It is a difficult one ...I certainly see both side of the arguement, but here is a view from the otherside ..
We (macpac) have distributors in EU, UK, HK and Japan. In each region we sell into we recognise that the distributor does a lot of work in their market place. They carry the cost of sales reps visiting retailers, marketing and advertising costs and the cost of business (warehousing, cost of financing stock, staffing the warehouse etc). As part of an understanding of partnership with distributors when we recieve a sales enquirey via our webstore from regions where we have a distributor we refer them to our distribution partner to follow up on the sale. That is simply the right thing to do in a partnership, anything other would not be right as you have to credit local activity for generating interest ( yes, even in this digital age).
I know from a customers point of view that not being able to access an identical item offered for sale at better pricing in another market is frustrating. (perhaps the question has to asked if the supply chain is too long, with too many clips of the ticket on the way through ifthe end price becomes non competitive.)
But buyers must also realise that a retail business pays rent, finance on maybe 400k of stock on the shop floor, pays 3-5 full time wages per store so they need to make a margin if they want to be in business. An on-line retailer off-shore may have a very different model from a local retailer, a very different cost base, and can staff their business in very different ways (we don't have hour long discussions with websites then not buy).
If you had local retailers stocking your products (as a brand) and were looking to support your brand/products growth in developing markets, would you think you could develop a partnership with a distributor without some efforts to ensure he could succeed in his market?
I don't have the answers, but I know when I am disappointed that an item can't be shipped to me (yes, I buy on-line too) I can at least see why such a situation might occur.
Anyhoo...back to business. Cheers,
