Difference between revisions of "Retailing" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Piggly-wiggly.jpg|thumb|250 px|Piggly-Wiggly, the first self service store, 1916.]]
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'''Retailing''' consists of the [[sales|sale]] of goods or merchandise,  from a fixed location such as a [[department store]] or [[kiosk]], in small or individual lots for direct [[consumption (economics)|consumption]] by the purchaser.<ref name="fas">{{cite web|year=February 9, 2000|url=http://www.fas.usda.gov/info/factsheets/China/distribution.html|title=Distribution Services|publisher=[[Foreign Agricultural Service]]|accessdate=2006-04-04}}</ref>  Retailing may include subordinated services, such as delivery.  Purchasers may be individuals or businesses. In [[commerce]], a retailer buys goods or [[product (business)|products]] in large quantities from [[manufacturer]]s or [[importer]]s, either directly or through a [[wholesaler]], and then 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 [[Marketing|marketers]] see the process of retailing as a necessary part of their overall [[distribution (business)|distribution]] strategy.
  
'''Retailing''' consists of the [[sales|sale]] of goods/merchandise for personal or household [[consumption (economics)|consumption]] either from a fixed location such as a [[department store]] or [[kiosk]], or from a fixed location and related subordinated services.<ref name="fas">{{cite web|year=[[February 9]], [[2000]]|url=http://www.fas.usda.gov/info/factsheets/China/distribution.html|title=Distribution Services|publisher=[[Foreign Agricultural Service]]|accessdate=2006-04-04}}</ref> In [[commerce]], a retailer buys goods or [[product (business)|products]] in large quantities from [[manufacturer]]s or [[importer]]s, either directly or through a [[wholesaler]], and then sells individual items or small quantities to the general public or end-user [[customer]]s, usually in a shop, also called a store.  Retailers are at the end of the [[supply chain]]. [[Marketing|Marketers]] see retailing as part of their overall [[distribution (business)|distribution]] strategy.
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Shops may be on residential streets, shopping streets with few or no houses, or in a [[shopping center]] or mall, but are mostly found in the [[Central business district|central business district]]. Shopping streets may be for [[pedestrian]]s only. Sometimes a shopping street has a partial or full [[roof]] to protect customers from [[precipitation (meteorology)|precipitation]].  Retailers often provided [[boardwalk]]s in front of their stores to protect customers from the mud.  Online retailing, also known as [[e-commerce]] is the latest form of non-shop retailing (cf. [[mail order]]).
  
Shops may be on residential streets, or in shopping streets with little or no houses, or in a [[shopping center]]. Shopping streets may or may not be for [[pedestrian]]s only. Sometimes a shopping street has a partial or full [[roof]] to protect customers from [[precipitation (meteorology)|precipitation]].  On-line retailing (e-commerce) is the latest form of non-shop retailing (cf. mail order).
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[[Shopping]] generally refers to the act of [[trade|buying]] products. Sometimes this is done to obtain necessities such as food and clothing; sometimes it is done as a [[recreation]]al activity. Recreational shopping often involves window shopping (just looking, not buying) and [[browsing]] and does not always result in a purchase.
  
[[Shopping]] generally refers to the act of [[trade|buying]] products. Sometimes this is done to obtain necessities such as food and clothing, sometimes it is done as a [[recreation]]al activity. Recreational shopping often involves window shopping (just looking, not buying) and [[browsing]] and does not always result in a purchase.
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Most retailers have employees learn [[facing]], a [[Hyperreality|hyperreal]] tool used to create the look of a perfectly-stocked store even when it is not.
  
<div id="Kinds of retailers"> <!-- anchor tag for links to this section —></div>
 
 
==Retail pricing==
 
==Retail pricing==
The [[pricing]] technique used by most retailers is [[cost-plus pricing]]. This involves adding a [[markup (business)|markup]] amount (or percentage) to the retailers cost. Another common technique is [[suggested retail price|suggested retail pricing]]. This simply involves charging the amount suggested by the manufacturer and usually printed on the [[product (business)|product]] by the manufacturer.
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The [[pricing]] technique used by most retailers is [[cost-plus pricing]]. This involves adding a [[markup (business)|markup]] amount (or percentage) to the retailers cost. Another common technique is [[suggested retail price|suggested retail pricing]]. This simply involves charging the amount suggested by the manufacturer and usually printed on the [[product (business)|product]] bize the manufacturer.
  
 
In Western countries, retail [[price]]s are often so-called [[psychological pricing|psychological price]]s or odd prices: a little less than a round number, e.g. $6.95. In Chinese societies, prices are generally either a round number or sometimes a lucky number. This creates [[price point]]s.
 
In Western countries, retail [[price]]s are often so-called [[psychological pricing|psychological price]]s or odd prices: a little less than a round number, e.g. $6.95. In Chinese societies, prices are generally either a round number or sometimes a lucky number. This creates [[price point]]s.
  
Often prices are fixed and displayed on signs or labels. Alternatively, there can be [[price discrimination]] for a variety of reasons. The retailer charges higher prices to some customers and lower prices to others. For example, a customer may have to pay more if the seller determines that he or she is willing to. The retailer may conclude this due to the customer's wealth, carelessness, lack of knowledge, or eagerness to buy. Price discrimination can lead to a [[bargaining]] situation often called [[haggling]] &mdash; a [[negotiation]] about the price. Economists see this as determining how the transaction's total surplus will be divided into [[consumer and producer surplus]]. Neither party has a clear advantage, because the threat of no sale exists, whence the surplus vanishes for both.
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Often prices are fixed and displayed on signs or labels. Alternatively, there can be [[price discrimination]] for a variety of reasons, where the retailer charges higher prices to some customers and lower prices to others. For example, a customer may have to pay more if the seller determines that he or she is willing to. The retailer may conclude this due to the customer's wealth, carelessness, lack of knowledge, or eagerness to buy. Another example is the practice of discounting for youths or students.  Price discrimination can lead to a [[bargaining]] situation often called [[haggling]], in which the parties [[negotiation|negotiate]] about the price. Economists see this as determining how the transaction's total surplus will be divided into [[consumer and producer surplus]]. Neither party has a clear advantage, because of the threat of no sale, in which case the surplus vanishes for both.
 
   
 
   
Retailers who are overstocked, or need to raise cash to renew stocks may resort to "Sales", where prices are "marked down", often by advertised percentages - "50% off" for example."Sales" are often held at fixed times of the year, for example January sales, or end-of-season sales, or [[Blue Cross Sale]]
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Retailers who are overstocked, or need to raise cash to renew stocks may resort to "Sales," where prices are "marked down," often by advertised percentages - "50% off" for example."Sales" are often held at fixed times of the year, for example January sales, or end-of-season sales, or [[Blue Cross Sale]]
  
==Etymology==
+
==Retail Industry==
Retail comes from the French word ''retaillier'' which refers to "cutting off , clip and divide" in terms of tailoring (1365). It first was recorded as a noun with the meaning of a "sale in small quantities" in 1433 (French). Its literal meaning for ''retail'' was to "cut off, shred, paring". Like the French, the word retail in both Dutch and German (detailhandel and Einzelhandel respectively) also refer to sale of small quantities or items.
 
  
==Retail types==
+
Retail Industry has brought in phenomenal changes in the whole process of production, distribution and consumption of Consumer Goods all over the world. In the present world most of the developed economies are using the Retail Industry as their vital growth instrument. At present, among all the industries of U.S.A the Retail Industry holds the second place in terms of Employment Generation. In fact, the strength of the Retail Industry lies in its ability to generate large volume of employment.
There are three major types of retailing. The first is the [[market]], a physical location where buyers and sellers converge. Usually this is done on town squares, sidewalks or designated streets and may involve the construction of temporary structures (market stalls). The second form is shop or store trading. Some shops use counter-service, where goods are out of reach of buyers, and must be obtained from the seller. This type of retail is common for small expensive items (e.g. jewelry) and controlled items like medicine and liquor. Self-service, where goods may be handled and examined prior to purchase, has become more common since the Twentieth Century. A third form of retail is virtual retail, where products are ordered via mail, telephone or online without having been examined physically but instead in a catelogue, on television or on a website. Sometimes this kind of retailing replicates existing retail types such as [[online shop]]s or virtual marketplaces such as E-Bay.<ref name="O'Brien">O'Brien, Larry and Frank Harris (1991) ''Retailing: shopping, society, space'', David Fulton Publishers, London</ref>.
 
  
Buildings for retail have changed considerably over time. Market halls were constructed in the middle ages, which were essentially just covered marketplaces. The first shops in the modern sense used to deal with just one type of article, and usually adjoined the producer (baker, tailor, cobbler). In the nineteenth century, in [[France]], [[arcade (architecture)|arcade]]s were invented, which were a street of several different shops, roofed over. From this there soon developed, still in France, the notion of a large store of one ownership with many counters, each dealing with a different kind of article was invented; it was called a [[department store]]. One of the novelties of the department store was the introduction of fixed prices, making haggling unnecessary, and browsing more enjoyable. This is commonly considered the birth of [[consumerism]] <ref name="Chung">Chung, Chuihua Judy  (ed.) (2001) ''Harvard Design School Guide to Shopping'', Taschen, Köln</ref>. In cities, these were multi-story buildings which pioneered the [[escalator]].  
+
Not only U.S but also the other developed countries like U.K, Canada, France, Germany are experiencing tremendous growth in their Retail Sectors. This boom in the Global Retail Industry was in many ways accelerated by the Liberalization of Retail Sector.
  
In the 1920's the first supermarket opened in the United States, heralding in a new era of retail: self-service. Around the same time the first [[shopping mall]] was constructed <ref name="Borking">Borking, Seline (1998) ''The Fascinating History of Shopping Malls'', MAB Groep BV, The Hague</ref> which incorporated elements from both the arcade and the department store. A mall consists of several department stores linked by arcades (many of whose shops are owned by the same firm under different names). The design was perfected by the Austrian architecht Victor Gruen<ref name="Hardwick">Hardwick, Jeffrey (2004) ''Mall Maker: Victor Gruen, Architect of an American Dream'', University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.</ref>.
+
Observing this global upward trend of Retail Industry, now the developing countries like India are also planning to tap the enormous potential of the retail sector. Wal-Mart,the world's largest Retailer has been invited to India. Other popular Brands like Pantaloons, Big Bazar, Archies are rapidly increasing their market share in the retail sector. According to a survey, within 5 years, the Indian Retail Industry is expected to generate 10 to 15 million jobs by  direct and indirect effects. This huge employment generation can be possible because of the fact that being dependent on the Retail Sector shares a lot of Forward and Backward Linkages.
. All the stores rent their space from the mall owner. By mid-century, most of these were being developed as single enclosed, climate-controlled, projects in suburban areas. The mall has had a considerable impact on the retail structure and urban development in the United States. <ref name="Kowinski">Kowinski, William Severini (2002) ''The Malling of America: travels in the United States of Shopping'', Xlibris Corporstion.</ref>
 
  
In addition to the enclosed malls, there are also [[strip mall]]s which are 'outside' malls (in Britain they are called [[retail parks]]. These are often connected to [[supermarket]]s or [[discount department store|big box store]]s. Also, in high traffic areas, other businesses may lease space from the supermarket or big box store to sell their goods or services from. A recent development is a very large shop called a [[superstore]]. These are sometimes located as stand-alone outlets, but more commonly are part of a strip mall or retail park.  
+
Emergence of a strong Retail Sector can contribute immensely to the economic development of any country. With a dominant retail sector, the farmers and other suppliers can sell their produce directly to the major retail companies and can ensure stable profit. On the other hand, to ensure steady supply of goods, the Retail Companies can inject cash into the production system. This whole process can result into a more efficient production and distribution system for the economy as a whole.
  
Local shops can be known as [[bricks and mortar business|brick and mortar]] stores in the [[United States]].Many shops are part of a [[business chain|chain]]: a number of similar shops with the same name selling the same products in different locations. The shops may be owned by one company, or there may be a [[franchising]] company that has franchising agreements with the shop owners (see also [[restaurant chain]]).
+
==Etymology==
 +
Retail comes from the French word ''retaillier'' which refers to "cutting off, clip and divide" in terms of tailoring (1365). It first was recorded as a noun with the meaning of a "sale in small quantities" in 1433 (French). Its literal meaning for ''retail'' was to "cut off, shred, paring." Like the French, the word retail in both Dutch and German (''detailhandel'' and ''Einzelhandel'' respectively) also refer to sale of small quantities or items.{{fact|date=July 2007}}
  
Some shops sell second-hand goods. Often the public can also sell goods to such shops, sometimes called 'pawn' shops. In other cases, especially in the case of a [[nonprofit]] shop, the public donates goods to the shop to be sold (see also [[thrift store]]). In [[give-away shop]]s goods can be taken for free.  
+
==Retail types==
 +
There are three major types of retailing. The first is the [[market]], a physical location where buyers and sellers converge. Usually this is done in town squares, sidewalks or designated streets and may involve the construction of temporary structures (market stalls). The second form is shop or store trading. Some shops use counter-service, where goods are out of reach of buyers, and must be obtained from the seller. This type of retail is common for small expensive items (e.g. jewelry) and controlled items like medicine and liquor. [[Self-service]], where goods may be handled and examined prior to purchase, has become more common since the Twentieth Century. A third form of retail is virtual retail, where products are ordered via mail, telephone or online without having been examined physically but instead in a catalog, on television or on a website. Sometimes this kind of retailing replicates existing retail types such as [[online shop]]s or virtual marketplaces such as [[amazon.com|Amazon]].<ref name="O'Brien">O'Brien, Larry and Frank Harris (1991) ''Retailing: shopping, society, space'', David Fulton Publishers, London</ref>.
  
There are also 'consignment' shops, which is where a person can place an item in a store, and if it sells the person gives the shop owner a percentage of the sale priceThe advantage of selling an item this way is that the established shop give the item exposure to more potential buyers.  
+
Buildings for retail have changed considerably over time. Market halls were constructed in the Middle Ages, which were essentially just covered marketplaces. The first shops in the modern sense used to deal with just one type of article, and usually adjoined the producer (baker, tailor, cobbler). In the nineteenth century, in [[France]], [[arcade (architecture)|arcade]]s were invented, which were a street of several different shops, roofed overcounters, each dealing with a different kind of article was invented; it was called a [[department store]]. One of the novelties of the department store was the introduction of fixed prices, making haggling unnecessary, and browsing more enjoyable. This is commonly considered the birth of [[consumerism]] <ref name="Chung">Chung, Chuihua Judy  (ed.) (2001) ''Harvard Design School Guide to Shopping'', Taschen, Köln</ref>. In cities, these were multi-story buildings which pioneered the [[escalator]].  
  
The term ''retailer'' is also applied where a service provider services the needs of a large number of individuals, such as with [[telephone]] or [[electric power]].
+
In the 1920s the first supermarket opened in the United States, heralding in a new era of retail: self-service. Around the same time the first [[shopping mall]] was constructed <ref name="Borking">Borking, Seline (1998) ''The Fascinating History of Shopping Malls'', MAB Groep BV, The Hague</ref> which incorporated elements from both the arcade and the department store. A mall consists of several department stores linked by arcades (many of whose shops are owned by the same firm under different names). The design was perfected by the Austrian architecht Victor Gruen<ref name="Hardwick">Hardwick, Jeffrey (2004) ''Mall Maker: Victor Gruen, Architect of an American Dream'', University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.</ref>.
 +
All the stores rent their space from the mall owner. By mid-century, most of these were being developed as single enclosed, climate-controlled, projects in suburban areas. The mall has had a considerable impact on the retail structure and urban development in the United States. <ref name="Kowinski">Kowinski, William Severini (2002) ''The Malling of America: travels in the United States of Shopping'', Xlibris Corporstion.</ref>
  
===Variety Store===
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In addition to the enclosed malls, there are also [[strip mall]]s which are 'outside' malls (in Britain they are called [[retail parks]]. These are often comprised of one or more [[big box stores]] or [[superstores]].
:''"Dollar store" redirects here but may also refer to [[Dollar store (Cuba)]].''
 
[[image:800px-99centstore.jpg|thumb|A 99 cent store]]
 
  
A '''variety store''' or '''price-point retailer''' is a [[retail store]] that sells inexpensive items, usually with a single [[price point]] for all items in the store.  Typical merchandise includes [[cleaning]] supplies, [[toy]]s, and [[candy]].
+
[[Image:SuperTarget.jpg|210px|left|thumb|Non-traditional exterior of a SuperTarget, Jacksonville]]
  
The store is usually named for the price of the merchandise sold in the store (but see below); the names vary by area and time, as each country has a different currency, and the nominative price of the goods has increased over time due to [[inflation]].  Modern names include:
+
Local shops can be known as [[bricks and mortar business|brick and mortar]] stores in the [[United States]]. Many shops are part of a [[business chain|chain]]: a number of similar shops with the same name selling the same products in different locations. The shops may be owned by one company, or there may be a [[franchising]] company that has franchising agreements with the shop owners (see also [[restaurant chain]]).
* '''dollar store''', $1.25 store, 50-cent store, etc. in the [[United States]]
 
* '''[[Pound sterling|pound]]''' store, £2 store, etc. in the [[United Kingdom]]
 
* '''$2 shop''' in [[Australia]] and [[New Zealand]]
 
* '''100-[[yen]] shop''' or '''one coin shop''' in [[Japan]]
 
* '''10-dollar shop''' (USD 1.28), 8-dollar shop, etc. in [[Hong Kong]]
 
* '''[[guilder]] store''' in the [[Netherlands]]
 
* '''Todo a 100 shop''' in [[Spain]]
 
* '''Magasin à prix unique''' in [[France]]
 
* '''Wszystko po 4 złote''' in [[Poland]]
 
* '''38 000 lei shop''' in [[Romania]]
 
* '''um e noventa e nove''' ([[BRL]] 1.99 = USD 0.90) in [[Brazil]]
 
* '''Loja dos 300''' in [[Portugal]] 300 [[portuguese_escudo|escudos]] = 1,5 Eur
 
  
[[Image:100-Emon.jpg|thumb|100-Emon at Kohnoike Higashi Osaka-City]]  
+
Some shops sell second-hand goods. Often the public can also sell goods to such shops, sometimes called 'pawn' shops. In other cases, especially in the case of a [[nonprofit]] shop, the public donates goods to the shop to be sold (see also [[thrift store]]). In [[give-away shop]]s goods can be taken for free.
  
Some variety stores are not true "single price-point" stores despite their name.  Often the name of the store, such as "dollar store", is only a suggestion, and can be misleading.  Some stores that call themselves "dollar stores" have items that cost more or less than a dollar.  Some stores also sell goods priced at multiples of the named price.  The problem with the name is also compounded by [[sales tax]], which leads to taxable items costing the customer more than a dollar.  Some purists maintain that the phrase "dollar store", in the strict sense, should only refer to stores which sell only items that cost exactly $1.
+
There are also 'consignment' shops, which is where a person can place an item in a store, and if it sells the person gives the shop owner a percentage of the sale price.  The advantage of selling an item this way is that the established shop give the item exposure to more potential buyers.
  
Some stores can have prices which are not round multiples of currency, such as the "99-cent store" or "$2 store", or "88-yen store".  As inflation increases the nominative price of goods, the names of such stores must also change over time.
+
The term ''retailer'' is also applied where a service provider services the needs of a large number of individuals, such as with [[telephone]] or [[electric power]].
 
+
===Examples of retailing===
====Products====
+
*[[Bazaar]]
Variety store products include cleaning supplies, small tools, personal hygene supplies, kitchen supplies, organizational supplies, small office supplies, holiday decorations, electronics supplies, gardening supplies, home decor novelties, toys, pet supplies, [[out of print books]], DVDs and VHS tapes, food products and automotive supplies.
+
*[[Chain store]]
 
+
*[[Department store]]
Some items sold at a dollar store would be a dollar or less anyway, whereas other items are a substantially better deal.  There are four reasons a dollar store is able to sell merchandise at such a low price:
+
*[[E-commerce]]
 
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*[[Franchise]]
* The product is a [[Generic brand|generic]] or "knock-off", often specially manufactured for such stores.
+
*[[General store]]
* The product was manufactured cheaply for a [[foreign]] market but was then imported by an unauthorized distributor ([[grey market]] goods).
+
*[[Mail order business]]
* The product is purchased from another retail store or distributor as [[overstock]], [[closeout]] merchandise, or seasonal merchandise at the end of the season.
+
*[[Shopping mall]]
* The items were manufactured to coincide with the promotion of a motion picture, television show or special event (e.g. [[Olympic games]]), and are past their prime.
+
*[[Supermarket]]
 
 
Some stores carry mostly new merchandise, some mostly [[closeout]] merchandise bought from other stores below regular wholesale cost.
 
 
 
Depending upon the size, some variety stores may have a frozen food and drink section, and also one with fruits and vegetables. The [[Deal$]] and [[99 Cents Only Store]] chains in the U.S. are two such examples.
 
 
 
====History====
 
The concept of the variety store originated with the '''five and dime''', a store where everything cost either five cents (a [[nickel]]) or ten cents (a [[dime]]).  The originator of the concept may be [[F.W. Woolworth Company|Woolworths]], which began in [[1878]] in [[Utica]], [[New York]].  Other five and tens that existed in the USA included [[W.T. Grant]], [[J.J. Newberry's]], [[McCrory's]], [[Kresge]], [[McClellan's]], and [[Ben Franklin Stores]].  These [[store]]s originally featured [[merchandise]] [[price]]d at only five cents or ten cents, although later in the century, the price range of merchandise expanded.  Inflation eventually dictated that the stores were no longer able to sell any items for five or ten cents, and were then referred to as "variety stores". Given that $0.05 in 1913 when adjusted for inflation is $1.02 in 2006 dollars, this retailing concept has shown remarkable vitality over the years.
 
 
 
Well-known five and dimes included:
 
* [[Duckwall-ALCO Retail Stores]]
 
* [[Ben Franklin Stores]]
 
* [[Butler Brothers]]
 
* [[W.T. Grant]]
 
* [[Kmart Corporation|Kresge's]]
 
* [[Kress Stores]]
 
* [[McCrory Stores]]
 
** [[J.J. Newberry]]
 
** [[TG&Y]]
 
** [[McLellan's]]
 
** [[H.L. Green]]
 
** [[G.C. Murphy]]
 
* [[Neisner Brothers]] ("Big N" in later years)
 
* [[F.W. Woolworth Company|Woolworth's]]
 
* [[M.H. Fishman Stores]]
 
 
 
Of these, only Duckwall-ALCO and Ben Franklin continue to exist.
 
 
 
==== International ====
 
 
 
===== Europe =====
 
In [[Spain]] there are '''Todo a 100''' shops ("everything for 100 [[pesetas]]" (0.60 €)), although due to the introduction of the euro and inflation, most products cost a multiple of 0.60 or 1 euro. Most of these shops maintain their name in [[peseta]]s, and most of them have been renamed as '''Casi todo a 100''' ("almost everything for 100 [pesetas]") or '''Todo a 100, 300, 500 y más''' ("everything for 100, 300, 500 or more").
 
 
 
===== Asia =====
 
In [[Japan]], '''100-yen shops''' (百円ショップ hyaku-en shoppu) or "One coin shops" have been proliferating across Japan since around 2001. This is considered by some an effect of decade long recession of Japanese economy.
 
 
 
For a few years, 100-yen shops existed not as stores in brick-and-mortar building, but as vendors under temporary, foldable tents. They were (and still are) typically found near the entrance areas of supermarkets.
 
 
 
One major player in 100 Yen Shops is Hirotake Yano, the founder of [[Daiso]] Industries Co. Ltd., which runs the "The Daiso" (sic) chain. The first store opened in 1991, and there are now around 1,300 stores in Japan. This number is increasing by around 40 stores per month.
 
 
 
In [[Hong Kong]], department stores have opened their own 10-dollar-shop (USD 1.28) to compete in the market, and thus there are now "8-dollar-shop" (USD 1.02) in Hong Kong, in order to compete with a lower price.  Note that there is no sales tax in Hong Kong, but the relative price is higher than in Japan or the US.
 
 
 
===== South America =====
 
In [[Brazil]], these stores are called '''um e noventa e nove''' (one and ninety-nine, meaning [[BRL]] 1.99, about US 90 cents) usually written as '''1,99''' (note the decimal comma). They began to appear in the decade of [[1990]] possibly as a consequence of both the increase in the purchasing power of the low income classes after the curbing of [[hyperinflation]] and the decrease in middle-class net income due to a gradual increase in the national average tax load{{fact}}.
 
 
 
Brazilians sometimes use the expression ''um e noventa e nove'' to refer to cheap, low quality things or even people.
 
 
 
====Modern notable variety stores====
 
Variety stores are often [[Franchising|franchise]]s.
 
 
 
=====North America=====
 
* In the [[United States]]: [[Dollar Tree]], [[Dollar General]], [[Family Dollar]], [[Deal$]], [[The Dollar Market]], [[Family Dollar Stores]], [[Fred's]], [[Greenbacks]], [[99 Cents Only Store]], [[A Dollar]]
 
* In [[Canada]]: [[A Buck or Two]] (163+), [[Dollarama]] (300+), [[Everything For a Dollar Store]], [[Great Canadian Dollar Store]] (100+)
 
* In [[Mexico]]: [[Waldo's Dollar Mart]]
 
 
 
=====Europe=====
 
* In [[United Kingdom]]: [[Poundland]] (also called Euroland), Everythings a £1!, [[Superpound]].
 
* In the [[Netherlands]]: [[Hema (store)|Hema]] originally a "[[guilder]] store", now a [[department store]]
 
* In [[Germany]]: [[Pfennigland]]
 
* In [[France]]: Prisunic, Monoprix
 
* In [[Norway]]: '''Tier´n'''{{fact}}, which is a colloquialism for ten [[Norwegian krone|kroner]] = USD 1.40.
 
* In [[Sweden]]: '''Bubbeltian''', called by some '''Tian''', which is a colloquialism for ten  [[Swedish krona|kronor]] (crowns) = USD 1.25. Another chain that has been spreading in Sweden during the last seven years is [[Dollarstore (Sweden)|Dollarstore]] [http://www.dollarstore.se/se], a chain where everything costs either 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 or 100 [[Swedish krona|skr]], which is supposed to roughly equal one, two, three, four, five or ten dollars.  It is not related to the American store.
 
 
 
=====Asia=====
 
* In [[Japan]]: [[Daiso]], [[Daiei]], [[Cando]], [[Seria]], [[Watts]], [[Kyushu Plus]], [[Mono Trading]]
 
 
 
===== Australia =====
 
* In [[Australia]]: [[Two Dollar Shop]]
 
 
 
====Economics====
 
In [[economic]] terms, the [[pricing]] strategy of dollar stores is inefficient as some items may actually be sold elsewhere for less than a dollar.  However, this is balanced by the marketing efficiencies of a single price structure and consumers accept potentially overpriced items.  The pricing inefficiency becomes unacceptable at higher price points.  Thus there are no "100 dollar stores" where all items sell for $100; consumers expect to pay the correct amount as inaccuracies result in significant dollar amounts.
 
 
 
Most merchandise in these stores is imported cheaply from foreign countries, most commonly in [[Asia]].
 
 
 
====In popular culture====
 
*The play ''[[Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean]]'' refers to a five and dime, as do the songs "Blank Page" by [[The Smashing Pumpkins]], "[[Raspberry Beret]]" by [[Prince (artist)|Prince]], "[[Love at the Five and Dime]]" by [[Nanci Griffith]], "[[Summer of '69]]" by [[Bryan Adams]], "Motherland" by [[Natalie Merchant]] (and covered in 2003 by [[Joan Baez]]) "It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas" by [[Meredith Wilson]], "Thousands are Sailing" by [[The Pogues]] and "Rock My World (Little Country Girl)" by [[Brooks & Dunn]].
 
*[[Mort Dixon]] and [[Billy Rose]] wrote the song "I Found A Million Dollar Baby (In A Five and Ten Cent Store)" for Rose's 1931 stage show ''Crazy Quilt''.
 
*The US late-night talk/variety show ''[[The Tonight Show with Jay Leno|The Tonight Show]]'' often features a segment called "99 Cent Shopping Spree" with odd or unusual dollar store items sent in by viewers.
 
  
 +
==Notes==
  
 +
{{reflist}}
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
<references/>
+
* O'Brien, Larry and Harris, Frank ''Retailing: Shopping, Society, Space'' David Fulton Publishers, London, ISBN 1853461229 ;
 +
* Chung, Chuihua Judy (ed.) ''Harvard Design School Guide to Shopping'' Taschen, Köln, ISBN 3822860476 ;
 +
* Borking, Seline ''The Fascinating History of Shopping Malls'' MAB Groep BV, The Hague, ISBN 9080183423 ;
 +
* Hardwick, M. Jeffrey (2004) ''Mall Maker: Victor Gruen, Architect of an American Dream'' University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, ISBN 0812237625 ;
 +
* Kowinski, William Severini (2002) ''The Malling of America: travels in the United States of Shopping'' (2nd ed.) Xlibris Corporation, ISBN 1401036767 ;
 +
* Krafft, Manfred and Mantrala, Murali K. (eds.) (2006) ''Retailing in the 21st century: current and future trends'' Springer Verlag, New York, ISBN 3540283994 ;
  
 +
* Economywatch.com: complete portal on the world Economy
  
  
  
  
{{Credit2|Retailing|91879522|Variety_store|92235757|}}
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{{Credits|Retailing|168440049|}}

Revision as of 20:14, 3 November 2007


Piggly-Wiggly, the first self service store, 1916.

Retailing consists of the sale of goods or merchandise, from a fixed location such as a department store or kiosk, in small or individual lots for direct consumption by the purchaser.[1] 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 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.

Shops may be on residential streets, shopping streets with few or no houses, or in a shopping center or mall, but are mostly found in the central business district. Shopping streets may be for pedestrians only. Sometimes a shopping street has a partial or full roof to protect customers from precipitation. Retailers often provided boardwalks in front of their stores to protect customers from the mud. Online retailing, also known as e-commerce is the latest form of non-shop retailing (cf. mail order).

Shopping generally refers to the act of buying products. Sometimes this is done to obtain necessities such as food and clothing; sometimes it is done as a recreational activity. Recreational shopping often involves window shopping (just looking, not buying) and browsing and does not always result in a purchase.

Most retailers have employees learn facing, a hyperreal tool used to create the look of a perfectly-stocked store even when it is not.

Retail pricing

The pricing technique used by most retailers is cost-plus pricing. This involves adding a markup amount (or percentage) to the retailers cost. Another common technique is suggested retail pricing. This simply involves charging the amount suggested by the manufacturer and usually printed on the product bize the manufacturer.

In Western countries, retail prices are often so-called psychological prices or odd prices: a little less than a round number, e.g. $6.95. In Chinese societies, prices are generally either a round number or sometimes a lucky number. This creates price points.

Often prices are fixed and displayed on signs or labels. Alternatively, there can be price discrimination for a variety of reasons, where the retailer charges higher prices to some customers and lower prices to others. For example, a customer may have to pay more if the seller determines that he or she is willing to. The retailer may conclude this due to the customer's wealth, carelessness, lack of knowledge, or eagerness to buy. Another example is the practice of discounting for youths or students. Price discrimination can lead to a bargaining situation often called haggling, in which the parties negotiate about the price. Economists see this as determining how the transaction's total surplus will be divided into consumer and producer surplus. Neither party has a clear advantage, because of the threat of no sale, in which case the surplus vanishes for both.

Retailers who are overstocked, or need to raise cash to renew stocks may resort to "Sales," where prices are "marked down," often by advertised percentages - "50% off" for example."Sales" are often held at fixed times of the year, for example January sales, or end-of-season sales, or Blue Cross Sale

Retail Industry

Retail Industry has brought in phenomenal changes in the whole process of production, distribution and consumption of Consumer Goods all over the world. In the present world most of the developed economies are using the Retail Industry as their vital growth instrument. At present, among all the industries of U.S.A the Retail Industry holds the second place in terms of Employment Generation. In fact, the strength of the Retail Industry lies in its ability to generate large volume of employment.

Not only U.S but also the other developed countries like U.K, Canada, France, Germany are experiencing tremendous growth in their Retail Sectors. This boom in the Global Retail Industry was in many ways accelerated by the Liberalization of Retail Sector.

Observing this global upward trend of Retail Industry, now the developing countries like India are also planning to tap the enormous potential of the retail sector. Wal-Mart,the world's largest Retailer has been invited to India. Other popular Brands like Pantaloons, Big Bazar, Archies are rapidly increasing their market share in the retail sector. According to a survey, within 5 years, the Indian Retail Industry is expected to generate 10 to 15 million jobs by direct and indirect effects. This huge employment generation can be possible because of the fact that being dependent on the Retail Sector shares a lot of Forward and Backward Linkages.

Emergence of a strong Retail Sector can contribute immensely to the economic development of any country. With a dominant retail sector, the farmers and other suppliers can sell their produce directly to the major retail companies and can ensure stable profit. On the other hand, to ensure steady supply of goods, the Retail Companies can inject cash into the production system. This whole process can result into a more efficient production and distribution system for the economy as a whole.

Etymology

Retail comes from the French word retaillier which refers to "cutting off, clip and divide" in terms of tailoring (1365). It first was recorded as a noun with the meaning of a "sale in small quantities" in 1433 (French). Its literal meaning for retail was to "cut off, shred, paring." Like the French, the word retail in both Dutch and German (detailhandel and Einzelhandel respectively) also refer to sale of small quantities or items.[citation needed]

Retail types

There are three major types of retailing. The first is the market, a physical location where buyers and sellers converge. Usually this is done in town squares, sidewalks or designated streets and may involve the construction of temporary structures (market stalls). The second form is shop or store trading. Some shops use counter-service, where goods are out of reach of buyers, and must be obtained from the seller. This type of retail is common for small expensive items (e.g. jewelry) and controlled items like medicine and liquor. Self-service, where goods may be handled and examined prior to purchase, has become more common since the Twentieth Century. A third form of retail is virtual retail, where products are ordered via mail, telephone or online without having been examined physically but instead in a catalog, on television or on a website. Sometimes this kind of retailing replicates existing retail types such as online shops or virtual marketplaces such as Amazon.[2].

Buildings for retail have changed considerably over time. Market halls were constructed in the Middle Ages, which were essentially just covered marketplaces. The first shops in the modern sense used to deal with just one type of article, and usually adjoined the producer (baker, tailor, cobbler). In the nineteenth century, in France, arcades were invented, which were a street of several different shops, roofed over. counters, each dealing with a different kind of article was invented; it was called a department store. One of the novelties of the department store was the introduction of fixed prices, making haggling unnecessary, and browsing more enjoyable. This is commonly considered the birth of consumerism [3]. In cities, these were multi-story buildings which pioneered the escalator.

In the 1920s the first supermarket opened in the United States, heralding in a new era of retail: self-service. Around the same time the first shopping mall was constructed [4] which incorporated elements from both the arcade and the department store. A mall consists of several department stores linked by arcades (many of whose shops are owned by the same firm under different names). The design was perfected by the Austrian architecht Victor Gruen[5]. All the stores rent their space from the mall owner. By mid-century, most of these were being developed as single enclosed, climate-controlled, projects in suburban areas. The mall has had a considerable impact on the retail structure and urban development in the United States. [6]

In addition to the enclosed malls, there are also strip malls which are 'outside' malls (in Britain they are called retail parks. These are often comprised of one or more big box stores or superstores.

Non-traditional exterior of a SuperTarget, Jacksonville

Local shops can be known as brick and mortar stores in the United States. Many shops are part of a chain: a number of similar shops with the same name selling the same products in different locations. The shops may be owned by one company, or there may be a franchising company that has franchising agreements with the shop owners (see also restaurant chain).

Some shops sell second-hand goods. Often the public can also sell goods to such shops, sometimes called 'pawn' shops. In other cases, especially in the case of a nonprofit shop, the public donates goods to the shop to be sold (see also thrift store). In give-away shops goods can be taken for free.

There are also 'consignment' shops, which is where a person can place an item in a store, and if it sells the person gives the shop owner a percentage of the sale price. The advantage of selling an item this way is that the established shop give the item exposure to more potential buyers.

The term retailer is also applied where a service provider services the needs of a large number of individuals, such as with telephone or electric power.

Examples of retailing

Notes

  1. Distribution Services. Foreign Agricultural Service (February 9, 2000). Retrieved 2006-04-04.
  2. O'Brien, Larry and Frank Harris (1991) Retailing: shopping, society, space, David Fulton Publishers, London
  3. Chung, Chuihua Judy (ed.) (2001) Harvard Design School Guide to Shopping, Taschen, Köln
  4. Borking, Seline (1998) The Fascinating History of Shopping Malls, MAB Groep BV, The Hague
  5. Hardwick, Jeffrey (2004) Mall Maker: Victor Gruen, Architect of an American Dream, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.
  6. Kowinski, William Severini (2002) The Malling of America: travels in the United States of Shopping, Xlibris Corporstion.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • O'Brien, Larry and Harris, Frank Retailing: Shopping, Society, Space David Fulton Publishers, London, ISBN 1853461229 ;
  • Chung, Chuihua Judy (ed.) Harvard Design School Guide to Shopping Taschen, Köln, ISBN 3822860476 ;
  • Borking, Seline The Fascinating History of Shopping Malls MAB Groep BV, The Hague, ISBN 9080183423 ;
  • Hardwick, M. Jeffrey (2004) Mall Maker: Victor Gruen, Architect of an American Dream University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, ISBN 0812237625 ;
  • Kowinski, William Severini (2002) The Malling of America: travels in the United States of Shopping (2nd ed.) Xlibris Corporation, ISBN 1401036767 ;
  • Krafft, Manfred and Mantrala, Murali K. (eds.) (2006) Retailing in the 21st century: current and future trends Springer Verlag, New York, ISBN 3540283994 ;
  • Economywatch.com: complete portal on the world Economy


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