THE BUZZ
June 4, 2008
CATEGORY DRIVER, OR CATEGORY CANNIBAL?
Dear Reefer:*
When reps pitch a new product to me, how
can I tell if it will give me incremental gains or just cannibalize the
category?
— Rhonda Retailer
By Kevin Janiga
Dear Rhonda:
Sounds like you’ve been stuck
doing “the incrementality dance” a few times. The rep warms up the dance floor
by walking you through a thick Power Point deck full of research showing you
the “opportunity gap,” then the tango begins with a look at the packaging and a
quick taste. The dance comes to a sudden end when you decide whether the
product will be an incremental gainer, or a cannibal.
According to a 2006 study
done by McKinsey Consulting, the average new product launch increased the
underlying category growth rate by only 0.7%. Breakthrough, new-to-the world
products drove category growth the most, increasing underlying growth rates by
2.7%. Line extensions were less accretive to the category, increasing growth
rates by only 0.5%. When value pricing was the sole differentiator of a new
offering, it had almost no effect, increasing category growth by a miniscule
0.05%.
So how do you decide whether
a new product is a category driver or a category cannibal? Here are six
fundamentals of incremental growth you should consider when evaluating any new
product:
- Is this new product relevant to your core
consumers? For example, if you cater
to older, more affluent clientele, health & wellness and portion control
items should drive incremental sales. If you have a Hispanic customer base,
consider more flavorful, fresh items.
- Classify the new product line into one of three
categories. Is the product line new
to the world, a line extension, or a reformulation/cost reduction. New-to-the
world items, although rare, usually offer the best chance for significant
category growth. Avoid redundant flavors and ingredient offerings by different
brands. These rarely drive incremental category growth.
- Does this product create a new usage occasion or
attract a new consumer to your stores?
If a product creates a whole new usage occasion or attracts a completely new
consumer to your store, it definitely should be given a shot. A good example
was teeth whitening strip products introduced a few years ago. This created a
whole new, at-home usage occasion.
- How strong is the introductory consumer marketing
program? Does the introductory
consumer support include strong vehicles to generate brand awareness, trial,
and repeat? In addition to broadcast media, there should be sampling,
interactive media, as well as account-specific marketing components.
- Consider the sales and profit per square foot
implications of stocking the item.
All else being equal, innovative products that come in space-efficient,
easy-to-stock packaging should get priority over bulky, cumbersome
products.
- Procurement income vs. category growth income. It is important to consider the incremental gross
margin a breakthrough product line can generate. For example, let’s assume that
grocery chain Z is reviewing a breakthrough, new product line in the frozen
appetizers & snacks category, which does $20 million in annual sales for
them. If this product delivers 2.7% incremental growth, it would deliver an
extra $540,000 in sales and $189,000 in added profit (@35% gross margin)
annually. Given this scenario, it would make more sense to stock this
three-item product line than taking the slotting fees of a non-innovative
product line at $50,000 per SKU or $150,000 total.
The next time you go to dance
with one of your vendors, make sure to choreograph your steps beforehand. It
will ensure that you take the lead and come up with the best product assortment
to drive incremental category growth. Kevin Janiga is president of Winsights Marketing, LLC,
a marketing & sales consultancy in Tampa, Fla. He can be reached at kevin@winsightsmktg.com
or 813-635-6013. *”Reefer” is a pet
name by which many readers know this magazine. We assume it’s a reference to
refrigerated trucks.
ARE YOU IN FAVOR OF IN-STORE EXECUTION?
Go to www.instoreimplementation.comBY WARREN THAYER
It may be just urban legend,
but supposedly when a (badly) losing football coach was asked what he thought
of his team’s execution, he replied “I’m in favor of it.”
If that’s how you feel about
execution at your stores, you’re far from alone. But a share group has sprung
up, hoping to find solutions. Among other things, it is focusing on
out-of-stocks, speed to shelf, in-store support and re-sets.
You can download this
year-old group’s initial report, but we warn you it has some pretty grisly
parts. For example:
—The industry average on
out-of-stocks remains at 8.3% on regular items at the shelf.
—Out-of-stock rates are
double for promoted items.
—86% of shelf inventory has
more than seven days of supply.
—Stockers and inventory do
not accommodate needs based on movement.
—Space management is not
addressing the issue with packout and blocks.
—Retailers do not
consistently adjust facings on best-selling and slowest-moving items. —Variety vs. duplication is
not really part of the evaluation of individual SKUs.
—Slotting money is paid for
non-performing SKUs.
—There is too much variety
without real differentiation.
Sound familiar? Of course it
does. “At-retail performance of category management, shelf management,
promotion and shopper marketing is limited by entrenched business behaviors in
ways that cry out for change,” says the executive summary of the share group’s
working paper, entitled “In-Store Implementation: Current Status and Future
Solutions.”
Heavy hitters abound in the
share group, including Giant Eagle, Schnucks, Procter & Gamble, General
Mills, Anheuser-Busch, Pepsico, Nestlé Purina, The Partnering Group, Driveline,
RetailTactics and VSN Strategies.
The group estimates that the total cost of sub-optimal
merchandising performance (actual and opportunity costs) is about 1% of gross
product sales, or about $10-$15 billion annually.
sidebar: EIGHT IDEAS TO FIX THIS MESS
We’ve paraphrased eight
remedies the share group proposes to help get us out of the mess we’re in. They
all sound good to us!
- Develop practices and
tools that routinely allocate the greatest proportion of resources toward
in-store activities that bring the greatest return.
- Design and use scorecards
for all stages in the “plan-do-measure” sequence for in-store actions, as
outlined in the report.
- Redesign or replace
present “home store” programs. These have a purpose, but they may tend to institutionalize
ineffective practices that don’t help achieve merchandising goals.
- Retailers need to assume
more responsibility for in-store implementation work, work flow and
communications. (This doesn’t mean manufacturers should contribute less to the
effort, that DSD has to change or that third-party merchandising work will be
slashed.)
- Tasks should be assigned
by priority, in a more predictable, consistent manner. Measurement and data
capture on shelf actions should be captured in as near to real-time as
possible.
- Retailers and marketers
should say “no” to activities that should never see the light of day. This can
only happen if the costs and ROI of in-store activities are clearly understood.
Perhaps 30% of today’s workload goes to unproductive activities, and resources
could be redeployed.
- Identify and specify the
most effective implementation actions. Systems should support measurement of
implementation as it is performed.
- Share. Development of new methods depends on broad
collaboration across share groups, associations, vendors, consultants and other
interested parties.
Which categories have had the
biggest increases in sales with merchandising support lately, and how well did
they perform while on promotion? As you can see, sometimes there’s a
correlation, and sometimes there’s not. The charts should give you an idea of
which categories may be more likely to offer support, and whether efforts are
working.
In frozen foods, the most
dramatic gap between promotional support and dollar sales was in
pudding/mousse, with a 10.5% increase in dollars sold with merchandising
support helping to bring about a sales gain of 81.1%. Most of this is heavily
driven by new products, of course, although sometimes a category that’s failing
gets extra support in a last-ditch effort to keep it afloat. There were some
aberrations here, as with frozen muffins. Promo support in that segment dropped
by 12.7%, while sales skyrocketed 76.3%.
Promotions seemed a little
less hot on the dairy side. Fresh soup had the biggest increase in promotion,
but also the highest level of promotion of all the categories. Private label
drove this: it had the largest increase in promotion, and the highest level of
promotion. Of course, private label sales are $27.4 million, completely
dominating the category.
'NOT YOUR GRANDMOTHER'S PRIVATE LABEL'
Safeway revamps its private label program, keying in
to consumers.
Our sister publication, Private Label Buyer, recently featured
Safeway as its Retailer of the Year. The story on the chain’s private label
evolution was discussed on Retailwire.com,
the daily online forum.
Much credit for recent
success goes to James White, the Nestlé Purina and Procter & Gamble alumnus
who became Safeway’s senior vp of consumer brands late in 2005. “A major
accomplishment during White’s tenure is Safeway’s rebranding of its entire
private label portfolio — or what the company calls its consumer brands. Over
the course of two years, the chain whittled a cumbersome assortment of 70
consumer brands down to 10 ‘power brands.’ The rebranding effort — which also
entailed the development of attractive new packaging — encompasses
approximately 3,000 product items,” according to the magazine.
“All are clearly positioned
based on consumer and household insights,” White told PL Buyer.
Such insights are critical to
Safeway’s corporate brand program, and White stresses that they drive consumer
solutions such as the company’s recently launched Eating Right and O Organics
for Babies lines.
“Both (lines) are driven by
deep consumer insights and deliver multi-category lifestyle solutions,” he
said. “Overall, we are in the brand-building business, not traditional private
label.”
To read all the comments on
Retailwire, go to www.retailwire.com. Here are excerpted responses from
Retailwire’s Braintrust panel of experts:
“The most striking thing
about this development, in conjunction and harmony with the ‘Lifestyle’ store,
is that Safeway looks like it may be the first major U.S.-based grocery chain
to successfully implement a ‘consumer ownership’ strategy that has long been
the hallmark of European chains like Marks & Spencer. That is to say, they
are working to own not only the consumer retail shopping experience, but also
the brands that complete that experience in the home… Safeway appears to be on
the way to a strikingly successful reincarnation.”
— Ben Ball, senior vp, Dechert-Hampe
“All too often, private label
is deployed strictly as a necessary “me-too,” component to a supermarket’s
business model. Safeway has used private label to help establish a point of
difference for itself which is a smart strategy.” — David Biernbaum, Senior Marketing and Business Development
Consultant, David Biernbaum Associates
Safeway has done a great job
in meeting consumer demands with their “O” and “Eating Right” P/L lines that
dovetail the Life Style concept Brian Cornell and his team executed.
A&P has taken notice of
Safeway’s success as they have hired several Safeway P/L executives to lead its
P/L program in the past two years. Given the recessionary period we are in, I
still believe the two tier P/L programs will see a much anticipated increase in
both dollar and unit sales in the next 24 months. Let’s not forget Kroger and
the power house P/L program they have in place as well.
— Kevin Hannan, President, The Hannan Group
Safeway deserves its status
in private label. They have gone above and beyond in all operational aspects of
their house brand program. In a recent visit to a store on the West Coast, I
was thoroughly impressed with the merchandising and assortment. What really
blew me away was the product knowledge the floor associate had when I asked
questions about the O line. She was well versed and knew much about organic
certification and content. Other chains can take a lesson from Safeway in
regards to PL. Think margins! Think margins!
— Doron Levy, President, Captus
Business Consulting
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