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ON EFFECTS OF THE PRODUCER-RETAILER-CONSUMER RELATIONSHIP’S KNOWLEDGE ON THE MARKETING FUTURE Purcărea Theodor Romanian-American University, Faculty of Management-Marketing, 1B, ExpoziĠiei Bvd., Bucharest, Email: [email protected], Telephone: 0722251373 RaĠiu Monica Paula Romanian-American University, Faculty of Internal and International Tourism Economy, 1B, ExpoziĠiei Bvd., Bucharest, E-mail: [email protected], Telephone: 0720891467 Abstract: The main purpose of this paper is the today’s interactive information (data) exchange between producers, retailers and consumers that takes place on the market. It focuses on the creative process of investigating and making connections between different ways of thinking about marketing future. We also try to develop some thoughts in understanding this “marketing world” by analyzing the significance of distribution channels knowledge to consumers’ benefit. Key words: marketplace challenges; trade marketing; consumer experience; efficient consumer response, consumer insight; critical marketing; participation marketing; revolution in marketing; new distribution channels; selling solutions; enhance communication; strategic logistic; Romanian retail market. An interactive information exchange takes place on the market in our days. Marketing must help confused consumers to be more successful in facing the offerings’ proliferation and to make the right choice. Consumer marketing targets the consumer. But who knows the consumer better? The retailers, of course, who know what is happening at the level of the store and want to improve the category management, while the manufacturers need theirs point of view: a feedback which represents the synergy of the partnership’s knowledge in which are involved the producer, the distributor and the consumer. As consumers, we all require information about this marketing knowledge and we all need to be able to think of it having a deep understanding of the main marketing explanations that give us a framework for making sense of the “marketing world” around us. Therefore, the need to create and deliver information about goods/services - to the consumer - is more than obvious, and it is challenging to take part to the creative process of investigating and making connections between different ways of thinking about marketing future. And also to try to express some thoughts about marketing world by analyzing the dynamic distribution channels’ to the consumers’ benefit (the increase of the use of marketing techniques; the increase in the use of the Web by those responsible with marketing, etc.). Trends in consumer behavior research According to Geac there are major implications for existing distribution channels: logistic has become an indispensable competitive weapon within most distribution environments; both customers and suppliers are demanding more and more access to the company’s data and at any time of day or night; sales people and managers often spend a disproportionately large amount of time on sales forecasts, reporting, tracking and performance reviews. Efficient distribution with adequate pre and post sale support is a part of the competitive process which brings significant benefits to the consumer. Consumers’ feelings about the product depends on product distribution and consumer experience during the purchasing process. Consumers’ perception about the product affects how they mentally position the product in relation to competitive products. As distributor’s actions can affect how consumers view the marketed products and as the marketer’s distribution system must deliver these products to the right place, in the right amount, in the right condition (efficacious), at the right time and for the right cost (efficiency), marketers must look for distribution assistance for their channel arrangements. Successful distribution (retailing) involves making sure that stores are stocked with the right products at the right prices at the time the consumer wants them. Efficient Consumer Response is a performing strategy 1143 based on today’s technology tools - that causes fundamental changes in the business process – which provides more added value to consumer. The three pillars of ECR are: providing consumer value, removing costs that do not add value, maximizing value and minimizing inefficiency throughout the distribution chain. Focusing on products and brands choice rather than on channel choice is a current trend in consumer behavior research, but nobody can now deny the obvious impact of the proliferation of channels on the consumer behavior. Nina Michaelidou, David C. Arnott and Sally Dibb argued that channel characteristics are determined - in comparison with multiple choice of products and by taking into account the elements used by Hoyer and Ridgway, 1984 - by channel involvement, channel perceived risks, channel loyalty, channel similarity and channel hedonism. It can also be included other aspects like self confidence, information seeking, channel commitment, enduring channel involvement. They state that the increased choice and the decision complexity is likely to impact on behavioral aspects such as brand switching. In the case of FMCG consumers obtain the marketed products by requiring them while visiting retail outlets, retailers selling in many different formats (physical location or virtual space) and using multiple distribution methods. Distribution fulfils a variety of economic and social functions and has a regulatory role to play in the confrontation with the permanent upstream and downstream diversification. The business environment is complex and requires a high flexibility from the companies (entrepreneurs). It is considered that flexibility is the condition to success in the complex global environment; temporal dimension is indispensable to any approach of complexity. So, this dynamic business environment has to be managed in such a way to produce a competitive advantage immediately. In a world of continuous change, where the boundary between the organizations becomes even more complex, reacting to the marketplace’s challenges means to build architecture that will flexibly integrate corporate information. Today we are speaking about “knowledge-based strategies”, “knowledge-based operations”, and an integrated model of battle is at the same time cerebral and cyber, takes place on land, air, sea, and space; and it is producing predictive analysis, and creating anticipatory decision models. As this “marketing world” is governed more by perceptions, marketers need an adequate marketing roadmap to arrive at the best positioning on the targeted market. They have to know how customers perceive them, having the ability of being perceived as they really are, trying to offer their customers expertise and insights because they really need to have someone buy, so they must help their customers to decide how to buy. To understand what customers expect marketers must be value driven, implementing the knowledge obtained, overcoming the barriers to communications, translating each value proposition into the customer’s language, thinking of expertise as an abundant resource and time to respond as a scarce one, enabling the future. The knowledge process makes up this construction in the complex business environment whose components can be easily understood by well trained marketers; this understanding is essential and influences the result of the knowledge process. Without knowledge through education, innovation suffers in the context of stiff competition. Education is the most important instrument of the company for adaptation to economic change, as an opportunity. As the business is becoming more focused on processes, the marketing process should provide the foundation for the organizational structure in such a way as to deliver the very basic of what customer expects, improving customer retention, looking after what the ultimate customer wants to buy and achieving increased profitability. It is important to renew organizational knowledge continuously - developing a knowledge culture - and within this framework to improve communication between internal suppliers and customers, by supporting a cross-functional process and adopting an interactive value perspective, according to a relationship value management, working in a way that enables the relationship marketing process to deliver on keystakeholder expectation. We have to mention that the twenty-first century is characterized by the emphasis of business marketing on developing relationships – and not on generating transactions – within a new focus on customer, requiring increased levels of information about its needs. During “the Year of Differentiation”, 2007 a greater emphasis on adding new services can be remarked. 1144 Focusing on what is important to customers In the “next-generation marketing”, customer experience is going behind the lines, "audience is king" so, let’s “learn more about the customer and how they think”. First of all a company has to see if it is possible to integrate this customer orientation and how can be this possible. According to Don E. Shultz – as Professor Emeritus-in-Service of Integrated Marketing Communications at the Medill School at Northwestern University, President of the consulting firm Agora, Inc. and founding editor of the Journal of Direct Marketing - the first thing is to stop thinking about products (ensuring the transition from product to service) and start thinking about customers as income flows, then think about all of the ways customers touch you, or you touch them. When a firm is oriented towards customers it is able to see how customers respond to its efforts to meet their needs and expectations. This customer alignment and integration presumes having good customer data and using it efficiently. Customers always appreciate the manner in which the company and its partners deal with dissatisfaction, inefficiency and opportunity. The “machinery” made up of the employees’ engagement and the clients’ engagement can significantly influence the company’s performance. Why is this phenomenon possible? Because in reality people feel more than they think, while “models” require and expected too much thinking from customers. Today’s marketing people - brand managers - are more preoccupied about customer engagement rather than finding new customers, the difficulty consisting in the fact that the recognition of the customer engagement’s need and the actual measurement of the real engagement are two different things. And real engagement is the consequence of the marketing/communication programme which produces and increased level of brand perception as meeting and overwhelming customer expectations (“brand equity”), while customer expectations are generally based on emotions. Shultz considers that marketers’ training must be focused on what is important to customers, not to the company because there is an increasing retailers’ focus on trying to build their own brands, their own private labels. On the other side, the manufacturer has to start thinking about how to become a better partner for the retailers in terms of capturing, sharing and using information and data. Successful retailing involves making sure that stores are stocked with the right products at the right prices at the time the consumer wants them and this aim can be achieved by implementing ECR strategy. Implementing ECR means dramatic change in current business practices. ECR is about redesigning the processes, altering paradigms and changing attitudes. Proper management of the ECR process is effective in mitigating resistance and increasing co-operation. A clear communication by top management of the benefits and rewards of ECR will make the process more effective. To implement ECR, distributors and suppliers are making fundamental changes in the business process using today's technology tools. Their goals are clear: provide consumers with the products and services they want; reduce inventory; eliminate paper transactions; streamline product flow. At the same time, from a retailer point of view, the real challenge is how to deal with Wal-Mart – that is the 21st Economy of the World - which pioneered in replacing inventory with information and has the very best distribution system in the world. Nobody can ignore the “Wal-Mart Symphony”…played on a global scale “over and over 24/7/365: delivery, sorting, packing, distribution, buying, manufacturing, reordering, delivery, sorting, packing…coordinating disruptionprone supply with hard-to-predict demand…the world’s most efficient supply chain…constantly looking for new ways to cooperate with its customers”. Trading partners are asked to work together in order to increase value to the consumer. The intensifying competition among trading partners often presents an apparent barrier to achieving this. However, just the opposite is true – ECR allows companies to seek a competitive advantage by demonstrating their superior ability in working with trading partners to add value for the consumer. The consumer experience and consumer-created media It’s very important to understand the consumer behavior, how customers buy products, what products are purchased together and what is the meaning of a satisfied consumer experience – which can be defined as the cognitions and feelings the consumer experiences during the use of a product or service; managers’ goal must be the converting of merely satisfied customers into completely satisfied customers: only the completely satisfied customers should be considered loyal. 1145 That is why we need to see what kind of customer data there are inside the company and bring all of the various types of captured and stored information together - by conducting an audit of all customer information that is available within the organization. But as we face some practical obstacles in making the needed changes we have to assign a budget and it ideally should be coming from the top of the organization (the cost really has to be an organizational expense, not a departmental or group expense). The first business command should be this kind of a holistic overview of all of the customer data and customer information and customer institutional knowledge. Vincent Grimaldi argues that resistance to change – which is ingrained in human nature - makes good marketing difficult in practice. He adds that in order to maintain competitive company’s marketing must be given a role that is both strategic and systemic, managing to live in a symbiosis with the increasingly demanding customers and the changing environment, going beyond marketing’s support role and penetrating most aspects of the organization. What is marketing in fact? It is worth to consider the opinions expressed by Grimaldi that marketing is the corporate equivalent of a central nervous system; it is an art and also a management science calling for the implementation of rigorous processes and metrics; it should be both creative and accountable. Grimaldi insists further that: the Baldridge criteria for performance excellence puts marketing in a leading role, together with leadership and strategic planning; because the customer is at the very heart (the core) of the problem, great strategies are developed around him; the corporate strategy ends up being totally customer-driven ensuring that every step of the process is developed with a market quick feedback and… obtaining the customers’ ”Wow”. “Marketing is what the organization does”, says Shultz. The marketing department ought to be the one that is aligning the organization, taking into account that there are lots of tools, tactics, techniques that can be outsourced - including strategy - rather than having those done by employees. Within this framework Shultz’s company has proposed a “media consumption model”, because every developed approach is based on distributing messages through the media and what is measured is distribution: every consumer today is creating his or her own internal information network, having an internal model for how he evaluates information sources and how he solves his problems (internal networks created for themselves). Consumers have created the ability to not only give advice, but also to get advice from multiple sources and, that is why marketers need to look at how customers and consumers and users communicate with each other, by going back to the consumer-created media. In the same time, Jonah Bloom shows that “we now live in a culture of instantly disseminated opinion”, everything in the public domain being instantly spread and dissected and in such a world marketers have to accept that they won't please all the people all the time: consumers are in control and messages are reinterpreted and criticized. Achieving a broader perspective on marketing There is a continuous debate within the academic marketing community about the so-called “critical marketing” and providing critical understanding: of the organization and impact of marketing operations; of the factors that are shaping marketing activities; of marketing professions and morality on the marketplace; of the mechanisms used by marketers for creating and supporting customer values; of consumer culture and the impact of brands; of the development and implementation of marketing strategies and programs; of the impacts of the marketing concepts’ and techniques’ application in a competitive environment; of marketing’s interpretation within the framework of the relationship marketing; of redefining markets and marketing. Marketers or not, we are all consumers and cannot escape the market, but we are not passive recipients of what marketers do, that is why – sustains Michael Saren, Professor of Marketing at Leicester University School of Management, UK – marketers must look at the marketing phenomenon as consumers experience it, as active participants in it, by achieving a broader perspective on marketing. And, the key to achieving such a new perspective is building of customer relationships, by understanding that customer relationships are the most important company’s asset needing to be managed. 1146 This “interaction approach” (Industrial Marketing and Purchasing-IMP), whose essential aim is to create value for both parties, is based on the idea that this process of interactivity takes place between active buyers and sellers that are individually significant to each other. According to Saren, the “critical marketing” extends its domain and gives a specific example to demonstrate the necessity that the academic discipline of marketing must encompass the wide range of activities and effects that it manifests in practice today. The recent stream of research asserting that the human body itself is the site of all consumption, people’s identities and self-esteem are closely associated with their bodies. He also adds the problematic issue of relevance in marketing, considering the fact that in management and marketing relevance itself has often been defined in a restricted manner to imply usefulness as measured by a sub-group of either practitioners or self-selected intermediaries. The future marketing department: more customer insight Three years ago, being in Bucharest, Philip Kotler attracted our attention to the imperative of “the development of better abilities in innovation, differentiation, branding and service, in a word marketing”, recommending the development of a stronger marketing: holistic, strategic, technological, financially oriented. The “father of marketing” emphasizes, among other things, the need to resort to a lateral marketing, conceiving new product and service ideas. In Kotler’s opinion marketing is the art of brand building. He also showed that one of the shortest definitions of marketing is the profitable fulfillment of needs. The commercial space is no longer what it was, more and more marketing people acknowledge the need to have a more complete, cohesive approach which goes beyond traditional applications of the marketing concept. An approach that attempts to acknowledge and reconcile the sphere and complexity of marketing activities is represented by holistic marketing (development, design and implementation of programs, processes and marketing activities which acknowledge content and interdependencies) whose components are: relational marketing, integrated marketing, internal marketing and marketing of social responsibilities. Marketing management is - according to the same authorized opinion - the art and science of choosing target markets and winning, preserving and increasing the client base by creating, delivering and communicating a superior value to the client. This - the client - has, in many cases, undefined preferences, which are ambiguous or even conflicting. The famous Al Ries wrote - in the spring of 2006 – that marketing study starts with psychology study: if psychology is the systematic study of human behaviour, than marketing is the systematic study of human behaviour on the market. In order to discover how the company can better satisfy customers’ needs, marketing people have to work together with the company’s clients, offering assistance and trying to understand their preferences. That is why Kotler considers “participation marketing” as a more appropriate concept, compared to “permission marketing”. On the other hand, Kotler’s mentor - Peter Drucker - says that the purpose of marketing is to know and understand the customer so well that the product or service is perfectly suited to him and sells itself. But customers respond differently to the company’s image and the company’s brand; the identity - the way in which a company identifies itself, self-positions itself or positions its products - and the image - the way in which the public perceives the company or its products/services – require a distinction. The key to branding - emphasized Kotler and Keller - is the customers’ perception of the differences between the brands belonging to a category of products. A branding strategy identifies which elements of a brand (name, term, sign, symbol, design, a combination of the previous) the company chooses to apply to the different products it sells. In order to serve multiple market segments often multiple brands are required (the basic principle in designing a brand portfolio is the maximization of market coverage, so that no potential customer is ignored). But how do we get customer insight? The future’s marketing organization is going to have employees who can deal with both push and pull forms of marketing, by recognizing that today’s real challenge is to be very responsive, and to give feedback (the responses generated by the marketing come back to customer service, sales, technical support), so that the marketing people have relevance and view of what the responses are. Brand experiences today - according to the same Don E. Shultz - are the responsibility of part-time marketers - employees, retailers, customer service people who are not trained as marketing people but they are doing most of the marketing for the organization being on the ground responding to 1147 people – and not of marketers. That is why one of the challenges is to get budget starting by thinking about customers as flows of income, aggregating those customers up and, building a financial calculation so that it is an investment and a return (beyond the actual marketing department as a cost center that can’t measure, financially, the returns the marketing organization is generating). The main distribution chains in Romania It is well known that marketing’s study object is a result of the economists’ research (from the end of the XIXth century) referring to the nature of distribution process. An article published in Fortune magazine (April, 1962), where Peter Druker considered that distribution represents “the African continent of economy”, led to a significant development of marketing theory referring to the conceptualization of physical distribution (marketing logistic). Eleven years ago, in a study about goods distribution, there were identified two main factors which create the motivation which is necessary to the distribution progress: technological innovation and stiff competition. Philip Kotler mentioned - in a book published three years ago - that marketing people use three types of marketing channels: communication channels, distribution channels and service channels. Distribution channels - that are used for displaying, selling or delivery of product or service to the consumer or user include distributors, engross sellers, retailers, agents. In a market approach, competitors are represented by those companies which satisfy the same requirement to the consumer. The competitive advantage is referring to a company’s ability to perform better than its competitors in one way or another. Long term competitive advantage is a profitable target for companies. Distribution efficiency requires finding out inventory, location and transportation savings. Kotler and Keller underline the need to build a creative marketing organization, the capacity for strategic innovation and imagination coming from the assembly of instruments, processes, abilities and measures which will allow the company to generate more and better ideas than their competition. And this requires also assuming social responsibility because the business success and the client’s continuous satisfaction are closely related to the implementation of high leadership standards of a business and marketing. But according to Nirmalya Kumar, “management has forgotten, or never realized, the ability of the marketing function to help drive organizational change”. CEOs have lost faith in marketing primarily for two reasons: shareholders and analysts are pressuring corporations and their CEOs to deliver against shortterm profit and revenue objectives; marketers are too often seen as specialists and tacticians talking about the marketing-mix rather than strategists who help CEOs lead organization-wide initiatives that have strategic, cross-functional, and bottom-line impact. To improve value the company’s value, marketers must engage CEOs and the top leadership in meeting the two marketplace challenges that all companies face: enhancing customer loyalty and reducing downward pressure on prices. To meet this, companies are looking for growth-related initiatives like expanding to new and growing channels of distribution, selling solutions instead of products, and pursuing radical rather than incremental innovation. The challenge consists in finding which aspects of marketing are really scale-sensitive versus those elements where local adaptation truly increases value for customers. The methods used - to reduce the tension between designing programs and products that are global versus local - are: increasing understanding through market research that allows the examination of this issue in a more "objective" manner; moving managers across countries to enhance communication. This preoccupation towards distribution efficientization is also demonstrated by the role played by the unique European market that is referring to: the creation of new market opportunities in Europe; costs savings and increase of productivity as a result of distribution methods’ eficientization – required by the sustaining of business strategies. Efficient distribution facilitates innovation in the distribution process, new technology implementation, and also low price products’ at high quality and high service for the client. Romania is an important market for the large international distribution networks, a fact proven by the investments that continue to increase constantly, due to the following factors: • Romania is a continually developing (increasing) market, with a significant economic growth rate, both effective and forecasted, above other European economies, the consumption market being far from saturated; 1148 • the size of the Romanian market is significant (second place in terms of size in Central and Eastern Europe, after Poland); • the average income per capita registers growth; • on the first of January 2007 Romania has become member of the European Union. In the past years Romania has recovered some of the gap registered from the point of view of the development of the retail market - even if there was another significant intermediary network of small shops and kiosks. Important structural changes have taken place through the development of national logistic distribution structures. The new formats – cash & carry (replacing wholesalers), supermarket (still representing one of the main types of modern retail outlet), hypermarket (offering maximum product range and good discounting performance) and discount have remodeled the image of domestic trade. A substantial change in the population’s consumption attitude can be mentioned, behaviour which in fact is the promoter of the development of retail networks. At present numerous international distribution networks are active on the Romanian market: Metro, Carrefour, Intermarche (Interex), Rewe Zentral AG (Selgros, Billa, XXL Mega Discount), Louis Delhaize (Cora, Mega Image, Profi), BricoStore (each having a network of stores developed according to the target market and the specifics of the group), Auchan, Ikea, …waiting for and Tesco. Their entry on the Romanian market was determined by the development potential and opportunities offered. The entry of new players on the Romanian retail market and the development intentions of those already existing cause the growth of competition at a market level and consumer is the one who gains important advantages. No. of stores No Name Group Store Type Total Bucharest Entry onto the Romanian Market 1 Carrefour Hyparlo Group Hypermarket 10 5 2001 2 " Louis Delhaize Hypermarket 3 2 2003 3 Real Metro Group Hypermarket 13 1 2006 4 Auchan Auchan Group Hypermarket 3 1 2006 5 Pic Grupul Pic Hypermarket 4 0 2004 6 Metro Cash&Carry Metro Group Cash&Carry 23 4 1996 7 Selgros Cash&Carry Rewe AG Cash&Carry 17 3 2000 8 BricoStore BricoStore Do It Yourself 9 4 2002 9 Praktiker Metro Group Do It Yourself 14 2 2002 10 Spar Hypermarket Spar Hypermarket 1 0 2006 11 Spar Supermarket Spar Supermarket 13 0 2006 12 Billa Rewe AG Supermarket 25 3 1999 13 Mega Image Louis Delhaize Supermarket 18 15 1994 14 Gima (G’Market) Gima Supermarket 5 3 1999 15 Interex Intermarche Supermarket 9 0 2001 16 Profi Louis Delhaize Supermarket 44 0 1995 Zentral Zentral 1149 (discount) 17 Plus Tengelmann Supermarket (discount) 50 3 2005 18 Kaufland Lidl & Schwarz Hypermarket 31 2 2005 19 Penny Market Rewe AG Zentral Supermarket (discount) 40 1 2001 20 Penny XXL Rewe AG Zentral Supermarket (discount) 5 1 2001 21 Artima (Carrefour) Carrefour Supermarket 21 0 2001 22 Altex Grup Altex Specialized store 125 11 1992 23 Domo Domo Specialized store 110 11 1994 24 Flanco International Flanco International Specialized store 110 11 1992 25 Cosmo Cosmo Specialized store 78 9 1998 Market The Main distribution chains in Romania (Source: Romanian-American University, TOEMM, February 2008) The first international retail company that entered Romania was Metro, in 1996. Subsequently stores such as Billa, Gima, Profi, Mega Image, XXL Mega Discount, Selgros, Carrefour, Bricostore, Praktiker, Intermarche, Cora, Univers’All (this last mentioned case should become an „interdisciplinary” case study; we also remark the „birth” of Carrefour in the previous central location of Univers’All Bucuresti) opened. Alongside these mall-type commercial centers were opened, local specialized stores networks were also opened. We can consider the evolution of the retail market in Romania to be significant, in tune with the evolution of consumption behaviour which is referring to: • target clients, buyers with medium and high income, targeting time and energy savings and the satisfaction of various needs; • the increase of the number of products sold (FMCG); • the increase of the presence of private brands (products marketed under their own private label); • the increase of promotional efforts. The big companies on the retail market are continuing their aggressive expansion nationally. The supermarket chains are looking to cover well defined areas from a client potential point of view. The strategy of these companies that invest in Romania takes into consideration the trends of the Romanian market. An important element is therefore represented by the changes in consumer behaviour, which is modeled by outside stimuli and which, in the conditions of an ever stiffer competition, will become more and more demanding regarding services, price and placement. The competition on the retail market is stiffer and stiffer. The following period will impose major changes on the retail market. Traditional trade will reduce its share with the development of modern forms of trade. The importance of the niches left open on the market will increase, one of these being represented by neighbourhood trade and specialized small stores. It is surely that in the near future significant changes will take place on the retail market. Time will demonstrate if the traditional commerce will keep the tempo with modern commerce development, generated by: the increase of marketing competition for gaining free 1150 market niches and new ones’ identification; more frequently usage of participation marketing; authorities’ attempts to achieve indispensable commercial balance between city centre and periferical areas (by net evaluation of commercial implants’ contribution to the social-economic development). Distributors have a multidimensional vocation and duty in the field of information. The value of information is universally acknowledged and the importance of certain issues such as information management and IT resources management has increased accordingly. Information technology is what today connects the business strategy and quick organizational reaction time. Strategic management and the demands of artificial intelligence, information systems management, integrated electronic businesses and marketing in the IT sector, all of these require a careful evaluation of the technology trends in technology, economy and abilities, as well as the periodic auditing of information systems. The globalization process accelerates the distributors’ will to rationalize and improve administration. The priorities in terms of investment will be: client performance; running activities from an operational point of view and an economic point of view. A generalization of technology is noted and the realization of the strategic importance of a better knowledge of the client base. We see today a multiplication of the methods of consumption, a modernization of logistic structures, an evolution of conceptions and store formats. Consumers want more and more choices, more and better services, more information, increasingly better price/quality rations, less and less expanded time and energy, higher and higher trust in the distributors and the products offered. Conclusions We are all consumers and we require to be informed about the marketing knowledge and eager to participate in this debate about knowledge to the consumers’ benefit by creating internal information networks about distribution channels that are constantly changing. Consumer’s feelings about the product depends on product distribution and consumer experience with the purchasing process. FMCG distribution on the Romanian market has proven to be the field with the most rapidly impact on our EU integration. There is an obvious result of marketing activities which substantially increase the power of the brand in the eyes of the Romanian consumer (not being passive recipients of what marketers do within this symbiosis). The existence of a clients’ identity alternation between two extremes – traditional client and cyber client – that impose a more proactive marketing style, is becoming visible. More creative market conducted approaches are necessary, taking into consideration the advantages of traditional marketing, combined with new techniques and proposals of superior value in relation with the evolution of market structure, channels and clients’ expectations. As a final conclusion, we must take into consideration Ph. Kotler’s recommendations. In hypercompetitive economies marketing should constantly create new ideas and build brands more through performance and less through promotion; also, the clients have to be served differently, but appropriately, building performing information and communication systems and analyzing profitability by segment, by client and by distribution channel. This evolution and confrontation with the new opportunities and challenges require new abilities and competences. 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A. Ristea., T. Purcărea, C. Tudose - DistribuĠia mărfurilor, Editura Didactica si Pedagogica, Bucureúti, 1996, p.26-27 Manda Salls – The Strategic Role of Marketing, May 31, 2004, www.hbswk.hbs.edu/item.jhtml Michael Saren - Marketing is everything: the view from the street, Marketing Intelligence & Planning, Volume 25, Issue 1 2007, p. 11-16 *** Symposium with international participation : Informatics solutions compatible with European audit, IBM, QBIT, Geac, Romanian Distribution Committee (CRD), Crowne Plazza, Bucharest, 27.05.2004 Mircea Chiriac, Adina Goder, Posmosanu Erika, Liliana Mierea 1152