Tag Archive for 'shopper data'

Four Steps to Win Back New Private-Label Shoppers

Putting a label on consumer purchase behavior these days is hard, what with Americans pulling out of the recession. But one thing is sure: The store brand is gaining ground as a core brand in an increasing number of households.

Despite improving employment figures and a stabilizing economy, American consumers continue to switch to lower-cost, private-label goods across every supermarket category. From cheese to shampoo to laundry detergent, shoppers are trading to store brands in the double digits – roughly 74% of almost 1,500 consumers recently surveyed by Epsilon Targeting said they shifted to private label in both food and household products. A surprising 61% switched in personal care.

Warren Storey - Guest Blogger for Phenomena

Warren Storey of Epsilon - Guest Blogger for Phenomena

This move could indicate not only the fading perception that purchasing store brands means sacrificing quality, but also that consumers are becoming satisfied with the value of these alternatives. (Wow, the store brand painkiller worked!) Yet at the same time, our research shows national brands still wield influence: In almost all segments, more than 65% of consumers said would return to their national brands, with a coupon.

For manufacturers of the nation’s most enduring brands, this is sobering shift, but they can rise to the challenge. The formula for winning back the best customers is well within reach – packaged goods makers just require the key ingredients of scale, consumer data and new-and-improved communication channels.

Winning Back Store-Brand Shoppers in Five Steps

To recapture this shifting segment and, importantly, to prevent additional brand-switches, we offer these state-of-the-industry findings:

  1. Target the Former Faithful: While more than 65% of those surveyed said they would return to their national brand if given the right offer, that means roughly 35% are not likely to switch. Marketers should first identify those consumers who would return to their national brand and then target them with coupons, samples and similar incentives. It is important to avoid directing resources to those consumers who are not willing to trade back, but focus instead on those who will deliver a meaningful return.
  2. Reward the Savvy Shopper: These days there is less of a stigma associated with store brands, coupons and other efforts to save money – this includes “image” categories such as hair and facial care. In addition to using coupons and samples, manufacturers can increase their consumer connections with “Savvy Shopper” clubs and similar loyalty programs tailored to the shopper’s lifestyle. Such rewards will increase the shopper’s emotional investment in the brand, and potentially result in powerful word-of-mouth marketing.
  3. Track the High-Risk Categories: Our research shows more consumers are switching to private label in high-quality categories such laundry detergent and diapers. Consumers make these decisions based on two factors: price and quality. Manufacturers must use their data to identify these price-conscious consumers and then target them with tailored promotions that emphasize the quality and value of the product. This equation should attract the shopper not just once, but for the long term.
  4. Use Food for Thought: The Wall Street Journal recently reported that food prices continue to rise, meaning that the trend toward store-brand foods will likely escalate. Using this pricing knowledge, manufacturers can cross-reference those categories with vulnerable pricing against the spending patterns of their best shoppers, and then promote accordingly. This trend also presents an opportunity for non-food marketers to develop cross-category promotions – “buy two cans of soup, get $1 off cold remedy.”

No Generic Answers

Indeed, there is no prepackaged solution to winning back consumers who have switched to store brands. But manufacturers certainly do have a recipe for altering the shift – it exists through the use of shopper data and tailored marketing.

The first step is segmenting out those consumers who have traditionally been faithful to national brands, since private-label loyalists are much more difficult to win back. Then, using robust, actionable data, manufacturers can win best shoppers with samples and money-saving promotions that emphasize the better quality of their product and innovative features. (New and improved! Works longer while reducing drowsiness.)

Lastly – and importantly – manufacturers must deploy their data based not only on what shoppers buy, but where they are likely to be reached, from the mailbox to the smart phone.

By combining these top-shelf ingredients, manufacturers should be able to recapture their most desired consumers while preventing others from switching to store brands. Most importantly, they’ll understand their shoppers better in the long run, which is the trademark of advanced, cross-channel marketing.

About the Author

Warren Storey is responsible for developing new products and improving ICOM’s current offerings in the sector and over-the-counter markets in the United States and Canada.

True Path to Loyalty: Winning the C-Suite by Marrying Marketing and Finance

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Maybe it’s true that money can’t buy love. But when it comes to developing a loyalty plan that distinguishes one retailer from the rest, dollars are as important as passion.

Indeed, for a loyalty program to reach its fullest potential, a retailer requires buy-in from the entire C-suite. And achieving that takes a meeting of minds that think very differently: marketing and finance.

Imagine them as two explorers traveling vastly different paths toward the same goal. When it comes to developing and evaluating retail loyalty programs, financial people tend to focus on the costs and the bottom line. Marketing experts, meanwhile, inform their decisions through shopper data and qualitative ingredients that can’t be measured with a financial yardstick. Both approaches are necessary, yet they can trip each other up.

Precima - Taking customer insight to a whole new level

Precima - Taking customer insight to a whole new level

It is possible, though, to build a bridge of understanding between the two paths. With the right plan, tools and a dose of open-mindedness, finance and marketing can together map a course that encourages support of a successful loyalty program across the entire retail organization.

Need more evidence? Then consider this: On average, 30 percent of retail customers generate 75 percent of sales. On a per-customer basis, this can translate to very high incremental value with each positive behavioral change.

Seeing Through a New Lens

But for marketers, capturing such milestones can only be realized with backing of the financial team. This means exposing finance to a “new” way of thinking, and changing the lens it typically uses to quantify the impact of loyalty programs and marketing efforts.

Instead, provide finance with the refined lens of data, best supplied through a well-designed loyalty program. After all, developing a peerless marketing approach takes trial and error, and each attempt does cost money. The more controlled the process, the sooner finance and marketing will see how they benefit each other. Once they can focus together on identifying and then attaining desired behaviors, they can shape the dialogue around managing the risk.

But it is a two-way path. The financial team has much to bring to the table, often raising critical questions that marketers may never consider. It is important not to take these cross-examinations personally – both teams want the best results. Likewise, always be forthright about projections, because overselling forecasted benefits can lead to a world of woe.

Such collaboration is crucial to a successful program, because true loyalty does begin at “home,” with the merchant. For instance, while working with one retailer, the finance team began poking holes in my program assumptions, saying they did not make sense and that the behavior shifts I assumed could not be accountable. This candid discussion forced us to open our minds and build a model we both felt comfortable with.

The trick is using the tools of data – knowing who your customers are and the products they want to buy – to illustrate the benefits of loyalty. This will help the finance team to see how deeper customer relationships equate to long-term engagement, lifts in spending and a broader breadth of products in the basket.

To Know Them is to Win Them

In short, knowledge is power. Through loyalty-supplied data, merchants can improve their percentage of marketable customers, create real-time communications that are relevant, and redirect mass-marketing dollars for optimal results. They can actually anticipate future demand by gauging their customers’ life stages and values, all revealed through data.

Achieving these goals as an organization takes patience. Marketing must continually seek company-wide support – most importantly from finance. The two teams may think in different ways, but that doesn’t mean they can’t see eye-to-eye.

Neither department may be able to put a price on that, but the results – while immeasurable – are certainly something to love.

About the Author

Nicolle Scavuzzo is Director of Client Services at Precima, a shopper-driven insight and strategy firm operated by LoyaltyOne. She can be reached at nicolle.scavuzzo@precima.com

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Where Does the Money Come From?

I’m often in conversations with clients who see the appeal of developing increasingly targeted activations, including Shopper Marketing efforts.  After all, it’s hard to stand opposed to focus and relevance.

At the same time, many clients are concerned with increasing the cost of reaching each household.  Some call it “less efficient spending” compared to their traditional approach to managing marketing budgets.

www.dunnhumby.comFor years, marketing and media departments have told Brand Managers and Merchants that “optimized” marketing plans were those with the lowest CPM (cost per thousand) for reaching a broadly-defined audience with the desired number of contacts (frequency).

This orientation toward measuring efforts (reach and frequency) instead of outcomes (ROI) leads to enormous waste and is responsible for undermining business growth.  It presumes that you can’t really tell what impact your marketing dollars are having.  If you can’t measure effectiveness, you might as well focus on efficiency and spend as little as possible!

But times have changed.  The broad availability of granular shopper data, the proliferation of vehicles for behavior-based targeted marketing, and the growing demand for marketing accountability means that no one should have to guess (or give up) regarding marketing ROI.  Overall, these trends favor an increased investment in shopper marketing, with a secondary opportunity to leverage learning from shopper insights to improve traditional consumer marketing.

So, where does the money come from to expand a more targeted and effective approach?

1. Rigorously evaluate the short-term and long-term ROI from current marketing efforts against behavior-based shopper segments, not against average shoppers or proxy segments such as demographics.

2. Stop doing what isn’t working, which usually includes marketing to the wrong shoppers or marketing to the right shoppers with the wrong proposition.  Having the courage to act on the data and stop wasteful spending is the primary source of funds for reinvestment.

3. Dramatically reduce reach as you shift to targeted approaches by investing in the shoppers who matter most.  This reduces marketing costs and sharpens organizational focus.

4. Leverage the tighter focus to be more relevant to your best shoppers on a segment and individualized basis, driving uplift, reducing churn, and growing brand value.

5. Adopt an aggressive test-and-learn approach to improving ROI.  Routinely test content, offers, creative, frequency, and other variables.

6. Do more of what works over time. The journey never ends, but it does become increasingly profitable!

About the Author

EVP, Manufacturer Practice at dunnhumbyUSA

EVP, Manufacturer Practice at dunnhumbyUSA

Matt Nitzberg is Executive Vice President, Manufacturer Practice at dunnhumbyUSA.

In this role, Matt leads dunnhumby’s strategy and client relationships with brand owners in emerging channels and directs global strategy among dunnhumby’s consumer packaged goods business. Prior to his current role, Matt served as Global Vice President, dunnhumby ltd. in which he established and led dunnhumbyUSA’s Manufacturer Practice.

Before joining dunnhumby, Nitzberg held marketing roles of increasing responsibility at Procter & Gamble and Borden Foods. Nitzberg also held a variety of senior roles at Information Resources including the leadership of IRI’s National Accounts client group.