Selling Wholesale vs Retail: Everything You Need to Know
Selling everywhere, across as many sales channels as possible, helps to grow your business. Additional sales avenues are routes to new customers — a wider audience who may be interested in purchasing your products. It makes sense to sell your items in as many ways as possible.
Wholesaling is a sales opportunity available to retailers, and has the potential to be lucrative. In addition to making smaller retail sales to the general public, you can negotiate bulk sales to another wholesale distributor, or a large retailer. These types of sales tend to be regular, and so open up additional, valuable sales avenues for your business.
While there are many similarities between being a wholesaler and retailer, wholesaling comes with its own unique challenges. In this article, we’ll cover 8 key differences between wholesale vs retail, and the challenges that you might face when delving into the wholesale industry, so that you may assess whether it’s the right choice for your business.
8 Key Differences Between Wholesale vs Retail
1. Relationships
Retail usually requires simple, transactional relationships with the general public - resolving issues with orders, answering product enquiries, etc. A good chunk of time may be spent building brand advocates on social media, but as a rule, the relationship is straightforward, and doesn’t need to progress to anything substantial.
The relationships that a wholesaler builds need much more time and effort. As with the master salesperson, the wholesaler understands that one of the reasons that customers buy from you is because they like and trust you. Solid relationships with clients are built over many months, and require a great deal of patience in order to become profitable. Trust is extended in both directions - you’ll need to be confident that the client can pay their outstanding order balances regularly, and on time.
Cameron Ross - owner of kitchen supply store Cheflink - believes that wholesaling is all about building trust with clients. Wholesale clients need to have a high degree of confidence in you, so that when the time comes for a substantial order at the right price, you can be relied on. "They need to know that someone has got their back", he says.
It’s clear that you’ll need to have good salesmanship (or hire sales reps) if you’re planning on selling wholesale. For Cameron, being a wholesaler feels like a big responsibility, but a lucrative one. He believes that:
It’s like trying to be a third wheel to their business.
Sometimes, the level of trust is so high that your clients will place wholesale orders without even asking for a price.
2. Price
Retail customers typically purchase small quantities of items, and while competitive pricing is an important influencing factor when deciding to buy, it isn’t essential. Wholesalers, on the other hand, will demand the most competitive price that can be offered, because they’re ordering much larger quantities. This requires a good ongoing knowledge of your market’s pricing, so that the necessary adjustments can be made to satisfy your wholesale clients. The difference between the wholesale and retail price must be understood in order to offer the right pricing for the right type of customer.
With both wholesale and retail selling, you may find yourself competing directly with your wholesale clients, which can result in one of you being out-of-pocket, damaging your relationship. This problem can be resolved by forging contracts, covering agreed pricing parameters to reduce the risk of undercutting each other. Alternatively, you can be exclusive with your retail products, with the remaining items in your inventory being available solely to wholesalers (though this reduces your sale quantities.)
| Related Reading: Double Your Sales and Expand Your Reach With B2B Wholesaling
3. Inventory
As a retailer, you should have a good grip on how much inventory is required to fulfill customer demand, and be able to anticipate changes throughout the year. This can be a delicate balancing act; introducing wholesale to your business requires careful planning, to prevent your optimum inventory levels being affected. The last thing you want is to fulfill a large wholesale order, only to be left with nothing to sell to your retail customers (who typically provide higher profit margins.)
Inventory requirements for each new wholesale client will need to be factored into your supplier purchasing, to ensure that you retain the optimum stock levels for your business, freeing up cash in the process. If you manufacture your own products, it’ll be necessary to optimize your production process so that you can meet the demands of your customers.