Tag Archive for 'EDLP'

Why Shopper Marketing is A Good Idea for Retail Brands

Changes in consumers/shoppers and the retail landscape make it an opportune time for retail branding efforts to take advantage of a shopper marketing approach. With more choices than ever, shoppers are becoming more discriminating, taking advantage of new shopping occasions, and  shopper journeys are how consumers experience brands and how brands are coming to be defined.  The retail landscape witnessed changes in 2011—e.g., Interbrand’s Best Retail Brands look at the future of retail brands, Carrefour Planet’s bold experiment to revitalize the hypermart, the success of the discounters, experiments with smaller format stores (Walmart, Ahold, Best Buy), and the changes India made to its Foreign Direct Investment— all underscore the importance of a shopper centric approach to retail branding.

Retail Brands: Impact Consumer/Shopper Decisions

To some extent, the reason for branding has always been about making consumer/shopper decisions easier. Brands provide an assurance of quality, dependability, or fit and style. Once consumers learn about a brand and decide it is a fit, decision-making has been made easier!  Retail brands are no different—  they  make a difference in consumer decision-making in three key roles they play:

  • Relevance/Fit—retail brands help shoppers express who they are, effectively making their choice of retail brands a lifestyle statement (Whole Foods’ clear fit with natural and organic or  Lululemon’s  yoga-
    inspired approach to athletic apparel). Retail brands become choice editors who fit their consumers’ lifestyle.
  • Shop-ability/Accessibility—retail  brands provide shoppers with orientation. They make it easier to process information, help save time, make it easier to find the right product (e.g., IKEA’s guided choice—how to buy a pillow; or  Best Buy’s use of QR codes to access peer reviews, product specs and availability all aid “here-now” decisions).
  • Trust/Reducing Risk—retail brands reduce the perceived risk involved in making a purchase. Thus they provide shoppers with a safe choice; reduce buyer’s remorse (e.g., Best Buy’s Twelpforce and Buy-back Program, Apple’s Genius Bar). Their transparency and trust speak to the ongoing nature of relationships and provide entree into the shopper’s circle of trust.

Retail branding is moving from sole reliance on pricing (EDLP vs. high-low pricing) and locational convenience. Shopper intimacy is essential to creating retail brands that demonstrate relevance, simplify shopping and engender trust, and therefore make it easy to decide on a retailer. Successful retail branding provides a unique shopper experience, a desired destination, creates separation from the competition, and provides a reason for an ongoing relationship between a shopper and retailer.

One Brand, Many Dimensions, Seamless Experience

Retail brands typically have more dimensions than CPG brands. Not only do retail brands typically have more attributes than CPG brands, but they have many more touchpoints by which they can express their brand and be evaluated (e.g., store formats, layouts, assortment, pricing, store brands, associates, merchandising, loyalty program, website, circulars, etc.). This is more important than ever as consumers have come to expect a “seamless experience” across a retailer’s touchpoints.

Retail Branding must address three key dimensions of the retail brand to create a “seamless experience.”

  • Umbrella brand –what does the overall brand stand for (e.g., Walmart: “Save Money. Live Better”)
  • Store/format—clear articulation to help define experience and set expectations about different formats (e.g., Walmart, Walmart Express, Walmart.com, Walmart Marketside, Sam’s Club,  etc.);  most prevalent shopper segments or types of shopping trips (e.g., Tesco Express vs. Tesco Extra)
  • Own brand products—value, exclusivity, segment-specific benefits (e.g., Great Value, Equate, White Stag, Ol’ Roy, World Table, George, Faded Glory, Canopy, etc.).

In a very real sense, the retail brand is indistinguishable from the marketing of the brand. Shoppers define a brand based on their shopping journey and the touchpoints which comprise it. Any of the touchpoints on the shopper’s journey can serve as a purchase trigger, everything blends into one story. Understanding the shopper can help weave these three dimensions to produce a coherent brand story, a seamless experience.

Building & Sustaining a Strong Retail Brand

Finally, building and sustaining a strong retail brand require two things:

An attention to balancing creativity and consistency can:

  • Endow a brand with an emotional appeal which builds on its heritage
  • Update, contemporize and re-establish the relevance of the brand (e.g., think about Carphone Warehouse’s origins, and where it stands in shoppers’ minds today).

Retail brands have been built through traditional (advertising) and less-traditional media (store, employees, assortment, own brands, etc.). Retail brands are more than awareness — they have many moments of truth. Understanding the brand’s strengths and weaknesses throughout a shopper’s path-to-purchase is key to leveraging all of its touchpoints, to define an experience, and to express the brand. The brand must be rigorously managed across all of its touchpoints.

Shopper Marketing at the Heart of Retail Brands

As retailers grapple to differentiate themselves from each other, compete for share of shoppers’ wallets, increase frequency of visits or basket size, shopper intimacy plays an essential role in helping shape and express a retail brand. Establishing relevancy, making it easier to shop and garnering shopper trust help a retail brand move beyond price and physical location as the only choice factors.

Because much of a retail brand’s equity resides in the minds of shoppers, the brand experience is shaped by shoppers. It is a reflection of their needs and wants. Adopting a shopper marketing approach can help retail brands better reflect and accommodate their shoppers’ needs and wants. Ultimately, they must become their shoppers’ advocate.

Finally, a shopper-centric approach will identify, design and implement those touchpoints or apertures that are most relevant to the shopper and fit best with their journey. Today’s shopper is no longer constrained by a purchase funnel or linear path-to-purchase. To build strong, sustainable retail brands, we should not be either.

About the author

Jim Lucas - Guest blogger for Phenomena.com

Jim Lucas is executive vice president, global director, retail insight and strategy, at Draftfcb.  The acknowledged founder of the science of retail ecology, he is internationally recognized as an experienced marketer and leading authority on understanding how consumers interact with brands and how they behave in retail environments.  His article, Shopper Marketing: the discipline, the approach” appeared in the 2010 international book titled “Shopper Marketing” (Kogan Page, April 2010), featuring subject experts from around the world.

Five Proven Tips for Winning Shoppers in New Categories

Share/Bookmark

A bigger basket. All retailers want it, and almost all of them have become adept at persuading shoppers to buy a particular item – whether it’s a new brand of pet food or a line-extension in cereal. But, turning those one-off item purchases into long-term incremental behavior is an all-together different challenge. It takes a deft understanding of shopper needs, brand loyalty and price and promotional responsiveness to win the bigger basket again and again.

Most retailers now know that this insight is attainable through analysis of shopper purchasing data, but putting it into practice is quite another matter. Retailers that analyze consumer shopping behavior can identify their most profitable shoppers, learn what motivates them and then get them to buy products they had not even considered. The key to long-term profitable behavior is to complement the understanding of what is most important to shoppers with relevant marketing and merchandising tactics that resonate and increase sales and profits.

Think shopper, not category.

Through our work with retailers, we have uncovered five proven strategies to winning shoppers by capturing the right trips and the right categories. These case studies demonstrate the true value of a shopper-centric strategy – leveraging deep shopper insights to execute more relevant marketing and merchandising tactics.

Win the Big Planned Trip: The best way to increase sales is by identifying the most important shoppers and then understanding which items drive what type of shopping trip. A family of four will purchase different items than a couple, even if they are spending the same amount. One retailer we worked with found that while milk and large cuts of meat drove bigger baskets among larger families, larger baskets among singles and couples were more likely to contain soup, canned vegetables and wine. By using these insights, the same retailer was able to increase the percentage of bigger baskets by more than 60 percent during a promotion.

The takeaway: When the retailer understands the drivers of each specific shopping trip by its priority shoppers, it can identify which items to promote to grow sales.

Shoppers are Talking, Be Sure to Listen: Retailers need to pay closer attention to their shoppers than to their competitors. Shopper data will help them track what their shoppers are buying – and not buying – and retailers can stock accordingly. With our help, one retailer discovered that shoppers of one smaller format store were – because of the limited assortment – going elsewhere for their meat. Analysis revealed these shoppers tended to be college students and low-income residents. By increasing the available selection of single-serve, more convenient and lower-priced meats, the retailer was able to significantly boost sales.

The lesson: Knowing what the best shoppers are not buying can lead to opportunities to win those same shoppers in new categories.

Get the Price Right: Retailers can quickly and significantly increase profits while maintaining or growing volume through a shopper-centric pricing strategy. In other words, being price competitive on the items to which their highest-value shoppers are most price sensitive, rather than being competitive on the same items as competitors. For example, one of our retail partners identified that within the cereal category, many items positioned at everyday low prices (EDLP) did not have to be. Conversely, many items that were not at EDLP should have been. When prices are low on the items shoppers really care about, they will shift their purchases from the competition, while providing an opportunity to build margin in less price-sensitive items – all while maintaining the right price position and image.

Understand Brand Preferences: Purchasing data can help merchants distinguish which shoppers prefer which brands, and in which product categories. Identifying the categories where key shoppers may be more likely to prefer private label is an invaluable insight to drive store brand innovation, or to inform marketing initiatives. For example, we advised one client to target private-label offers to shoppers with a proven high propensity for such store brands. The result was a significantly higher response rate via improved relevance, and, more importantly, greater sales and profit lift and overall ROI than previous initiatives focused solely on national brands. It’s important to note that the key take-away from this initiative is not a prioritization of private label over national brands or vice-versa. Rather, the key learning is that by understanding the brand preferences of priority shoppers to develop more targeted promotions, retailers will significantly increase sales, profits and relevance.

You are what you buy: Every time consumers shop and with every item purchased, they tell the retailer about who they are and what is important to them. The aisle is a significant tool for tracking the stages of shoppers’ lives and the information gained can be used to market to them in a more relevant and profitable way. We regularly help retailers increase their share among most important shoppers by identifying who they are, what are their needs and what are the items that matter most to that segment. If a retailer is looking to increase its sales among health-conscious families with children, for example, more effective promotions would feature not only core family grocery items such as produce, bottled water and meat, but also highly correlated items for that segment that drive bigger baskets such as yogurt, organic cereal and fruit juice. Understanding what items matter to which shopper segments can help retailers identify new ways to engage shoppers and capture a greater share of their wallets.

In each of these examples, our retail partners were able to grow the shopping cart among their best shoppers, and in a long-lasting way. In other words, these learnings didn’t simply translate to a single, bigger shopping occasion. Instead, the findings helped retailers optimize their merchandising and marketing strategies over time. Shoppers responded with a shift in behavior that translated to more consistently profitable trips. The highlight of this approach is that it is based on leveraging every retailer’s greatest asset and competitive advantage: Their shoppers.

Brian Ross - President of Precima

Brian Ross - President of Precima

About the Author

Brian Ross is President of Precima, a shopper-driven insight and strategy firm operated by LoyaltyOne. He can be reached at bross@precima.com. For access to the case studies referenced in this article, please go to

http://www.precima.com/priority_shopper_download.html

Subscribe