Tag Archives: diversity

Wholesale Distributors Meeting 21st Century Challenges

Expanding Services – Margin Upside

Product margins vary for Wholesale Distributors, based on products, territories, and their own efficiencies. But clearly, service margins are usually much higher. Along with outsourcing, manufacturers are also closing branch offices and service depots. Businesses don’t want the head count or the challenges associated with the resource management of diverse and remote facilities, logistics, and people.
That represents the upside for the wholesale distributor! Local market knowledge, the strength and weakness of the product catalog, and insight can be provided into the types of services that customers need. Today, many brand companies clearly know that their channel partners are the ‘sales and service arms’ of their companies. And many have put large investments in place, from sales training to product installation, repair training and certification.

For call centre management, this capability can also be leveraged to support clients’ businesses. Again, instead of making the WD just a cost centre to manage customer interactions, it can become another service and a source of revenue.
Manufacturing services are playing a great part in the distributor’s business model. From light ‘kitting’ and assembly to custom value-added-reseller (VAR) services, the proximity to customer markets, again, allows the WD to open discussion on these higher margin activities. Once the WD is in the ‘manufacturing game,’ customer-specific services such as configuration management, pre-loaded software and installation can all be done.

Diversity and Multi-channel

A big challenge for the WD is managing diverse methods for customer sales and self-service options, often called multi-channel. This is the ability to provide a ‘single face to the customer’ regardless of their preferred shopping method—direct sales, web, catalog, phone or showroom. Often, established customers use multiple channels. This is a huge issue if the processes, system and business tools can’t identify this customer and assure that all the appropriate services and agreements are instantly known. Does the sales person in the showroom know that this customer is entitled to a 30% discount? Does the system know that this customer, when ordering on-line, has higher priority when allocating scarce product? Can the 3rdparty warehouse have access to all the proper labeling and shipping information?
Foundationally, today’s WDs should be old pros at this type of challenge. Right?
Added to this are the complexity and diversity of the services, priorities, pricing, and ‘deals’ unique to each customer. In addition to providing transparency in sales and fulfillment, the WD’s business accounting software and billing system has to be precise, productive and transparent to the customer. Too often WDs are filled with paper tracking down pricing complaints, dealing with charge-back and settlements with customers, with no audit trail of transactions and service add-ons. Making the sale, only to lose margins in poor paperwork and ‘give backs’ to customers, who clearly did not really earn those discounts, is an all too familiar story. Diversity can cost. But it doesn’t have to be that way.

Wholesale Distributors Meeting 21st Century Challenges

Expanding Services – Margin Upside

Product margins vary for Wholesale Distributors, based on products, territories, and their own efficiencies. But clearly, service margins are usually much higher. Along with outsourcing, manufacturers are also closing branch offices and service depots. Businesses don’t want the head count or the challenges associated with the resource management of diverse and remote facilities, logistics, and people.
That represents the upside for the wholesale distributor! Local market knowledge, the strength and weakness of the product catalog, and insight can be provided into the types of services that customers need. Today, many brand companies clearly know that their channel partners are the ‘sales and service arms’ of their companies. And many have put large investments in place, from sales training to product installation, repair training and certification.

For call centre management, this capability can also be leveraged to support clients’ businesses. Again, instead of making the WD just a cost centre to manage customer interactions, it can become another service and a source of revenue.
Manufacturing services are playing a great part in the distributor’s business model. From light ‘kitting’ and assembly to custom value-added-reseller (VAR) services, the proximity to customer markets, again, allows the WD to open discussion on these higher margin activities. Once the WD is in the ‘manufacturing game,’ customer-specific services such as configuration management, pre-loaded software and installation can all be done.

Diversity and Multi-channel

A big challenge for the WD is managing diverse methods for customer sales and self-service options, often called multi-channel. This is the ability to provide a ‘single face to the customer’ regardless of their preferred shopping method—direct sales, web, catalog, phone or showroom. Often, established customers use multiple channels. This is a huge issue if the processes, system and business tools can’t identify this customer and assure that all the appropriate services and agreements are instantly known. Does the sales person in the showroom know that this customer is entitled to a 30% discount? Does the system know that this customer, when ordering on-line, has higher priority when allocating scarce product? Can the 3rdparty warehouse have access to all the proper labeling and shipping information?
Foundationally, today’s WDs should be old pros at this type of challenge. Right?
Added to this are the complexity and diversity of the services, priorities, pricing, and ‘deals’ unique to each customer. In addition to providing transparency in sales and fulfillment, the WD’s business accounting software and billing system has to be precise, productive and transparent to the customer. Too often WDs are filled with paper tracking down pricing complaints, dealing with charge-back and settlements with customers, with no audit trail of transactions and service add-ons. Making the sale, only to lose margins in poor paperwork and ‘give backs’ to customers, who clearly did not really earn those discounts, is an all too familiar story. Diversity can cost. But it doesn’t have to be that way.

Anatomy of Inbound Link Building

Link building is one of the most important and most effective methods in SEO. Employing a solid link building strategy is one of the best ways to increase organic traffic and boost your search engine rankings as well. In this article I will go into the anatomy of the link building process so you can gain a better understanding of how inbound links work and how to tweak your strategy for maximum results.

Dofollow vs Nofollow

There are a couple distinct differences in inbound links. There are dofollow and nofollow links. Both feature advantages and disadvantages. Dofollow means that any link juice will be passed on from the site through the link to your site. A nofollow link is the exact opposite. Traffic and visitors can get to your site, but search engine spiders will not follow the link and your site will not receive any “link juice.”

It is important to know the difference when you are building inbound links to your website. You will be putting in the time and effort, so be sure that you are being rewarded for your work. One good and fast way to check is by adding the SEO for Firefox extension. This handy tool will help you decipher if links on a particular page are dofollow are nofollow.

Anchor text

Another important factor in your link building strategy is using targeted anchor text in your inbound links. Each page on your website is a doorway page and an individual opportunity for new visitors to find your site. A good link building method that produces powerful results is using your target keywords for the page you are building links for in the anchor text of the link. For example, instead of having your link say yourcompany.com or click here, you could have your keyword hyperlinked.

Link diversity

Link diversity is another important aspect. Link diversity helps your link building strategy look more natural to the search engines. This means finding multiple different ways to build inbound links to your website. Find a good mixture of industry and authority sites to link to you and use a combination of 2-3 of your targeted keywords for that page. Mix some nofollow links in as well.

Continuity

Think of link building as an ongoing campaign with no end date. By now your competitors are seeing value in SEO, so you should never stop building inbound links to your website. It takes a lot of links to rank well for your desired keywords and it will take continuous improvement to keep your rankings.