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SYNNEX INTERNATIONAL : TRANSFORMING DISTRIBUTION OF HIGH-TECH PRODUCTS

Marketing Management Class - Group 7 M Farhan Lucky [11P2156] Meidi Indah Nurmiati [11P2158] Lingga Wardhana [11P2155]

History Of SYNNEX
In 1985 separated from MiTAC as an independent firm, Micro Electronics Corp Distributed mainly computer parts and components Started in 1975 as division of MiTAC 1 of 2 pioneer in PC makers (besides Acer)

Evans Tu as founding president


Grow up rapidly. In 1988 incorporated into Synnex Technology International Corporation In 1997 began overseas expansion, took equity shares in several distribution company in US, India etc

In 2007, sales close to US$ 6 billion & became third largest electronic product distributor worldwide

Distribution of High Tech Products


Computer-component suppliers (hardware or software) e.g. Intel and Microsoft. Relied heavily on local distributors to serve the market Bigger group of manufactures e.g. HP, Epson, NEC, Canon, Kodak, Samsung. Sold through multi layer channels, supplemented by mass media

Startups with innovative solutions e.g Research in Motions BlackBerry


Challenge was to identify the product that had real market potential

Business Issues
Distribution rights is not secure and could be forfeited at any time without warning Little bargaining power vis-vis their vendor Mass exodus manufactures to China lead to intensive market competition and driven retail prices down quickly

Scope of operations varied from case to case

Volume must big enough to justify the service cost

The SYNNEX Way


In The beginning (1985) did not differ from other, except its operation scale was bigger than most rivals Generated sales mainly from parts and components to PC manufactures, and sales to institutional clients In 1987 begin to distribute computer peripherals to retail outlets. Response to the exodus PC makers to China and the booming market for consumer electronics

The SYNNEX Way Unconventional Practices


Broad client base, willing to cater to small outlets that were neglected by others Problem : profit generated from small clients was usually not big enough to offset the service cost No volume sales, Synnex refused to fill orders that too big for a store to handle. Instead, it increased frequency delivery

Facts we know : high volume sales helped distributors reduce frequency delivery & lower the service cost No reimbursement for unsold stock, manufactures allowed distributors to reimburse retailers the loss of unsold stock caused by pricing changes in the retail market. Synnex decided to discard this practice

Problem Solving
How to keep its business profitable ? Synnex could boost the efficiency of serving small retailers by bundling multiple items in one shipment. Action 1. Positioned itself as a one-stop distributor for small clients. Increase number of vendors from 28 (1992) to 300 (2008). Also increasing number of items distributed from less than 1000 to 7000. Action 2. Tighter control over the shipping process by established a fleet of trucks that numbered in hundreds. Kept shipping errors at or below 0.004 % Action 3. Build logistics centre to handle all aspects of inventory management, such as unpacking, repacking, assorting, shipping and so on.

Problem Solving Management Information System


How to linked all operational units ? Inventory Control. Based on current inventory and historical sales data, IT systems can classify products into 5 categories : shortage, normal, overstock, slow-moving and dead items. Customer Management. With 35,000 clients, the IT systems could track all clients based on their business size, transaction volume, frequency order and the number of items in each order. Express delivery. Synnex pooled all multiple item in one big box to reduce time consuming in delivery. The warehouse videotaped the packing process and assigned a computer number to each box.

Problem Solving Management Information System


How to linked all operational units ?

Telephone Sales. To reduce cost many firms replace personal sales with telepohone sales. But many attempts failed because face to face business dealings important in some area.
Synnex quickly figured out that the key to the success of telephone sales lay in an information system that made customer data available to any telemarketer who answered the phone call.

Service Differentiation
With its advanced logistics systems, Synnex required less than 30 minutes to repair broken item from retail outlet

2000. Offering an additional year of quality asurance on top of original manufacturer warranty 1997. Attached a service label to the products that it distributed

Selected some retail outlets as partner stores to push service quality and increased consumer exposure

International Expansion
How to replicated in foreign markets ? 141 cities 16 nations Step 1. Implement MIS in the foreign subsidiary Step 2. Build logistics centre after business volume grew and local knowledge in the host contry accumulated Merger with local distribution company

16 ,000 outlets

1997. Acquired an electronic products distributor in Hong Kong (covered China Market), and also distribution company in the United States (covered Canada and Mexico) 2004. Took partial stake (36.3 %) in an Indian distibutor called Redington that also operated in several Arab and African markets

Thank You

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