intermediaries

(noun)

Organizations that act as a provider of a specific function or service for other organizations.

Related Terms

  • opportunity cost
  • Selective Distribution
  • Exclusive distribution
  • Intermediary
  • e-commerce
  • Intensive distribution
  • specialization
  • economies of scale

(noun)

Organizations or individuals that fulfill tasks on behalf of other organizations.

Related Terms

  • opportunity cost
  • Selective Distribution
  • Exclusive distribution
  • Intermediary
  • e-commerce
  • Intensive distribution
  • specialization
  • economies of scale

(noun)

A third-party that acts as a go-between in a given transaction

Related Terms

  • opportunity cost
  • Selective Distribution
  • Exclusive distribution
  • Intermediary
  • e-commerce
  • Intensive distribution
  • specialization
  • economies of scale

Examples of intermediaries in the following topics:

  • The Cost of Intermediaries

    • While organizations gain advantage by collaborating with intermediaries, there are costs involved to consider.
    • Distribution of goods is often enabled through collaboration with partners and intermediaries.
    • Shipping Intermediaries - Getting an item from the business to the user often requires shipping and warehousing.
    • Marketing Intermediaries - Storefronts, be they online or physical locations, are convenient and comfortable contact points for products and consumers.
    • Understand the various costs which accompany product distribution when working with intermediaries
  • The Value of Intermediaries

    • So you use a marketing intermediary, and work with companies that sell music equipment.
    • The rest are value-adding intermediaries who limit your risk and allow you to focus on what you do best.
    • Additionally, whomever the intermediary is shares this advantage.
    • As a result, organizations with many intermediaries can benefit from the specializations of their partners.
    • Outline the various benefits of utilizing intermediaries, and understand how to capture value from the process
  • US commercial centers, trade intermediaries, and alliances

    • Small manufacturers who are interested in building their foreign sales are turning to trade intermediaries to assist them in the sale and distribution of their products.
    • These trade intermediaries account for about 10 per cent of all US exports.
    • (Michael Selz, "More Small Firms Are Turning to Trade Intermediaries," The Wall Street Journal, February 2, 1995, p.
    • B2. ) The trade intermediary provides a valuable service to small companies, which often do not have the resources or expertise to market their products overseas.
    • The trade intermediaries have developed relationships with foreign countries; these relationships are time-consuming and expensive to develop.
  • Marketing Intermediaries

    • Instead, they outsource many of these aspects to intermediaries.
    • Intermediaries are specialists for a specific function along the value chain.
    • Some of the most common intermediaries are related to product distribution.
    • Another popular intermediary is the ad agency.
    • Understanding the value chain is central to the concept of intermediaries.
  • Commercial Banks

    • A commercial or business bank , is a type of financial institution and intermediary that lends money, accepts time deposits, and provides transactional, savings, and money market accounts.
    • A commercial bank (or business bank) is a type of financial institution and intermediary.
  • Exporting

    • Indirect exporting also involves little risk, as international marketing intermediaries have knowledge of markets and will make fewer mistakes than sellers.
    • Such semi-direct exporting can be handled in a variety of ways: (a) a combination export manager, a domestic agent intermediary that acts as an exporting department for several noncompeting firms; (b) the manufacturer's export agent (MEA) operates very much like a manufacturer's agent in domestic marketing settings; (c) a Webb-Pomerene Export Association may choose to limit cooperation to advertising, or it may handle the exporting of the products of the association's members and; (d) piggyback exporting, in which one manufacturer (carrier) that has export facilities and overseas channels of distribution handles the exporting of another firm (rider) noncompeting but complementary products.
  • Selling to Businesses

    • First is the reduction of search costs, as buyers need not go through multiple intermediaries to search for information about suppliers, products, and prices as in a traditional supply chain.
    • Disintermediation: Through B2B e-markets, suppliers are able to interact and transact directly with buyers, thereby eliminating intermediaries and distributors.
    • However, new forms of intermediaries are emerging.
    • For instance, e-markets themselves can be considered intermediaries because they come between suppliers and customers in the supply chain.
  • The people at the bottom of the pyramid

    • Successful inclusive business strategies rely heavily on embedded processes that include working with and/or helping to create intermediary businesses that bring local and outside companies into close personal relationships with BoP communities.
  • The Export-Import Bank of the United States

    • The Ex-Im Bank provides two types of loans: direct loans to foreign buyers of American exports and intermediary loans to responsible parties, such as foreign government lending agencies that re-lend to foreign buyers of capital goods and related services (for example, a maintenance contract for a jet passenger plane).
    • Two types of loans: direct loans to foreign buyers of American exports and intermediary loans to responsible parties, such as foreign government lending agencies that re-lend to foreign buyers of capital goods and related services (for example, a maintenance contract for a jet passenger plane).
  • The Promotion Mix

    • Examples of personal selling include: Sales presentations, sales meetings, sales training and incentive programs for intermediary salespeople, samples, and telemarketing.
    • Examples: Sales presentations, sales meetings, sales training and incentive programs for intermediary salespeople, samples, and telemarketing.
Subjects
  • Accounting
  • Algebra
  • Art History
  • Biology
  • Business
  • Calculus
  • Chemistry
  • Communications
  • Economics
  • Finance
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Microbiology
  • Physics
  • Physiology
  • Political Science
  • Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Statistics
  • U.S. History
  • World History
  • Writing

Except where noted, content and user contributions on this site are licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 with attribution required.