1 buying and selling goods and all their functions; sometimes excluding advertising and salesmanship; adjusting purchases to sales possibilities; product planning for profitable distribution 2 any activity that makes advertising or other promotion more effective, especially by calling it to the attention of influences that might otherwise overlook it as by means of preprints or reprints of ads, enlargements for point-of-sales material, furnish lists of dealers, etc
The employment of the best means of item identification, segregation, lotting, description, display, planning and promotion, advertising and publicity, to sell surplus or foreign excess personal property
{i} promotion of merchandise sales as an extensive function that includes market research and development of new products (also merchandizing)
A way to provide green and "logo" clothing items at cost to students and families Available at Booster meetings or call the Merchandising Manager
Display of product through creative means that delivers a point of view shopping experience based on brand
Merchandising consists of goods such as toys and clothes that are linked with something such as a film, sports team, or pop group. We are selling the full range of World Cup merchandising The club says it will make increasing amounts from merchandising
Merchandising is used to refer to the way shops and businesses organize the sale of their products, for example the way they are displayed and the prices that are chosen. Company executives say revamped merchandising should help Macy's earnings to grow. Element of marketing concerned especially with the sale of goods and services to customers. One aspect of merchandising is advertising, which aims to capture the interest of the segment of the population most likely to buy the product. Merchandising also involves product display; companies provide retailers with display and promotional materials and negotiate shelf space for their products. The development of sales strategies includes the determination of pricing, discounts, and special offers; the invention of sales pitches; and the identification of avenues for sales, including store-based retailing and alternative means such as direct-mail marketing, telemarketing, commercial Web sites, vending machines, and door-to-door sales
Promoting a company's in-store effort to the sales force, wholesalers, and dealers Also the promotion to consumers of the product by use of POS materials, in-store promotions, and stock maintenance
To advertise, promote, and organize the sales of a particular product Generally involves both in-store and outside store activities that promote a product, including pricing, assortment, product placement, signage, displays, etc