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  2. Retailers' cooperative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retailers'_cooperative

    A retailers' cooperative is a type of cooperative which employs economies of scale on behalf of its retailer members. [1] Retailers' cooperatives use their purchasing power to acquire discounts from manufacturers and often share marketing expenses.

  3. Supply chain operations reference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supply_chain_operations...

    The performance attributes are characteristics of the supply chain that permit it to be analyzed and evaluated against other supply chains with competing strategies. Just as you would describe a physical object like a piece of lumber using standard characteristics (e.g., height, width, depth), a supply chain requires standard characteristics to ...

  4. Category:Retail company stubs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Retail_company_stubs

    Please propose new stub templates and categories here before creation. This category is for stub articles relating to retail corporation . You can help by expanding them.

  5. Consumers' co-operative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumers'_co-operative

    Retail co-ops alone had a combined turnover of 2.5 trillion Yen (21 billion U.S. Dollars) in April, 2003. [19] Co-op Kobe (コープこうべ) in Hyōgo Prefecture is the largest retail cooperative in Japan and, with more than 1.2 million members, is one of the largest cooperatives in the world. In addition to retail co-ops there are medical ...

  6. Chain store - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chain_store

    A chain store or retail chain is a retail outlet in which several locations share a brand, central management and standardized business practices. They have come to dominate many retail markets, dining markets, and service categories in many parts of the world. A franchise retail establishment is one form

  7. Vendor-managed inventory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vendor-managed_inventory

    Under VMI, the retailer shares their inventory data with a vendor (sometimes called supplier) such that the vendor is the decision-maker who determines the order size, whereas in traditional inventory management, the retailer (sometimes called distributor or buyer) makes his or her own decisions regarding the order size.

  8. Much of this advice boils down to one thing: Treat retail workers like fellow human beings. “It’s so easy to do,” one commenter writes . “I can’t figure out why other people find it so ...

  9. Omnichannel retail strategy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omnichannel_retail_strategy

    Omnichannel retail strategy, originally also known in the U.K. as bricks and clicks, [citation needed] is a business model by which a company integrates both offline and online presences, sometimes with the third extra flips (physical catalogs).