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What Is International Retailing?

What Is International Retailing?. “All activities involved in selling products and services to final international consumers for their personal consumption”. Internationalization of Retailing . Retailers are rapidly expanding internationally in order to: Gain competitive advantage

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What Is International Retailing?

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  1. What Is International Retailing? “All activities involved in selling products and services to final international consumers for their personal consumption”

  2. Internationalization of Retailing • Retailers are rapidly expanding internationally in order to: • Gain competitive advantage • Increase sales • Increase profits • Improve overall firm performance • As they expand internationally, retailers can take advantage of cost savings and learn from experiences in a way that could further enhance home-country operations.

  3. Top 10 Global Retailers Rank Country Retailers Format Sales of Origin (US $mil.) 1 U.S. Wal-Mart Discount, Hypermarket, Warehouse, 256,329 Supermarket, Supermarket, 2 France Carrefour Cash & Carry, Discount, Superstore, 65,011 Convenience, Specialty, Hypermarket 3 U.S. Home Depot DIY, Specialty 58,247 4 U.S. Kroger Convenience, Discount, Warehouse, 51,760 Specialty, Supermarket, 5 Germany Metro Cash & Carry, Superstore, Specialty, 48,349 Department, DIY, Hypermarket 6 U.S. Target Department, Discount, Superstore 42,722 7 Holland Ahold Cash & Carry, Supermarket, Drug, 40,755 Convenience, Discount, Hypermarket, Specialty 8 U.K. Tesco Convenience, Department, 40,071 Superstore Hypermarket, Supermarket, 9 U.S. Costco Warehouse 37,993 10 U.S. Sears Department, Specialty, E-commerce 35,698 Mail Source:“2004 Global Powers of Retailing,” January 2004, http://www.stores.org/m200global.asp

  4. Countries Have Many, Small Stores Convenience Store Segovia, Spain

  5. Retail Formats (General Merchandise): (1)Specialty Stores • Specialty Stores (narrow product line and wide assortment) • Very popular, especially in developed countries; independent stores often dominant • E.g. florists, Virgin Records

  6. Specialty Store in Portugal Malljn00

  7. Specialty Stores Portugal jn00

  8. Italy 03

  9. Specialty Food Store Germany

  10. Lisbon Fish Market jn00

  11. (2)Specialized Markets • Markets that contain specialty stores specializing in a particular product category • Exist worldwide in both developed and developing countries • E.g. Jade market, Hong Kong, Jewelry Market

  12. Silk Market, Beijing ap00

  13. Specialized Market Sukienice Krakow jl02

  14. Florence, Italy 03

  15. Specialized Market La Boca Argentina

  16. (3)Department Stores • General Retailers that offer a broad variety of goods and wide assortments • U.S. & Canada losing share to discounters, specialty stores, category killers • European department stores focus on home countries with eye towards European Union • Often include supermarket sections

  17. El Corte Ingles Department Store in Madrid, Spain ju00

  18. El Corte Ingles Department Store in Madrid, Spain ju00

  19. Department Store Germany ju02

  20. Department Store Germany ju00

  21. Mall, Frederikstad, Norway ju01

  22. Mall, Frederikstad, Norway ju01

  23. Mall Buenos Aires may02

  24. Mall Buenos Aires may02

  25. Queen Street Mall, Brisbane Australia – Happy Jack’s

  26. Shopping Mall, Canberra, Australia

  27. (4) General Merchandise Discount Stores • Retailers that sell high volumes of merchandise, offer limited service, and charge lower prices, e.g. Wal-Mart, Target, Home Depot, KMart

  28. Shopping Mall, Canberra, Australia

  29. Retail Formats (Food): (1) Super Stores / Hypermarkets • Hypermarkets Large retailers that combine supermarket, discount, and warehouse retailing principles

  30. Hypermarket Santiago Chile

  31. Hypermarket Santiago

  32. Hypermarket Santiago Chile

  33. Brands Supermarket Australia

  34. Warehouse or Wholesale Clubs • Require members to pay an annual fee; operate in low-overhead, warehouse-type facilities, offer limited lines of brand name and dealer groceries, apparel, appliances, etc. at low prices

  35. Convenience Stores, Kiosks • Small retailers located in residential areas, open longer hours, carry limited lines of high-turnover necessities.

  36. Food Retailers • Convenience Store • Small residential retailers or retail chains consisting of small neighborhood stores. • Open long hours. • Carry limited lines of higher-turnover necessities. • One-stop shopping. Convenience store in Poland—note that Procter & Gamble products (especially their pan-European detergent Ariel) are predominant.

  37. Kiosk Lima, Peru

  38. Florence, Italy 03

  39. Trends in International Retailing • Both U.S. & European retailers expanding internationally • Consolidation & acquisition among retailers • Television Home ShoppingPopular in North America and Europe, and becoming increasingly popular in Asian markets. • Direct selling firms are most active in the growth markets (in emerging markets, in particular). • Network marketing is growing rapidly, especially in emerging markets. Involves signing up sales representatives to go into business for themselves with minimal start-up capital and sell more “distributorships” and merchandise.

  40. Global Internet Retail Sector Segmentation Category % Market Share Tickets & Travel 29.00% Computers, Electronics & Software 28.70% Household 12.80% CDs, Music and Videos 11.80% Books 8.50% Apparel and Gifts 5.00% Toys & Games 4.20% Other 0.10% Total 100.0% Source:“Global Internet Retail,” Internet Retail Industry Profile: Global, May 2004, 1–17.

  41. Issues in International Retailing • Local regulations – e.g. restrictions on expansion of hypermarkets; operating hours • Taxation – e.g. Taxes higher in Norway than Denmark; Consumers shop on duty free shop on Ferry • Consumer Preferences- e.g. U.S. shop less frequently & buy in bulk; Argentina prefer to shop in small food stores

  42. Kolding, Denmark 3 p.m. Saturday

  43. Italy 03

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