Channel stuffing

Channel stuffing

Channel stuffing is the business practice where a company, or a sales force within a company, inflates its sales figures by forcing more products through a distribution channel than the channel is capable of selling to the world at large. Also known as "trade loading", this can be the result of a company attempting to inflate its sales figures. Alternatively, it can be a consequence of a poorly managed sales force attempting to meet short term objectives and quotas in a way that is detrimental to the company in the long term.

Channel stuffing has a number of long-term consequences for the company. Firstly, distributors will often return any unsold goods to the company, incurring a carrying cost and also developing a backlog of product inventory. Wildly fluctuating demand, combined with this excess inventory, leads to costly overtimes and factory shutdowns. Even mild channel stuffing can spiral out of control as sales works to make up for prior over-selling. Discounts used to drive trade loading can greatly affect profits, and even help establish gray market channels as salesmen no longer adequately qualify their prospects.

Occasionally, distribution channels such as large retailers have been known to identify the practice of channel stuffing in their suppliers, and use the phenomenon to their advantage. This is done by holding back on orders until the end of the suppliers' quota period. The supplier's sales force then panics, and sells a large amount of the product under more favorable terms than they would under ordinary circumstances. At the beginning of the next period, no new orders are placed, and, barring any action, the cycle is then repeated. This has an impact on customers, with gluts and shortages as buyers turn to competing products.

Corporations have been known to engage in channel stuffing and hide such activities from their investors. In the United States, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has in some cases litigated against such corporations.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Channel Stuffing — A deceptive business practice used by a company to inflate its sales and earnings figures by deliberately sending retailers along its distribution channel more products than they are able to sell to the public. By channel stuffing, distributors… …   Investment dictionary

  • channel stuffing — n. To artificially boost sales at the end of a fiscal year by offering distributors and dealers special incentives to purchase more goods than they need. Example Citation: Two of the suits allege that the company failed to disclose an early… …   New words

  • Channel check — In financial analysis, a channel check is third party research on a company s business based on collecting information from the distribution channels of the company. It may be conducted in order to value the company, to perform due diligence in… …   Wikipedia

  • Channel service unit — In telecommunications, a channel service unit (CSU) is a line bridging device for use with T carrier that: is used to perform loopback testing, may perform bit stuffing, may also provide a framing and formatting pattern compatible with the… …   Wikipedia

  • Dream Stuffing — Genre Sitcom Created by Paul Hines Su Wilkins Directed by John Kaye Cooper Starring Rachael Weaver Amanda Symonds Maria Charles Ray Burdis …   Wikipedia

  • bit stuffing —    Insertion of an occasional dummy bit into a binary stream so that the mean data rate is slightly less than the bit signaling rate of the channel. The position of the stuffed bits must be signaled on a supplementary channel. Also called pulse… …   IT glossary of terms, acronyms and abbreviations

  • bit stuffing —    A technique used to ensure that a specific bit pattern never occurs in the data transmitted over a communications channel. Additional bits are added at the transmitting end and removed at the receiving end of the channel as the data is… …   Dictionary of networking

  • Criticism of Coca-Cola — The Coca Cola Company, its subsidiaries and products have been subject to sustained criticism by both consumer groups and watchdogs, particularly since the early 2000s. Allegations against the company are varied and criticism has been based… …   Wikipedia

  • Bristol-Myers Squibb — Infobox Company company name = Bristol Myers Squibb Company company company type = Public(nyse|BMY) company slogan = foundation = 1887 location = New York City, New York, USA key people = James Cornelius, CEO num employees = 43,000 (2005)… …   Wikipedia

  • 2006 in Information Technology — EventsAnniversaries3rd quarter 2006 summaryThe same long term factors influenced 3Q06 as other recent quarters. But their effect is perhaps a little clearer:#The dramatic build out of fibre optic cables in the 1990s enabled an extraordinary… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”