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Retail Operations summary

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Summary of the retail operations colleges.

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  • February 7, 2023
  • 28
  • 2022/2023
  • Class notes
  • Robert rooderkerk
  • College 1 t/m 11

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By: jonasderijk48 • 1 year ago

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B3EL108 Retail operations
Lecture 1: Introduction to retail operations
Introduction to retail operations
 Retail operations definitions:
- The sale of small quantities of items to end costumers, as opposed to wholesale, which
involves selling to business or instrumental costumers
- Activities involved in the selling of physical goods or services to ultimate costumers for
personal or household consumption
 Origin of the word retail
- Derived from the old French verb tailer, which means something like to cut off, clip, pare,
divide in terms of tailoring
- 1433 meaning ‘a sale in small quantities’
- Middle French ‘a piece cut off, shred, scrap, paring’
 Purpose of retail:
- Break up bulk
- Holding inventory
- Offer an assortment (provide variety)
- Lower consumer search costs (one stop shopping)
- Offer services (e.g., curation, expertise, return handling)
 Costs of retail:
The costs of channel activities
- Increase the costs of products and services
- The costs in the supply chain can be almost as much as the cost to make the product
 Manufacture -> wholesaler -> retailer, everyone wants a profit, so it gets added and added to the
costs in every channel
 Solved by vertical integration -> lower price
o 20% of GDP is de costs of selling goods
o Retail is pretty much always growing, so people spend more money because de GDP gets
bigger
 Turnover vs sales volume
- Turnover = price x quantity
- Sales volume -> corrects for price changes
o The turnover grew with 4% while the sales volume declined with 3%
 Some defining characteristics -> what makes retail special?
- Highly regulated (local, national, Europe) -> regels
- Low productivity -> labor intensive, trying to grow productivity in order to be competitive
1. Labor productivity = sales per employee
2. Online retail is more productive because you don’t have to deal with employees etc. ->
automated
- Thin profit margins: net profit margin: net income / revenue x 100
- Globalizing
- Rapid influx of technology
 Retail value chain:

, = forward supply chain
 Reverse value chain:
- Is concerned with retrieving, reusing and recycling end-of-life products
- Legislation (regelgeving) may force retailers to engage in reverse supply chain activities
collecting, reusing, recycling goods
- Headache for retailers, why?
 A lot of extra costs and steps: storage, fuel costs, etc.
 Forced by regulations

Online retail
 Why the rise of online retail?
- Time, effort, etc.
o Less real estate and more inventory pulling: benefiting from aggregating things into one
place
o Consolidation: bundle items so they can go in one truck
o Cost perspective, but they have a bunch of variety
- Less real estate + inventory pooling
 Offline retail: selling popular items
- The scattered inventory problem
 Fulfilment of the warehouse:
- Returns no longer are free, because of the weight it carries on the health of the earth, stores
are becoming more important
 Online marketplace:
- Platform: buyers and sellers are brought together
- Regulation of online marketplaces: (because they have a lot of power)
- Tightening regulations to ensure that it is clear who is the vendor, and what can be done in
case dissatisfaction with the product or service
- Fines for antitrust -> retail
 Trend: There are retailers who are start a marketplace too
- Create a more engaging product range
- Source of additional revenue
- No inventory necessary
 Effect of covid-19 on retail:
- E-commerce has grown 5 times more
- It was higher in covid-19 times, but now it is almost back to normal, not as dramatic as
people believe
- People like going to physical stores

, - More time at home -> the more people buy online (similar graphs) -> is a huge problem for
certain sector, like people walking to work to get a coffee on their way and they suddenly
don’t go to the office but work from home
- Dutch retail, online retail is losing share

Key takeaways
 Retail provides many useful services to manufactures and consumers
 Retail is a sizeable part of the economy
 There are many regional differences in the size and nature of retail
 Retail is built on highly optimized forward and reverse supply chains
 Retail is subject to several developments
 Online penetration and market share is increasing across the board
 The covid pandemic has accelerated several developments
 However, physical retail is still very much alive

Lecture 2: The omnichannel (r)evolution
Omnichannel revolution
 From single to multi-channel




- Single -> multi-channel
- Multi -> cross channel: connecting the channels (e.g., click and collect, buy in store home
delivery)
- Cross -> omni channel: simultaneity (e.g., in store targeting, QR codes)
 Omnichannel retail
- Providing customers with seamless journeys across all
available channels

Omnichannel customer journeys ->




 Touchpoints:
- Narrow definition: all the moments in which the costumer comes into contact with your
brand, directly or indirectly, throughout his or her costumer journey

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