Showing posts with label Customer Advocacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Customer Advocacy. Show all posts

Sep 26, 2014

Courage to Build a Customer-Focused Organization

Something’s eating at the heart of old-school western business, and it isn’t just a hangover from the tough economy or recent financial sector excesses. Not that long ago, iconic brands were faltering, commoditization was rampant, margins were plummeting, planning horizons got stuck quarter-to-quarter, suppliers and distribution partners were bickering, and opportunities for growth were increasingly being sought in greener pastures overseas. But like children swept up in a messy divorce, it’s the ultimate consumer’s buying experience that got caught in the middle.
You see, now that the dust has settling on the great 21st Century economic malaise, the basic game is still be the same. Winners will still be those who delight end customers by breaking with the pack and offering them distinctly better experiences than others are. But in today’s hyper-connected world, providing better experience alternatives means making a difference in more than just your product’s features and its price.  It involves re-thinking every aspect of how your end customers learn about, find, evaluate, choose, buy, own, use, update, and share, maybe even talk about, your product, service, or solution. This is distribution.
More than ever, what customers say they crave most are better buying and ownership experiences in the distribution channels available to them, not lower prices or bigger selections. And this fundamental dynamic holds true whether your end customer is in a mature, western market or a growing emerging one. Good times or bad, customers choosing among options will always discriminate on a complex range of variables, and only a certain segment makes their decision on the single dimension of price (unless all the options are identical!). Even in tough economic times, consumers make careful trade-offs around dimensions like durability, safety, usability, personalization, returnability, installation and much more when comparing prices. This is as true in Iowa as it is in Beijing, Mumbai and Rio.
And dramatic advances in internet and mobility technology mean that new improvements to your end customers’ experiences are being pushed further and further downstream into your distribution activities and partners. The net result is that all these touch point experiences will come together to either reinforce or destroy your customer’s experience with, and therefore perceptions of, your brand. And your future.
What customers say they crave, then, are more authentic interactions at every touch point in the experience-creating channels for your offering. They  want to be treated as individuals, not abstract members of segmentation schemes. Future innovations in distribution channel experiences simply can’t be described in the arcane language of ‘customer satisfaction’ research and ‘buyer insight’ studies.
Creating competitive advantage through your distribution channels comes from looking harder and more creatively at white spaces in your industry. White spaces in distribution, once spotted, may seem hard to reach or dangerous to explore. Some members of your management team will want to turn away from such daunting prospects, calling their retreat a “return to fundamentals.” The familiar may indeed be more comfortable (i.e., “doable”), but treading on old ground will typically do little to help your company change the actual experiences your customers have downstream in your channels.
This is where Frans Johansson’s thinking becomes helpful. Johansson, author of the fascinating book The Medici Effect: What Elephants and Epidemics Can Teach Us About Innovation, synthesizes medical, mathematical, and business research into a fresh perspective on converting natural fears of white space unknowns into managerial terms. He views white space as opportunities that arise in the margins, or the unknown, where two or more industry players or marketplace activities intersect.
Using this perspective, you can start to see your supply chains and your distribution channels as simply a stapling together of one industry intersection or activity after another, all the way from components supplier to assembler to wholesaler to retailer, and with all sorts of other ancillary industries such as logistics added in at different points along the way. Often, managers in under-performing chains or channels experiencing intense cost reduction pressures, inadvertently start regarding these intersects as necessary evils - the inefficiencies and loss of control that a company must endure in order to avoid doing all the customer experience work itself. But more powerful and enduring gains in the marketplace can be made if instead you view every one of these intersects as a white space opportunity, and see that orchestrating all of them in fundamentally new ways is the biggest opportunity of all.
Classic prospect theory teaches us that, without even realizing it, managers often take bigger risks in relatively safe environments than they are willing to take in hazardous ones. It is not so much that managers cannot live with uncertainty; the real problem is that they and their organizations fear losing. In the relative comfort of one’s industry, it is easy to do badly but it is hard to lose entirely. There may be some off years, some bad quarters, and the odd product failures, but the chances of going out of business are fairly low in the medium term. The long term, as they say, is another story. And the day of reckoning may be here for many companies.
That’s why Johansson says it takes “intersectional courage” to work the white spaces between industries. Managers fear the unknown risks involved in tackling new space. Ironically, however, taking the plunge may be less risky for your company than continuing to operate in the old corporate confines of tried-and-true processes. Staying afloat in a tough competitive environment is not exactly risk-free. But for a variety of reasons, it can be hard for managers to make an accurate comparison between white space and normal business risks.
But here’s what you will likely find most frustrating on your journey: those whitespaces are more than likely hiding right out in the open. What makes such golden nuggets so hard to see is the dense fog of conventional wisdom and constraints-based thinking that the old generals in your business have long espoused, and which you are struggling to break free.  As new leaders, you must stop fighting their last war!
Of course, this is not a journey for the timid, the faint of heart, or the risk-averse. But as one senior leader recently said to me – “What’s our alternative? Follow the lemmings over the cliff?”. Maybe Woody Allen was right that ‘just showing up is half the game”. But what about the other half? And what about winning?
 

Richard E. Wilson is managing director of the advisory firm Chicago Strategy Associates, and a former clinical professor of marketing at the Kellogg School of Management and Director of the school’s Center for Global Marketing Practice. rick@chicagostrategy.com

Apr 1, 2010

And What an Outlier It is

Forbes.com wrote on its website about a contemporary phenomenon that many new generation Marketers recognize as the dawn of a new age. Eyes are opening to the reality that sustainable (and profitable!) growth strategy is first and foremost rooted in tangible, meaningful, and demonstrable differenitation - as determined by the end customer.

Here's an excerpt of the Forbes.com piece (authored by Rich Karlgaard):

"Apple is now 33 years old, but it seems like a perpetually new company. Jim Cramer so loves Apple, he said Tuesday night Apple's stock was headed to $300. I have no clue where Apple's stock is headed, but I do think its blowout performance since the iPod launch in 2001 has everything do to with Apple's keen sense of cultural shifts, which keeps the company at the edge of new. The genius of Steve Jobs has always been to marry his good-enough layman's understanding of technology with his world-class design eye and his preternatural understanding of cultural moods.
Apple always seems one step ahead even when it comes from behind. Apple didn't invent the personal computer, but it made the computer personal. It didn't invent the MP3 player, but the iPod put it all together. Smart phones existed before the iPhone. The forthcoming Apple iPad (or whatever it is called) will stand on the shoulders of the Amazon Kindle and maybe crush the Kindle. That's my speculation as a rabid Kindle lover.
The lesson of Apple is to think deeply (or differently) about what touches customers in an enduring way. Apple proves that great design and product coherence--stuff that looks cool, works well, and thus justifies higher prices--can work even in a recession.

Apple is a secular company with a religious following. It understands that people want transcendence and hope, especially during a difficult period. Apple's products, to those who like them--myself, I love my MacBook Pro but still prefer a BlackBerry to the iPhone--have a quality that reaches beyond today's drudgery and reminds us of what is possible. Movies did that in the 1930s. Apple is doing that now. Which is why Apple is an outlier."
Legacy brand leaders: is your company stepping up?



Feb 28, 2010

The Merry Meanderings of Marcom

Published articles and papers suggest that as the global economy drags itself out of the doldrums, the pitched battle between yesterday's generation of financial engineers and the new generation of marketplace-driven marketing engineers is heating up.

Advertising and marketing communications (fondly referred to as Marcom) strategies are getting caught in the crossfire. As we sort out fantasy from reality in the business world, it's no wonder that the cable show MadMen is such a poplular hit. It's hard to believe what went on in previous eras sometimes.

And the ad business is struggling mightily to sort out its future in a Digital 2.0 world. Maybe it's worth remembering one critical Marketing basic: Brands build sustainable, long-term equity by acutally delivering meaningful value to end consumers, not by creating clever illusions of value.

Creative ads for strawberry flavored mouthwash might have once been seen as good marketing; I certainly hope those days are over. And while much-hyped Superbowl ads are fun to watch,  robust businesses they do not create single handedly. Lead is best used as a verb when referring to market position; the hard work of block-and-tackle marketing is where the real action is.

But it's also worth remembering: Advertising's role is to communicate value propositions, not substitute for them.


Oct 30, 2009

DowJones Acknowledges Innovation Sells

DowJones bloggers John Shipman and Paul Vigna outline in a recent news piece on consumer marketplace trends what they consider breaking news: consumer spending isn’t dead, it’s just becoming more selective (“Consumers Do Spend on innovative Goods”, WSJ, Oct. 27, 2009). My deepest hope is that today’s marketers recognize both the truth and the folly of their view.

First the truth. Consumers do indeed discriminate between alternatives that are made available to them, and they do indeed lean towards solutions that stand apart in providing the best outcome to their personal needs and preferences.

But here’s the folly: they always have. It’s just that we are coming out of a dark age of corporate strategy that has been surreally and myopically focused on low cost, low price, scaled-driven competition. Unfortunately, this has also meant a dearth of undifferentiated offerings. And too often the most “me too” has been coming from leading legacy brands. It’s always led to the same: when all else looks essentially the same, more and more consumers make their choice decision on price. Even highly discriminating ones.

Nonetheless, if Shipman and Vigna’s article is meant to herald a return to the lost wisdom of Drucker, Kottler, Stern, and others then bring it on. A new era of market(ing)-led growth strategy is indeed dawning, and a new generation of business leaders is abandoning yesterday’s spreadsheet crutch and fantastical pro formas to dig in to the hard work of differentiation.

It can’t happen fast enough.





Jul 23, 2009

Channel Collaboration Brings Wireless Innovation to Market

Sometimes real news isn’t new. Sometimes it’s enough to discover that something you barely noticed has subsequently blossomed.

In today’s New York Times, David Pogue reminds us of a market-making collaboration between two companies more than two years ago. But back in 2007 it was hard to tell how big the collaboration’s payoff would be. Now we know.

The two companies are Apple, maker of iPhones, and Cingular Wireless, a network provider later rebranded AT&T Mobility. Apple had developed “Visual Voicemail,” which would let people check their incoming voice messages by glancing at a list on their phone screen and chosing the order instead of being tied to sequential listening to each message one at a time. No doubt, phone users would love this feature. Problem was, big wireless networks at the time weren’t designed to link with software that converted voice data into visible readouts.

For both engineering and business reasons collaboration was key, and in this case an exclusive relationship between supplier and carrier probably proved indispensible. As Mr. Pogue points out, the engineering costs were too high for Cingular, or any carrier, to absorb without relaible assurances about adequate product sales. In this situation, that was done by gaining sole rights to iPhone’s sales. An exclusive also benefited Apple, which could then concentrate on perfecting a single phone for use on a single network, an approach very much in keeping with Apple’s preference to wait for its pitch then swing for the fences.

Was Visual Voicemail either company’s only reason to go exclusive? I doubt it. But VV probably helped focus executives on both sides to get past the head-to-head negotiation mentality and accent the value for each party of focusing on new solutions and usage experiences for end consumers.

Working together like Apple and Cingular apparently did remains the exception. But intensifying competition in all industries is going to make it the rule. Where relationship exclusivity helped both companies win big, tomorrow’s collaborations will be essential simply to win small.

Jul 17, 2009

Healthcare Distribution - A Must-Read

In my twenty-five years of work on distribution strategy, I have never read a more fascinating analysis of distribution system challenges and opportunities as the one recently published by Dr.Atul Gawande, a surgeon, writer, and a staff member of Brigham and Women's Hospital, the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, and the New Yorker magazine.
If you have not yet read his piece in The New Yorker, I strongly encourage you to take the time. It's an absolute must-read analysis for anyone interested in designing and managing higher-performing, lower-cost complex distribution systems.

Enjoy!

Apr 22, 2009

Fighting the Wrong War?

There’s a price war on among the large on-line hotel booking services, started by Orbitz and followed grudgingly by Travelocity and Expedia. Savings to the Orbitz consumer should run around $7 per night, on average.

I don’t see how Orbitz can come out ahead on this. Can you?

Of course, price-cutting typically does make sense when shoppers can see no real difference between competing alternatives.  And I’d be willing to bet that in 99 out of booking 100 occasions, they can’t - in either the price or the overall shopping experience. Why should a consumer think twice about minor disparities in rival booking fees?

 Bigger considerations will wash over all of this. Hotels vary in look and feel, amenities, location, and prestige, not to mention base price and daily deals.  Personally, I don’t think consumers can even tell if Orbitz is saving them a bit of money. I decide based on the all-in package deal. Don’t you?

More to the point for bookers, don’t on-line consumers prefer a website largely for its navigation characteristics? Personally, I hate sites that force me to reenter the airport names, number of tickets, time of departure, and so on every time I try a different destination or travel date. The aggravation and lost time cause me to write off the site entirely. Grrrrr....

More value in the customer experience is where on-line bookers should be competing head to head. Ironically, on this front Orbitz may already doing well. I know scores of Orbitz loyalists. Their repeat business has nothing to do with cuts in price, and everything to do with Orbitz’s cleverness in cutting their time spent and improving their ability to find a great destination.

Shouldn't they hold the line just like physical stores that have something better to offer? Didn't research just come out that discounts cheapen consumers' perceptions of a product long after the discounting stops?

 

 

Apr 19, 2009

And Now Drywall?

Everyone knows that when it comes to drywall, it’s all about price. Right? I mean, come on, this is a commodity business guys. Construction is in a massive funk, pricing pressures are debilitating, and smart buyers will find the lowest cost sources they can.

We know what that means. No-name branded drywall made in mysterious factories far, very far from consumer residential markets here in the U.S. But that’s OK, because transport costs are (usually) low, and heck, it’s only drywall, not food or baby toys…

Now comes homeowners in Florida (see WSJ article), moving out of their houses because of fears about toxic effects of cheap, but allegedly dangerous, overseas drywall used to build their homes and the freshly painted bedrooms for their kids.

New school marketers are carrying the flag of a forgotten, but basic, Marketing 101 principle:

VALUE = Benefits – Costs

In contrast to how old schoolers use the term, Value is not to be confused with low price. While it’s just common sense, it seems that reliable, safe, high quality product is indeed part of the benefits most consumers are seeking. Much of the responsibility for ensuring those benefits rests in channel systems, and with commercial buyers. Managing by Gross Margin, while it leaves plenty of time for the quick golf game or long lunch, does little to address the more complex supply chain and distribution trade-offs that a relentless pursuit of lowest price surfaces.

I’m reminded of a little story a CEO told me about his eye-opening negotiations with mid-level buyers at a major home improvement chain. The buyers indicated that if the branded product CEO didn’t get his sales team to lower their prices down to foreign import levels, they would push the products off the shelf and substitute lower cost house brands made  overseas. He knew how those price points were accomplished: using inferior and unsafe materials, cutting corners on design specs, etc. He refused to play the game for both moral and business reasons.

Consumers demand and expect that the entire system that delivers them a product or service – at any price point – is trustworthy. That means the product itself (WHAT they buy) as well as all the activity that occurs in the channel system (HOW they buy).

A new generation of business leaders is going to have to clean up the messes left behind by the old school guard and their advisers who thought so much about efficiency and low price that they forgot about the end customer. Big changes to come!

Apr 15, 2009

super-ReValu?

SuperValu, America’s no. 5 food retailer, just announced it will stop delivering goods that consumers order on line.

The end  of a distribution channel?

Not exactly, and that’s what caught my interest. 

SuperValu has listened to its customers (in surveys 60% of on-line shoppers say in-store pick-up is actually more convenient for them) and they’ve looked at the economics of individual specific operating activities (channel flows). They aren’t eliminating the channel. They’re sculpting it. Shoppers will still get the convenience of on-line ordering and store-staff picking of selections from the store aisles. They just won’t get that ($$$) drop-off at their doorstep that is so hard to coordinate and frustratingly inconvenient.

Retailers — and manufacturers — should do a lot more of this: determine what experience provides end customers the most benefit. Compare that benefit to its cost to you.  Will shifting some activities to a partner (e.g., delivery via local trucking companies) improve net value? Will restructuring the offering in a novel way that comes at consumers’ need from a different direction (e.g., pick-up at loading dock available when store is closed) add more value?

There are always improvements to channel systems and better alternatives. As a rule of thumb, the most resilient distribution systems are multichannel and adaptive. 

Bottom line: avoid shutting any route to market entirely. Try reshaping it instead.

Sep 9, 2008

Microsoft Jumps in to Customer Experience Revolution

Competition in consumer markets is restructuring in daring new ways right now. The more familiar battleground of product against product or retailer against retailer is being trumped by larger contests between coordinated systems.

This new go-to-market landscape has product manufacturers and retail partners collaborating to create new business models that win over consumers from other combinations of players. To beat competitors and gain share, companies are starting to see they must create tighter and more strategic system wide alliances to drive differentiated new experiences for consumers.

And now, we find Microsoft the latest branded product maker to jump head first into this new customer experience revolution. While pundits debate the merits of an idiosyncratic ad campaign, we are very impressed with the company's early forays into go-to-market system thinking.

As part of its new $300 million marketing campaign and image makeover, Microsoft Corp. plans to deploy its own customer-service representatives at retailers such as Best Buy and Circuit City to help people with their PC purchases.
The world's largest software company plans to have 155 "Microsoft Gurus" in U.S. stores by the end of the year, and expand based on the project's success, said Tom Pilla, Microsoft's general manager of corporate communication.

The experts will answer questions about PCs and Microsoft products and demonstrate how the company's products work together -- help designed to get customers "thinking Microsoft."

"Think of that as borrowing a page from Nordstrom, with that retail customer experience," Pilla said, referring to the upscale department-store chain known for customer service...." (Rachel Metz, Associated Press)


I have for some time lamented the absence of branded product manufacturer leadership in growing consumer markets. And their abscence is not only bizarre, it’s the norm. Branded product manufacturers long ago ceded customer experience responsibility and retail system influence to downstream players, helping to fuel these retailers growing power.

So I applaud the company's strategic direction and predict that if they follow up these initial marketplace moves with more, it will fuel what is at best today a brush fire of change in the consumer electronics and software marketplace.

Jun 6, 2008

Hey GM - It's The Customer Experience!

A few days ago, General Motors announced it was closing four plants that make high gas-consumption vehicles such as trucks and SUVs. Observers have been almost gleeful. Oh how the mighty are falling. They shoulda seen it coming. The Hummer is now a contaminated brand. And so on and so on.

Well, yes. Now let’s move on. How can GM can make the best of a rapidly souring situation? One big lever, largely neglected so far by the press, is to strengthen GM’s dealer system and insulate it from the PR and financial fallout that the car company inevitably faces.

GM has, very roughly, 10,000 independent dealers in its distribution network. These businesses were already struggling to sell vehicles. Now their guilt-by-association quotient has risen, yet again. If it wants to retain any semblance of a healthy distribution system, GM has to get busy with a hundred channel management steps that reduce the hurt that dealers are bound to feel.

First and foremost, GM must work closely with its dealers to fundamentally reinvent the customer experience they offer. Lexus/Toyota’s striking success in that area has been widely discussed for decades. Now is the time to be decisive. Weed out backward-looking, old-school channel partners; invest in the willing.

GM also has to make changes beneficial to dealers in its inventory carrying policies. It has to pitch in with local advertising that plays up dealer virtues and describes GM’s new horizons, whatever they may be. Possibly it has to relax its constraints on dealers taking on other brands, without subsidizing those rivals in the process. In short, GM needs to be accommodating, even paternal, to a degree it historically has not been. And it needs to be creative, to a degree that . . . you get the picture.

As usual, distribution problems barely register in the media coverage. But they are nearly as big for GM as plant closings. They are definitely more significant than an added layer of tarnish on the reputation.

Mar 30, 2008

Competitiveness and Intellectual Accounts

A recent Op/Ed piece argues that our competitiveness as a nation in coming decades will be determined not only by our financial accounts but also by our intellectual accounts. That same prediction is being made about a less lofty realm as well - at the level of global go-to-market and supply systems.

Power bases are shifting - to expertise, which will always trump its weaker cousins coercion and even reward. Expertise about opportunities to create incremental new value for all the players in these complex supply and distribution systems. From strategic conversations that provide insights directly - in the voice of the end customer.

When marketing channels are championed, or stewarded as Professor Kash Rangan describes, from an external perspective, an end customer perspective, surprising things happen. Customers see new value, and improved buying and decision alternatives. Intermediaries are winners, focused on creating tangible growth-oriented advisory and physical distribution value for both their customers and their vendors. And branded product and solution manufacturers operate on a strategic path of differentiation.

Differentiation in not only product dimensions, but total customer experience. The kind of customer experiences that build excitement and new options for end customers. The kind that grow a marketplace and increase the margin pool. The kind that optimally-structured marketing channel systems provide. Finally. Welcome to the 21st Century.

* * * *

Disclosure - But then I think this could finally be the Cubs' year. The team not only has talent and seasoning, the team has chemistry. And they think. Can they build momentum - from a .500 start?

Dec 11, 2007

U.S. Ships Retail Commoditization Strategy Overseas

While U.S. management practices are still widely followed and emulated around the world, there's one era of distribution strategy our international brethren would be wise to reject. Yet evidence is mounting that overseas retail players are nonetheless escalating the commoditization of their market positions.

We're just now emerging from the commoditization funk in domestic U.S. retail sectors. Frank Blake, CEO at The Home Depot, recently spoke for the industry when he publicly pronounces to over 2,000 vendors that the company was misled by conventional management advisers into a myopic and ultimately fatal "squeeze vendors for low prices" strategic obsession. He lamented the loss of basic 'retail 101': delightful consumer experiences.

What's most frustrating, the strategic tragedy of the 1988-2008 retail commoditization era was well anticipated by forward-looking consumer experience advocates. Here's a few excerpts of a definitive 1989 study for Miles Inc. (maker of One-A-Day brand multiple vitamins) and Kellogg Company (maker of cereal and other food products), which warns about the risks of a single-minded search for lower prices and higher Gross Margins at the expense of robust retailing:

Private-label products present a growing danger to the package-goods industry... forcing marketers to compete with price promotion...private-label products drag down category profitability....the study's results fly in the face of conventional reasoning among grocers, who
look at
private-label products as a way to increase margins....Ogilvy Group

When private label gains dominance, other elements start to diminish....unit sales go down, advertising-to-sales ratios go down, volume declines, manufacturer support evaporates and category profits erode...manufacturers, turned off by private label's encroaching share of the
market, tend to surrender the affected category, abandon new-product research, and reduce general marketing and advertising support....most manufacturers are left with no weapon but price
.....John Howell, President, Miles, Inc. (One-A-Day vitamins)

Manufacturers are reacting because a lot of category squeezing is taking place and national manufacturers are "looking for excuses" to abolish private label. Private label now accounts for 12.9% of the dollar volume of all grocery products in the U.S. While private brands could drag down overall category gross profits, that's irrelevant. Retailers are concerned
with "getting customer loyalty to the store with private brands not with national brands... private label is a "loss leader" to draw consumers to a particular store rather than a competitor across the street
....Brian Sharoff, President, Private Label Manufacturers Association

It's disheartening to see that overseas retailers, many in strong emerging markets, are following their U.S. counterparts and repeating the descent into a commoditization void. We would rather they invested in new retailing models that provide incremental value to all - consumers, manufacturers and retailers. For many consumers, it's simply insulting to suggest that all they care about is lowest price (ask the parents buying lead tainted toys).

In a bid to face the slow down in consumption in Spain, where retail banner sales represent about 15% of Carrefour's entire sales worldwide, the retailer is to increase the market share of its private labels currently standing at 25%....Planet Retail, 12/11/07
Is it too late for these retail leaders to see some light? Perhaps a few "fly on the wall" visits to U.S. retail boardrooms are in order. That might just scare them silly and open their eyes. Come on over!

Oct 25, 2007

Commoditization Era Winding Down: Home Depot to Follow Target and Lowe's Lead

In a further sign that major U.S. retail players are putting significant strategic focus on improved customer experiences, Tru-Value is striving to make a major strategic overhaul of its 4,000 company-owned and independent stores. The focus is women, and Tru-Value is making an aggressive "catch up" move to stay relevant in the changing home improvement marketplace.

In a nod to standard practice today, the company is focusing on wider aisles, color-coded navigational signs, softer lighting, earth tones and an expanded array of decorative fashion items. Lyle Heidemann, chief executive of the Chicago-based cooperative, said that "the redesign should be more "female friendly," without alienating the traditional hardware customer...we finally have a retail perspective of what a store should be...in the past, we had a wholesale assortment to pick from...now, here's what we believe is a good retail assortment."

Rival Lowe's has been responding to an increasing role for women in designing and remodeling their homes for some time. They had learned from Target. And Frank Blake announced at a recent meeting of over 2,000 vendors that Home Depot would be following the same path.

Oct 16, 2007

Consumers Use Gift Cards to Avoid Commoditized Retailing

Without a "must-have" item or stellar shopping experience, consumers wait for a price deal. And desperate stores are resorting to earlier and earlier holiday start dates to make up for what is essentially an industry wide outbreak of so-so brands and ho-hum services.

"We have to recognize that part of the sluggishness of the consumers isn't just the economy. The industry isn't doing enough to get the consumer excited," said Marshal Cohen, chief industry expert at the Port Washington, N.Y.-based NPD Group Inc. in a Chicago Tribune article.

Perhaps most telling is the rising popularity of gift cards, easy presents for those who can't figure out what to buy or don't want to navigate commoditized retail environments. The Tribune article goes on to report that gift cards for the first time ranked as the most sought-after gift, with 54 percent of shoppers putting it on their wish list. Once considered an impersonal present, gift cards have risen in status, and their ascent means more consumers are spending little time in stores, or no time at all, if they buy gift cards online.

The implication for branded product manufacturers is encouraging. It's only a matter of time - and likely soon - that dominant retailers will be forced to abandon a long era of commoditizing sourcing and pricing decisions and return to their roots as merchants. Retailers looking to be pre-emptive and stake out new in-market differentiation with consumers will soon be striking deals with strong, branded product manufacturers to provide support.

We welcome the emerging opportunity, and encourage the new generation of branded product leaders to use this window as an entree to refreshed partnerships and tighter collaboration.

Oct 3, 2007

Consumers Vent Frustration with Commoditized Retail Environments

Retailing is a tough business. And successfully creating exciting, consumer-friendly shopping experiences seems more and more elusive as retail sectors commmoditize. Some retailers do a good job. Apple stores are most often mentioned by consumers as a fun, enjoyable and helpful place to spend their money.

Yet Laura Landro of the WSJ writes that U.S. retailers last year lost an estimated $40.5 billion to Shrinkage (shoplifting, employee theft, and other inventory losses); as a percentage of sales fell shrinkage fell just slightly to 1.57% from 1.59% a year earlier...one of the most common forms of theft in retail is "ticket switching" where a shopper removes a price tag from an item and puts it on a more expensive one or switches an expensive item into the box of something lower-price. While many stores now use sophisticated radio-frequency ID tags and multiple tickets on an item to head off ticket switching, tech-savvy gangs can now print new tags on portable printers and slap them on merchandise right in the store.

Some retailers are getting more aggressive in loss-prevention efforts; Wal-Mart recommends that local store officials prosecute shoplifters at age 16 and older rather than the prior age of 18. According to the principle known as merchant's privilege, any merchant that believes a crime is in progress has the right to detain and question a shopper and to conduct a reasonable investigation.

So are consumer experience-destroying theft and "shrinkage" programs simply an unavoidable "reality" of U.S. retailing? I sat next to a retail security expert on a flight recently and asked him that very question. The answer is no, and there are many more options that retailers can chose from that enhance - rather than destroy - the end consumer experience. After all, trying a product and touching a product encourages sales for many products.

Is there anything more baffling than a consumer electronics shelf full of innovative new products wired to the shelf and non-working because batteries have been removed? The retail security guy I spoke with shared that the key is the strategic mindset of the executive team running the retailer. Are they all about cost-cutting (take out batteries; cable the products down, and arrest shoppers) or are they focused on consumer experience and growth (add staff to handle questions and monitor traffic; provide more serviced sales versus self-serve; etc.)?

The excerpts below of WSJ "Letters" on the "shrinkage" article provide a wonderful glimpse of how consumers feel:

It is symptomatic of so many poorly run businesses, particularly retailers
and airlines, to focus on internal operational issues rather than on good
customers. Much like the circumstances of flying in coach class, this form of
treatment by retailers forces consumers to consider alternatives to the negative
shopping experiences encountered today. No, online shopping isn't killing
retail; the retailers are committing their own form of suicide.

[this] article summarizes what many people who shop at scrappy discounters
experience on a regular basis: a degrading interaction when a customer has to
deal with understaffed and improperly stocked stores, inefficient check-out
procedures and, sometimes, overzealous and ill-advised security personnel


The good news is that a new era of pro-consumer retailing is emerging, and is being led by new-style "customer experience" merchants. Short-term strategies built on income statement tweaks at the expense of customers are reaching their inevitable dead end.

Sep 14, 2007

A Moment of Truth in Retail Prices and Distribution

A large-scale consumer educational campaign is unfolding as retail shoppers are taught more than they ever wanted to know about the trade-offs of juggling low prices with quality, safety and other retail total experience attributes.

A combination of reputation-saving market forces along with increased regulatory oversight will soon drive home to wary shoppers the inherent strategic realities of an intensely competitive global marketing and distribution environment.

An associated Press article today indicated that "....shoppers can expect price increases up to 10 percent next year to pay for increased vigilance by toymakers and stores after more than 3 million lead-tainted toys from China were recalled worldwide since June. That means a $6.99 Barbie doll could go up to about $7.70, or a $70 child-friendly digital camera could retail next year for almost $80. Consumers could also see higher prices on other Chinese imports such as fish and children's apparel, but the big price gains in toys could be more jolting. Shoppers have become accustomed to cheap playthings from China because Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and other discounters have waged cost-cutting campaigns. Critics say real safeguards were sacrificed to keep prices low, however."

Sep 7, 2007

Fears Around Overseas Suppy Chains Creates Opportunity for Branded Product Makers

Mounting concerns swirling around long, overseas supply chains and low-cost contract manufacturers is creating a significant strategic opportunity for branded product makers in the U.S. market. "Made in the U.S.A.” is now being exploited by emboldened marketers catering to heightened consumer concerns about workplace and environmental issues, consumer safety and quality problems, and logistics and transportation impacts.

Press reports indicate that the recent recalls of Mattel toys, made in China with lead-based paint, prompted many parents to seek American-made toys. Some domestic companies, such as Stack & Stick, which produces building blocks, or Little Capers, which makes superhero costumes, are working American flags and “Made in the USA” messages into their advertising, as well as marketing themselves as a safe alternative.

All this attention to the realities of running a well-honed manufacturing operation and living up to the promises of trusted brands is a boon to incumbent branded product makers, who have seen their roles increasingly emasculated by commoditized, price-based, undifferentiated retail powerhouses. Finally, word is getting out that there's more to the trust game than lowest price, and there's more to delivering on consumers' needs than lowest cost.

With all the competitive pressures that dominant U.S. retailers are facing vis-a-vis specialty stores and other higher-value consumer shopping options, wouldn't they be better served focusing on consumer experience differentiation than bulding bigger and bigger overseas private label sourcing machines?

Fears Around Overseas Suppy Chains Creates Opportunity for Branded Product Makers

Mounting concerns swirling around long, overseas supply chains and low-cost contract manufacturers is creating a significant strategic opportunity for branded product makers in the U.S. market. "Made in the U.S.A.” is now being exploited by emboldened marketers catering to heightened consumer concerns about workplace and environmental issues, consumer safety and quality problems, and logistics and transportation impacts.

Press reports indicate that the recent recalls of Mattel toys, made in China with lead-based paint, prompted many parents to seek American-made toys. Some domestic companies, such as Stack & Stick, which produces building blocks, or Little Capers, which makes superhero costumes, are working American flags and “Made in the USA” messages into their advertising, as well as marketing themselves as a safe alternative.

All this attention to the realities of running a well-honed manufacturing operation and living up to the promises of trusted brands is a boon to incumbent branded product makers, who have seen their roles increasingly emasculated by commoditized, price-based, undifferentiated retail powerhouses. Finally, word is getting out that there's more to the trust game than lowest price, and there's more to delivering on consumers' needs than lowest cost.

With all the competitive pressures that dominant U.S. retailers are facing vis-a-vis specialty stores and other higher-value consumer shopping options, wouldn't they be better served focusing on consumer experience differentiation than bulding bigger and bigger overseas private label sourcing machines?

Aug 24, 2007

U.S. Retailing Pendulum Swings Back to Consumer Friendly Formats

More and more retailers are driving for smaller footprints and segment-specific formats. That's good news for consumers who have had to suffer through years of 'me-too' retail options in the U.S. The real estate strategies are just a lead indicator that the U.S. retailing pendulum is swinging back to higher-service, smaller-scale, more customer friendly strategies.

In the grocery sector:

In the U.S., Tesco plans a smaller scale format, based on U.S. research and modeled after the format already rolled out in five countries. Tesco's West Coast stores will likely offer high-quality prepared foods, which means California is a good place to start. ``More people on the West Coast are focusing on premium foods and the provenance of foods,'' said a leading researcher.

In the mass merchant sector:

Wal-Mart is preparing to test two new small-footprint formats in early 2008: a smaller, urban, convenience-type store and a stand-alone store dedicated to health services and products.The urban stores would reportedly be less than a tenth of the size of the company's supercenters which typically are about 200,000 square feet; and would be stocked with groceries that appeal to more affluent consumers...
In the U.S. apparel sector:
AnnTaylor stores confirmed it was launching a new store concept targeting the "modern boomer." It will involve a new chain of stores it expects to launch in the fall of 2008. While there are a number of companies that currently play in the broader boomer market, we believe that this particular segment has been the most significantly underserved and a huge opportunity"
In the food service sector:

Denny’s has unveiled a new prototype outlet that the company hopes will underpin its growth strategy in the US... The new design sees Denny’s change the colouring of the restaurant, both internally and externally; add a new “tower” design to the front, while the major development will see the new outlets be smaller than previous models. The smaller size has seen the outlets shrink from a standard size of 483 square metres to a new design of 372 square metres, which has only been accomplished through the use of smaller, more efficient equipment.
Much of this new strategic direction is in response to the rise of consumers' power and influence. According to Anthony J. Stokan (author of new book, Naked Consumption: Retail Trends Uncovered): "today's customer is considerably more aware, alert and educated than any previous generation of shoppers. The plethora of fashion and shelter publications consumers read, the ability to research anything spontaneously on the net, the staggering abundance of home-design and makeover television shows all heighten the average person's awareness of living a more stylish, more organized and more comfortable lifestyle."

This is all great news for branded product manufacturers who are desperate for more customer-friendly experience outlets capable of driving for growth with new products and new offerings.

But: Are manufacturers doing enough to support and nurture this retail pendulum swing? More to come...