Strategic Groups of British Market

Business Article Directory, Get Free Reprint Articles and Business Content for your site with
article directory
54866 *recent articles in 509 categories Last article added 11/15/07
 
Article Categories
 
Reviews
 
Site Menu
 
Site Search


 
ArticlePros.com » Business » Sales Management » Strategic Groups of British Market

  • Date: 2007-06-13
  • Author: Andrew Schwartz
  • All articles by this author
  • Visit author's website
  • Strategic Groups of British Market


    Related Sales Management Articles

         Retail market of Great Britain at present has more than 102,000 grocery stores. There are four sectors that market can be divided into. The first group is expediency stores the average area of which is 3,000 sq. feet and they put on the market products from no less than eight grocery groups. Such stores are working for long hours among them are Londis, SPAR, Co-operative Group. The second group, developing convenience and customary retail stores that have the sales spot less than 3,000 sq. feet among them are forecourts, grocers, off-licenses, and newsagents. The next group includes marginal channels which are small and usually are represented by doorstep delivery, kiosks, post offices, home-shopping. The last group contains superstores and supermarkets. Stores from this last category in general have sales area from 3,000 to 25,000 sq. feet with a wide variety of sales items. Although supermarkets above all concentrate in groceries, other non-food things are also sold there. Companies like Asda, Sainsbyru’s, Morrison, and Tesco belong to the group of supermarkets, they are close opponents both in goods and services offered, terms of the promote they operate in and also in whole policy used to enlarge business. The next features are common for this strategic group: Numerous locations all over the world with spotlight on international investment; cost minimization as a consequence of large balance operations; insistent price opposition; convenient locations with single parking lots; a broad range of goods with the primary focus on groceries and non-food products being secondary; products are served to every person; 24/7 operations; legal / traveling / financial services can be accessible; self-service. The significant feature of this group that is distinguished from new groups that are present in the marketplace is the politics of cost minimization. Until middle 90’s Sainsbury used to be the market leader in Great Britain; the strategic mistake was made by business managers when they made a choice to leave the standard focus on the value to brightening up of interior and additional brand promotion. The fact that Sainsbury is now only on the third position in the market, this proves that the prime focus of the group stays on price cuts.

    More articles from this pro: http://www.ArticlePros.com/author.php?Andrew Schwartz


    More on Business and Sales Management can be found here.
     

    Get this article to go

    RSS | JScript | Email | HTML

     

    About the author

    Andrew Shwartz is staff-writer at Custom-Writing.org, <a href="http://custom-writing.org/dissertation-writing" target="_blank">writing a dissertation</a>. Andrew has been providing assistance to students with <a href="http://custom-writing.org/custom-term-paper-writing" target="_blank">custom papers term</a> and <a href="http://custom-writing.org/custom-research-paper" target="_blank">custom research paper</a> for over 2 years. He is always willing to share his own experiences, provide quality custom writing services and writing tips to students of all academic levels.

    http://custom-writing.org

     
    Email options
       

    ** Check all that apply **

     

    This article has been accessed 553 times since 2007-06-13.


    Home  •  Search  •  Add Your Own Article  •  RSS feeds  •  JavaScript Feeds  •   •  Set as Homepage  •  Add to Favourites
    Disclaimer: The information presented and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors
    and do not necessarily represent the views of ArticlePros.com and/or its partners.
    Copyright ArticlePros.com © 2005. All Rights Reserved