount Stores

Off- priceRetailers

Control ofOutlets

Chain Store

FranchiseOrganization

MerchandisingConglomerates

Non-storeRetailing

DirectMarketing

Direct Selling

AutomaticVending

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Store Retailing 

This type of retail store that come in a variety of shapes and sizes, and new retail types

keep emerging. They can be classified by one or more of several characteristics:

Amount of service: Different products require different amounts of service, and customer 

service preferences vary:

  Self-service retailers increased rapidly in the US during the Great Depression in the

1930's. Customers were willing to perform their own "locate-compare-select" process to

save money. Today, self-service is the basis of all discount operations, and typically is

used by sellers of convenience goods (such as supermarkets) and nationally-branded,

fast-moving shopping goods (such as catalog showrooms).

  Limited service retailers, such as Sears and JC Penney, provide more salesassistance because they carry more shopping goods about which consumers need

information. Their increased operating costs result in higher prices.

  Full service retailers, such as specialty stores and f irst-class department stores, have

salespeople to assist customers in every phase of the shopping process. Full service

stores usually carry more specialty goods for which customers like to be waited on.

They provide more liberal return policies, various credit plans, free delivery, home

servicing, and extras such as lounges and restaurants.

Product line: retailers can also be classified by the depth and breadth of their product

assortments:

  Specialty stores carry a narrow product line with a deep assortment within that line.

Examples include stores selling sporting goods, books, furniture, electronics, flowers, or 

toys. Today, specialty stores are flourishing, due to the increasing use of market

segmentation, market targeting, and product specialization.

A department store carries a wide variety of product lines. Each line is operated as a

separate department managed by specialist buyers and merchandisers.

  Supermarkets are large, low-cost, low-margin, high-volume, self-service stores that

carry a wide variety of food, laundry, and household products. Most US supermarket

stores are owned by large chains such as Safeway, Kroger, Publix, Winn-Dixie, Jewel,

and Tops. Chains account for almost 70% of all supermarket sales.

  Convenience stores are small stores that carry a limited line of high-turnover 

convenience goods. Examples include 7-Eleven, Circle K, Wilson's Farms, and Starvin'

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Marvin. These stores located near residential areas and remain open long hours, seven

days a week. Convenience stores must charge high prices to make up for higher 

operating costs and lower sales volume, but they satisfy an important consumer need.

  Superstores, combination stores, and hypermarkets are all larger than the

conventional supermarket. Many leading chains are moving toward superstores

because their wider assortment allows prices to be 5-6% higher than conventional

supermarkets'. Combination stores are combined food and drug stores. Examples are

 A&P's Family Marts and Wal-Mart's Supercenters. Hypermarkets combine discount,

supermarket, and warehouse retailing, and operate like a warehouse -- products in wire

baskets are stacked high on metal racks, and forklifts move through aisles during selling

hours to restock shelves. They usually give discounts to customers who carry their own

heavy appliances and furniture out of the store.

Relative prices: retailers can also be classified by the prices they charge. Most retailerscharge regular prices and offer normal quality goods and customer service. Some offer higher 

quality goods and service at higher prices. Retailers that feature low prices include:

  Discount stores sell standard merchandise at lower prices by accepting lower margins

and selling higher volume. Occasional discounts or specials do not make a store a

discount store. A true discount store regularly sells its merchandise at lower prices,

offering mostly national brands, not inferior goods.

  Off-price retailers buy at less than regular wholesale and charge customers less than

retail.

With the discounters trading up, off-price retailers have moved in to fill the low-price,high-volume gap. They obtain a changing and unstable collection of higher-quality

merchandise, often leftover goods, overruns, and irregulars at reduced prices from

manufacturers or other retailers. The three main types of off-price retailers are factory

outlets, independents, and warehouse clubs.

Control of outlets: about 80% of all retail stores are independents, accounting for 2/3 of 

retail sales. Other forms of ownership include the corporate chain, the voluntary chain and

retailer cooperative, the franchise organization, and the merchandising conglomerate.

  The chain store is one of the most important retail developments of this century.

Corporate chains appear in all types of retailing, but they are strongest in department,

variety, food, drug, shoe, and women's clothing stores. The size of corporate chains

allows them to buy in large quantities at lower prices, and chains gain promotional

economies because their advertising costs are spread out over many stores and over a

large sales volume.

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A franchise is a contractual association between a manufacturer, wholesaler, or 

service organization (the franchiser) and independent businesspeople (the franchisees)

who buy the right to own and operate one or more units in the franchise system.

Franchising has been prominent in fast-food companies, motels, gas stations, video

stores, auto rentals, hair cutting salons, real estate, and dozens of other goods and

services. The compensation received by the franchiser may include an initial fee, aroyalty on sales, lease fees for equipment, and a share of the profits.

  Merchandising conglomerates are corporations that combine several different retailing

forms under central ownership and share some distribution and management functions.

Examples include Dayton-Hudson and JCPenney.

Type of store cluster: Most stores today cluster together to increase their customer 

pulling power and to give consumers the convenience of one-stop shopping:

  Central business districts were the main form of retail cluster until the 1950's.

Every large city and town had a central business district with banks, department stores,

specialty stores, and movie theatres. When people began to move to the suburbs,

however, these central business districts (with their traffic, parking, and crime problems)

began to lose business.

In recent years, many cities have joined with merchants to try to revive downtown

shopping areas by building malls and providing underground parking. Some central

business districts have made a comeback; others remain in a slow, and possibly

irreversible, decline.

A shopping center  is a group of retail businesses planned, developed, owned, and

managed as a unit. All shopping centers combined account for about 1/3 of all retail

sales.

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Non-Store Retailing 

Non-store retailing includes direct marketing, direct selling, and automatic vending.

 Although most goods and services are sold through stores, non-store retailing has been growing

much faster than store retailing.

Traditional store retailers are facing increasing sales competition from catalogs, direct mail,

telephone, home TV shopping shows, and on-line computer shopping services, home and office

parties, and other direct retailing approaches.

Direct Marketing vehicles are used to obtain immediate orders directly from targeted

consumers. Direct Marketing uses various advertising media that interact directly with

consumers, generally calling for the consumer to make a direct response. Although direct

marketing initially consisted mostly of direct mail and mail-order catalogs, it has taken on

several additional forms, including telemarketing, direct radio and TV, and on-line computer shopping. Its growing use in consumer marketing is largely a response to the "demassification"

of mass markets, which has resulted in an increasing number of fragmented market segments

with highly individualized needs.

  Trends that have increased the use of direct marketing include:

number of women in the workforce;

higher costs of driving, including traffic congestion and parking problems;

shortage of retail help;

longer checkout lines;

toll-free telephone numbers;

availability of credit through proliferation of credit cards;

growth of computer power & communication technology; and

Increasing time pressures on consumers.

Direct Selling, or door-to-door retailing, started centuries ago with roving peddlers. Direct

Selling offers consumers the advantages of convenience and personal attention. But, the high

costs of hiring, training, paying, and motivating the sales force usually results.

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Today, it has grown into a huge industry, with more than 600 companies selling their products

door-to-door, office-to-office, or at home-sales parties. Although some direct selling companies

are thriving, door-to-door selling has a somewhat uncertain future. Trends working against this

form of selling include:

increase in single-person and working-couple households decreases the chances of 

finding someone at home;

home-party companies are having difficulty finding non-working women who want to sell

product part-time;

increases in crimes against individuals has made consumers reluctant to invite strangers

into their homes; and

Recent advances in interactive direct-marketing technology mean that the door-to-door 

salesperson may be replaced by the telephone, the television, and the home computer.

Automatic Vending  Automatic Vending uses space-age and computer technology to sell

a wide variety of convenience and impulse goods, including: beverages, cigarettes, candy,

newspapers, foods and snacks, film, cosmetics, apparel, and fishing worms.

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Retailer marketing decisions

Retailers always keep searching for new marketing strategies to attract and hold

customers. Their marketing decisions include choices of target markets, positioning and themarketing mix- product assortments and services, price, promotion, and place.

Table: Retailer Marketing Decision (Kotler, 2005 p. 403)

 Target market a reatilers most important decision concerns with target market. Until the target

market is defined and profiled, the retailer cannot make conistent dicisions on product

assortments, store decor advertising messages and media, price and service lavels.

Price are the key key positioning factors amd must be decided in relation to target market, the

product and service assortmrnt mix,and competition.

Promotion retailers use a very high range of promotion toolsto generate traffic and purchases.

They place ads, run special sales, issue money-saving coupons,and in store sampling. Each

retailers must use promotion tools that support and reinforce its image positioning.

Place retailers must select locations that are assicible to the target market in areas that are

consistent with the retailer positioning.

Retailers strategy

Target market

Retail store positioning 

Retailer marketing mix

Product and sevice assortment

Prices

Promotion

Place (location)

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The Future of Retailing 

Several trends will affect the future of retailing, including:

y  The slowdown in population and economic growth. Retailers can no longer enjoy sales

and profit growth through natural expansion in current and new markets;

y greater competition and new types of retailers make it harder to improve market shares

in existing markets;

y  The retailing industry suffers from severe over-capacity. There is more than 18 square

feet of retail space for every man, woman, and child, more than double that of 1972;

y consumer demographics, lifestyles, and shopping patterns are changing rapidly;

y quickly rising costs make more efficient operation and smarter buying essential to

successful retailing;

y Retail technologies are growing in importance as competitive tools to produce better 

forecasts, control inventory costs, order electronically from suppliers, communicate

between stores, and sell to consumers within stores. These technologies include

advanced checkout scanning systems that can deliver individualized couponing and

incentive programs, in-store television, "smart" shopping carts that direct consumers to

in-store specials, on-line transaction processing for better inventory management, and

electronic funds transfer.

Many retailing innovations are partially explained by the Wheel of retailing concept. 

 According to this concept, new types of retailing forms challenge established retailers that

have become "fat" by letting their costs and margins increase. The new retailers' success

leads them to upgrade their facilities and offer more services, increasing their costs and

forcing them to raise prices. Eventually the new retailers become like the conventional ones

they replaced, and the cycle begins again when still newer types of retail forms evolve with

lower costs and prices. The Wheel of Retailing concept seems to explain the initial success

and later troubles of department stores, supermarkets, and discount stores and the recent

success of off-price retailers.

To be successful, retailers of the future will have to choose target segments carefully

and position themselves strongly. But the life cycle of retail forms is getting shorter:

y department stores took 100 years to reach the mature stage of the product life cycle;

y Catalog showrooms and furniture warehouse stores reached maturity in about 10 years.

Essentially, retailers can no longer sit back with a successful formula. To remain

successful, they must keep adapting.

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Mordern-day Retailing 

Over time, different types of retailers have emerged and prospered because they have attracted

and maintained a significant customer base. A retail institution is a group of retailers that provide

a similar retail mix designed to satisfy the needs of a specific segment of customers.

Today, the success of small retailers or major retail corporations depends on how much they

embrace the retailing concept. The retailing concept is a management orientation that focuses a

retailer on determining its target-market needs and satisfying those needs more effectively and

efficiently than its competitors. Three critical environmental factors affect retailing today:

y  Competition, because each department store, specialty store, or other type of retail

outlet is competing against all others for the consumer's dollar.

y  Consumer demographic and lifestyle trends and the impact they will have on retail

strategies.

y  Needs, wants, and decision-making processes that retail consumers utilize.

Characteristics of retailing

The most basic characteristic of a retailer is its retail mix, which include decisions and strategiesregarding the type of merchandise sold, the price of the merchandise, the assortment of themerchandise, and the level of customer service.

 A retail chain is a company operating multiple retail units under common ownership and usually

having some centralization of decision making in defining and implementing its strategy. Someretail chains are divisions of larger corporations or holding companies. Due to scale economies

and an efficient distribution system, the corporate chains can sell at lower prices.

There are few charecteristics of retailing, according to bangladesh prospective:

Small scale

Ownership

Management

Working hours sources of product

Financing

Low operating cost Unskilled marketing cost

Sales volume

Sales policy

Monthlu sales variation

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Ostacling factors of Retail efficient in Bangladesh 

Lack of mordern teniques

Low quality products

Irregular supplies

Price variations

Lack of competetion

Lack of trained sales man

Higgling

Lack of seasonal capitallack of fixed capital

Credit sales

  Transportation problem

Lack of communication

Deffective accounting

 Among the list of consumer trends that are greatly affecting retail sales today are the

growth of the elderly population, as the baby-boomers age; the rapidly growing minority

segments of the U.S. population; the importance of shopping convenience, with consumers

wanting one-stop shopping; and the rising number of two-income families.

Examples of retailers using a competitive advantage to maintain their position in the market

place at the start of the twenty-first century include AutoZone, which has convenientneighborhood locations and excellent customer service. Talbot's uses unique synergies

between its stores and its catalogue operation and offers private brand clothing. Starbucks, a

highly regarded brand name in the coffee industry, has maintained strength and customer 

loyalty through providing excellent service.

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Wholesaling

What is wholesaling? Wholesaling includes all activities involved in selling goods and services to those buying for 

resale or business use. Wholesaling is the sale of goods or merchandise to retailers, to

industrial, commercial, institutional, or other professional business users, or to other wholesalers

and related subordinated services

Wholesaler is those firms engaged primarily in wholesaling. Wholesalers are someone who

buys large quantities of goods and resells to merchants rather than to the ultimate customers

Why would a producer use wholesalers rather than selling directly to retailers or 

consumers? Because wholesalers are better at performing many channel functions.

 According to the United Nations Statistics Division, "wholesale" is the resale (sale without

transformation) of new and used goods to retailers, to industrial, commercial, institutional or 

professional users, or to other wholesalers, or involves acting as an agent or broker in buying

merchandise for, or selling merchandise to, such persons or companies. Wholesalers frequently

physically assemble sort and grade goods in large lots, break bulk, repack and redistribute in

smaller lots.

Business that buys goods from manufacturers and that sells goods, usually in large

quantities to retailers, who in turn sell them to the end user.V

irtually everything sold on a retailbasis can be purchased from a wholesaler, who acts as middleman between the manufacturer 

(and owner, as in the case of list rentals) and the retailer. Wholesalers help manufacturers by

absorbing some of the costs of sales and distribution, and allow manufacturers to concentrate

their resources on manufacturing.

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Functions Of Wholesalers 

Selling & promoting: wholesalers' sales forces help manufacturers reach small

customers at low cost. The wholesaler has more contacts and is often more trusted by the

buyer than the distant manufacturer.

Buying & assortment building: wholesalers can select items and build assortments

needed by their customers, thereby saving the consumers much work.

Bulk-breaking: Wholesalers save their customers money by buying in carload lots and

breaking these large lots into smaller quantities.

Warehousing: Wholesalers hold inventory, thereby reducing the inventory costs and risks

of suppliers and customers.

Transportation: wholesalers can provide quicker delivery to buyers because they are

closer than the producers.

Financing: Wholesalers finance their customers by giving credit, and they finance their 

suppliers by ordering early and paying bills on time.

Risk bearing: wholesalers absorb risk by taking title and bearing the cost of theft, damage,

spoilage, and obsolescence.

Market information: wholesalers give information to suppliers and customers aboutcompetitors, new products, and price developments.

Management services & advice: wholesalers often help retailers train their salesclerks,

improve store layouts and displays, and set up accounting and inventory control systems.

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Types Of Wholesalers 

Wholesalers fall into three major groups: merchant wholesalers, brokers & agents, and

manufacturers' sales branches and offices. They can be classified as shown below:

Table 2: Classification of Wholesalers Intermediaries (created by Author, SEU)

Manufactures&

retailers 

branches & offices 

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Independent Wholesaling Intermediaries

Merchant wholesalers are independently owned businesses that take title to the

merchandise they handle. There are two types of such merchants. One is full service

merchants who provide all the services relating to the marketing, carry stock and makedeliveries. The other one is limited service wholesalers who provide limited services, examples-

electrical merchants, hardware merchants, pharmaceutical merchants that sell goods in

particular category only. 

Full-service merchant wholesalers provide a full set of services, such as carrying stock, using a

sales force, offering credit, making deliveries, and providing management assistance. They are

of two types:

  Wholesale merchants: sell primarily to retailers and provide full range of services.

Example: health foods wholesalers, and sea food wholesalers.

  Industrial distributors: sell to manufacturers rather than retailers. Provide severalservices, such as carrying stock, offering credit and providing delivery.

Limited service merchant wholesalers offer fewer services to their suppliers and customers, and

include:

  Cash-n-carry wholesalers: offer a limited line of fast-moving goods, sell to small

retailers for cash, and generally do not deliver. A small fish store retailer, for example,

normally drives at dawn to a cash-n-carry fish wholesaler and buys several crates of fish,

pays on the spot, drives the merchandise back to the store, and unloads it.

  Truck jobbers: perform a selling and delivery function.

They carry a limited line of 

goods (such as milk, bread, eggs, or snack foods) that they sell for cash as they make

their rounds of supermarkets, small grocery stores, hospitals, restaurants, factory

cafeterias, and hotels.

  Drop shippers: operate in bulk industries such as coal, lumber, and heavy equipment.

They do not carry inventory or handle the product. Once an order is received, they find

a producer who ships the goods directly to the customer. The drop shipper takes title

and risk from the time the order is accepted to the time it is delivered to the customer.

  Rack jobbers: serve grocery and drug retailers, mostly in the area of non-food items.

Rack jobbers send delivery trucks to stores, and the delivery person sets ups racks of toys, paperback books, hardware items, pet supplies, health & beauty aids, and other 

items. They price the goods, keep them fresh, and maintain inventory records. Rack

 jobbers sell on consignment; they retain title to the goods and bill the retailers only for 

the goods sold to consumers.

  Producers' cooperatives: owned by farmer-members, they assemble farm produce to

sell in local markets. Profits are divided among members at the end of the year. They

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often try to improve product quality and promote a co-op brand, such as Sun Maid

Raisins, Sunkist Oranges, or Diamond Walnuts.

  Mail order wholesalers: send catalogs to retail, industrial, and institutional customers,

offering jewelry, cosmetics, specialty foods, and other small items. Their main

customers are businesses in small, outlying areas.

Brokers & Agents differ from merchant wholesalers in two ways -- (1) they do not take

title to goods, and (2) they perform only a few functions. Their main function is to aid in buying

and selling, and for these services they earn a commission on the selling price. Like merchant

wholesalers, they generally specialize by product line or customer type. They account for 11%

of total wholesale volume.

A broker brings buyers and sellers together and assists in negotiation. Brokers are

paid by the parties hiring them. They do not carry inventory, get involved in financing, or 

assume risk. The most familiar examples are food, real estate, insurance, and

securities brokers.

  Agents represent buyers or sellers on a more permanent basis. Selling agents contract

to sell a producer's entire output -- either the manufacturer is not interested in doing the

selling, or feels unqualified.

  The selling agent serves as a sales department and has much influence over prices,

terms, and conditions of sale.

  Manufacturers' agent¶s representatives handle two or more related lines, with separate

formal agreements, from two or more different manufacturers. They are most oftenused in lines such as apparel, furniture, and electrical goods.

  Purchasing agents generally have long term relationships with buyers. They make

purchases for buyers and often receive, inspect, warehouse, and ship goods to the

buyers.

  Commission merchants (or houses) are agents that take physical possession of 

products and negotiate sales.

Manufacturers' Sales Branches &Offices account for about 31% of all wholesale

volume. Manufacturers set up their own sales branches and offices to improve inventory

control, selling, and promotion. Sales branches carry inventory, and are found in industries

such as lumber and automotive equipment and parts. Sales offices do not carry inventory, and

are most often found in the dry goods and notion industries. Purchasing officers perform a role

similar to that of brokers or agents but are part of the buyer organizations.

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Trends in Wholesaling

Progressive wholesalers are always looking for better ways to meet the needs of their 

suppliers and target customers. They can do this best by reducing costs while improvingservices. Wholesalers' reason for existence comes from increasing the efficiency and

effectiveness of the entire marketing channel.

The distinction between large retailers and wholesalers continues to blur. Many retailers now

operate formats such as warehouse clubs and hypermarkets that perform many wholesale

functions. In return, many wholesalers are setting up their own retailing operations. For 

example, Super Value and Fleming, both leading food wholesalers, now operate their own retail

outlets.

Wholesalers will continue to expand the services they provide to retailers -- retail pricing,

cooperative advertising, marketing and management information reports, accounting services,and others. Rising costs on the one hand, the demand for increased services on the other, will

put the squeeze on wholesaler profits. Wholesalers who do not find efficient ways to deliver 

value to their customers will soon drop by the wayside.

Because of slow growth in their domestic markets, and through such developments as

the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFT A), many large wholesalers are now going

global. The National Association of Wholesaler-Distributors predicts that, by the year 2000,

wholesalers will generate 18% of their sales outside the United States, twice the current share. 

(Weber, Joseph "On a Fast Boat to Anywhere," Business Week, January 11, 1993, p. 64) 

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Difference between Wholesaler Retailers 

 A wholesaler does not sell to the public whereas retailers do. Wholesale goods are

generally meant for resale and are also exempted from sales taxes because they will be sold

again (at retail), at which time the sales taxes are collected - if applicable.

y  The difference between wholesale and retail prices:

Volume is the difference. A wholesale price in general will be lower because the amount being

sold is much higher. A business may buy say, 5000 bottles of ketchup. At that amount you can

lower the price of the ketchup but still make the same amount of profit because you are selling

so much. However, if you are only going to sell maybe one bottle, or sell the bottles at a lower 

rate then you prices will have to be higher because as the supplier you want to make back your 

costs of production for the good and a little profit as well.

y  Wholesale rice prices mark fall without impact on retail

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

News Source: The Daily Star. Powered by Wordpress. Entries (RSS). Comments (RSS). Based on the

BOBv2 theme. Copyright © 2006 - 2008 Bangladesh News, A Feline Tech Web Portal. 

With an increase in supply of rice, prices of coarse varieties on wholesale markets in the

capital came down a little yesterday, but no impact of it was seen on retail markets.

Importers however said there is no possibility of rice prices coming down in the near future, as

they are currently importing rice at hiked up prices of $505 to $510 a ton, up by more than $80 a

ton from the prices they paid a week ago. Meanwhile, prices of other essentials including fish,

beef, mutton, edible oil, and sugar also shot up further on different markets.

Visiting Karwan Bazar and Mohammadpur Krishi Market yesterday, it was found by The Daily

Star, although wholesale prices of Indian rice came down by Tk 30 to Tk 40 a maund,

interestingly on retail markets the prices went up by Tk 1 a kilogram (kg).

Retailers said they were not being able to sell rice at lower prices in line with the decrease inprices on wholesale markets yesterday, because they had bought the rice they were selling at

higher prices from the wholesalers two days ago.

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Bibliography

Kotler. P, Gray. A, 2005, Principles of Marketing, 11th Edition, Pearson Prentice hall, p. 397-419

Kotler. P, 2003, Marketing Management, 11th Edition, Pearson Education, p. 534-50

The Daily Star. BD Domain by Register.com.bd. Hosted by WebHosting.com.bd, Saturday,

February 16th, 2008, Copyright © 2006 - 2008 Bangladesh News, A Feline Tech Web Portal

Table 1 and Table 2, created by Israt Zahan, Id:2008010000103, SEU

Weber, Joseph "On a Fast Boat to Anywhere," Business Week, January 11, 1993, p. 64

Websites:http://www.aboutretail.net/types_of_retail_outlet/clothing_and_accessory_store.htm 

http://www.answers.com/topic/wholesaler  

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wholesale_marketing 

http://www.martec-international.com/landing_pages/lp_retail_marketing_s.htm