ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Principles of Finance: Unit 7, Distribution 4 Views
Share It!
Description:
Distribution is the process of delivering a product to the buying public. Like, if your company makes drones, you may want to distribute them via, um... drone.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop distribution distribution what is it
- 00:08
well it's this and this and this distribution is the process of getting [child feeding ducks, person serving food, newspaper thrown onto doorstep]
- 00:14
your thing or product whatever it is food golf putters clever little
- 00:19
advertising messages double-sided forks all those out to your buying public
- 00:23
that's distribution distribution for a ketchup company is getting their ketchup [ketchup in store]
Full Transcript
- 00:28
stocked in great places in the store and sold in big fat volume through Safeway [forklift carrying load of ketchup]
- 00:34
and Kroger x' and 7-eleven and the fake blood company behind mom Massacre for
- 00:38
and time to take a blood bath seven okay but you're the CEO and founder of Blade [bloody magazines]
- 00:43
Runner a recently IP owed manufacturer of toy drones sold through retailers and
- 00:48
on your website to destinations all around the globe you are proud of the [Blade Runner drone merchandise]
- 00:52
fact that when you sell your drones through retailers they've given you
- 00:55
highly favorable distribution terms like usually they take a lot more than thirty
- 01:01
percent of the sales price for stocking your drones in prime shelf space that [merchandise stocked on store shelves]
- 01:06
they've charged you stocking fees and all kinds other fees in addition to way
- 01:10
more than thirty percent of the selling price but the retailer's love the rich
- 01:14
geeky people your drones attract into their stores the geeks with green come [people walk into store holding money]
- 01:19
into the store and buy other products after your drones have drawn them in so [woman carries multiples drones away]
- 01:24
the retailers are happy to cut you a bit of a break and get lots of drone lovers
- 01:28
you know and drones on the shelves going there yeah
- 01:32
so that's physical quote brick-and-mortar unquote retail
- 01:35
distribution physical goods get shipped from your manufacturing plant in Beijing [world map with plane flying across it]
- 01:40
to your American warehouse in Peoria to the shelves of Walmart and Target and
- 01:45
shopping malls all over the country in world brick mortar physical distribution
- 01:49
lots of UPS hauling but a kind of competitor to this distribution exists [drone website]
- 01:54
you have your own website and on Bladerunner comm you respect retail
- 01:59
pricing that is you sell your own product on your own website for the same
- 02:04
price that retailers sell it for if target stores are selling your drones
- 02:09
for $2000 Bladerunner comm website offers this
- 02:13
same product for the same price even though when you're selling it to
- 02:17
brick-and-mortar guys you know you get a lot less and you make a lot less profit
- 02:21
from them right it's a big deal because if you're selling to the public for 2 [writing on white board]
- 02:25
grand and you get $1,500 from a retailer for a minute cost you 1100 bucks well
- 02:31
you make $400 on the sale to a brick and mortar retailer but if you sell it
- 02:35
directly off your website now you're making 2,000 - the 1100 bucks it cost
- 02:39
you or $900 but so why do you respect pricing then why do you keep your prices
- 02:44
high basically the same price that the retailers are selling them for why
- 02:48
because if you undercut the brick-and-mortar guy's on price they'd [man leaves store without buying drone]
- 02:53
stop selling your product and the retailer's know that you're a public [drone product gets kicked out of building]
- 02:56
company and if they ever pulled you out of their stores
- 02:59
you'd miss Wall Street earnings expectations in revenue also and growth
- 03:03
and all that stuff and your stock would be crushed you and the brick-and-mortar [hand crushes flower]
- 03:07
guys yet you're frenemies and gasp welcome to the disadvantage side of
- 03:11
being a publicly traded company on the street because you're public you have
- 03:16
few secrets and you're kind of vulnerable in the sense that you have
- 03:20
immediate feedback on the price of your stock and the value of your company and
- 03:24
it forces you to both think short term at times while you're trying to think
- 03:29
long term long term value anyway value builder for your company when you sell a
- 03:33
unit for $2,000 on your own website while you keep all 2,000 of it - and 20 [writing on white board]
- 03:39
30 40 bucks and credit card charges and there's little shipping but usually you
- 03:43
charge the customer for that it's way higher contribution margin when you sell
- 03:47
it off your own website like you keep more profit and when you do sell it off
- 03:51
your website well then you know who your customer is so you can then spam email [person clicking drone website]
- 03:57
communicate to them all kinds of annoying ads for upgrades and future
- 04:01
sales of drone things coming their way and they can add on for 99.95 if they
- 04:08
order this week and buy some drone insurance yeah yeah that's it we can
- 04:12
sell them that as well when you sell to a brick-and-mortar guy well you don't [man in store that cells drones]
- 04:16
get that data so when you sell off your own website that's generally a good
- 04:19
thing and owning the customer allows you to sell and already prove an interested
- 04:24
buyer all kinds of crap in the future so there's a big fork [drone throws flames]
- 04:28
in the road revolving around whether you should focus on selling through [road signs]
- 04:31
brick-and-mortar outlets and old proven paths in the world or whether you should
- 04:35
sell through your own website which has unclear results yet and it'll always
- 04:40
compete against Amazon and well it carries costs and other kinds of risks [amazon businessmen]
- 04:45
like fraudsters and the management of direct to home shipping and all kinds of
- 04:50
other things so one big fat strategic question should you spend big money to [writing on white board]
- 04:54
market your own website and maybe start to control your own distribution better
- 04:59
relying on a bunch of price pinched retailers is kind of a scary thing to go [man hides under bed covers]
- 05:04
to bed to each night and you remember Toys R Us went famously bankrupt the
- 05:08
targets probably not too far behind them and Sears is pretty much already there
- 05:12
so you know SHhhh in the numbers and you're thinking that almost playing
- 05:16
defense you have to build your own website because the brick and mortar
- 05:19
guys are all dying well the cost to upgrade your Bladerunner comm website to
- 05:23
be a top-notch one would cost you a million bucks it's mostly creative work [writing on white board]
- 05:27
painting it all pretty shooting some demo videos of crazy people strapping [dog strapped to drone]
- 05:31
their dogs underneath the drones dressing the dogs as dragons and flying
- 05:35
them all over the backyard so you did your IPO not long ago and you had
- 05:40
budgeted a big part of that 50 million bucks now on your balance sheet to
- 05:43
market your website improve distribution and touch your customer legally more [hand comes out of computer to poke person]
- 05:48
after spending a million bucks to make your website all pretty collecting crazy
- 05:52
videos of users while there's now forty nine million dollars left over and
- 05:55
capital to go spend and you comfortably note that in the normal course of doing
- 05:59
business you generate a few million bucks albeit seasonally per month in [businessman laying back in chair while money piles up]
- 06:03
cash so in theory at least the dollar amount on your balance sheet should
- 06:07
continue to get fatter and presumably whatever you spend that 50 ish million
- 06:12
bucks on will produce more revenue more profits better earnings etc or you
- 06:16
wouldn't be spending the money in the first place alright well after much
- 06:19
internal debate you decide to spend 40 million dollars in Internet direct
- 06:24
target marketing ie Google keywords that you just go by and yeah you buy a ton of
- 06:29
traffic the dough is dropped and you get affiliate clicks to your site on that of [traffic on highway]
- 06:33
those billion clicks you get 10 million people who actually do stuff on
- 06:37
Bladerunner like watching the videos play with the
- 06:40
product configurator read about the performance and so on and after this
- 06:44
marketing campaign you do the tally which shows that a hundred thousand
- 06:48
people actually bought a unit so is this a good use of your precious capital for
- 06:53
distribution or not well your costs are eleven hundred bucks a unit and you
- 06:57
retail them for two grand the gross profit then was nine hundred each but [writing on white board]
- 07:01
you need to subtract credit card fees which retailers don't deal with because
- 07:05
well they just pay by wire which is almost free and there are some handling
- 07:09
shipping and restocking fees for returns which retailers also handle so to be
- 07:13
fair you really have to take off about a hundred bucks from the unit sale to
- 07:17
compare apples to apples and not to kumquat [apples and kumquats]
- 07:20
so you made eight hundred bucks per unit relative to their brick-and-mortar
- 07:23
retail guys on a hundred thousand units incrementally sold on this forty million [writing on white board]
- 07:28
dollar drop you just grossed eighty million dollars in profits from this
- 07:32
forty million in spend and you know a hundred thousand rich geeks who like
- 07:36
your drones and swag well things feel great and you were able [man throwing drone swag into crowd]
- 07:40
to pull this off in ninety days and yeah web traffic moves bath way faster than
- 07:44
brick-and-mortar retailers so when you proudly report the next quarter
- 07:48
estimates for next year's earnings get published as two dollars and the whisper
- 07:53
number goes to three dollars a share well the stock zooms to a hundred
- 07:57
dollars valuing your company now at two billion dollars right twenty million
- 08:02
shares out ten hundred bucks each everyone thinks you're a genius so all [business magazines]
- 08:05
is great right and not so much there were only about 300,000 units in total
- 08:11
that you sold last year and you just took a hundred thousand of them away
- 08:14
from the retailers who Brun yeah so all of the sudden the traffic of drone sales
- 08:18
at Walmart and Target and the other brick-and-mortar places actually
- 08:22
declines and oh dear the kindly loving buyers at Walmart decided that there was
- 08:27
another new whiz-bang gadget that would fly off the shelves on wealth less [fidget spinners on store shelves]
- 08:31
literally but generate more profits for Walmart so they replaced you by contract
- 08:36
they finished selling the remaining 14,000 units you'd left with them and
- 08:39
then they waved buh-bye meanwhile the street with its insatiable
- 08:42
appetite for growth and ceiling breaking never stopped raising estimates on you a [goblin bouncing up and down]
- 08:47
chicken in every pot and a drone in every garage it's
- 08:51
new thing alright so what do you do now well you're officially worried about now
- 08:54
missing your next quarter pressure is massive to keep your enormous hundred [man biting nails in business meeting]
- 08:58
times earnings multiple you have employees shopping for Porsches
- 09:02
journalists waiting to laud you and clever tax planners waiting to buy homes
- 09:06
for you in the Caymans with the clever ways to avoid paying your share and a
- 09:10
quarter goes by and surprise surprise you miss badly watch the next video in [man throws basketball and misses hoop]
- 09:15
this unit to continue the saga
Up Next
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
Related Videos
What is bankruptcy? Deadbeats who can't pay their bills declare bankruptcy. Either they borrowed too much money, or the business fell apart. They t...
What's a dividend? At will, the board of directors can pay a dividend on common stock. Usually, that payout is some percentage less than 100 of ear...
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...