In Brief
How Product Diversion Works
The opportunity for diverted goods largely springs from "tiered pricing," in which one product may be sold at different price levels in different markets or circumstances.
By Todd Datz
February 01, 2005 — CSO — The opportunity for diverted goods largely springs from "tiered pricing," in which one product may be sold at different price levels in different markets or circumstances. Accelerated globalization of business has created more opportunities today, as in this example:
1 U.S.-based Acme Widget wants to break into a particular Eastern European country, forecasting potential annual sales of 100,000 widgets. A low price point is mandated by the government of the target country, providing Acme with a 10% margin.
2 Acme finds a European distributor, ChannelCo, that offers even more optimistic forecasts and purchases 150,000 widgets.
3 ChannelCo surreptitiously ships the extra 50,000 units back into the United States, where ChannelCo can undercut Acme's usual U.S. price and still make a healthy profit. ChannelCo marks packages and shipping documents "returned goods, manufactured in the U.S."
Diversion at Home Diversion happens domestically as well. For example, a West Coast distributor or retail chain might over-purchase on widgets to get a better volume discount, then resell the extra inventory to another chain on the East Coast. In that case, Acme's East Coast sales team might start missing its quotas because its sales territory, mysteriously, is already saturated with Acme widgets.
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