Posts Tagged ‘Retail’

What if it all STARTS with the purchase?

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

By Joel Rubinson

Traditional marketing theory tells us that the purchase is the successful outcome of consumer-directed messages that create awareness which begets interest, desire, and action.

What happens when that is wrong?  What does marketing do when it STARTS with the purchase?

This is an extreme version of what Procter calls “store back”.  However, based on shopper insights research I have conducted, I believe that, for grocery products, over half of first-time purchases are unplanned; in fact, the shopper might not even have been aware of the product before buying it.  In those cases, it all STARTS with the purchase and ENDS with awareness.  The purchase funnel is totally flipped.

When it all starts with the purchase, the role of marketing communications changes.  Now marketing must get the product noticed at shelf and impart meaning to it instantaneously for the shopper.  Packaging, shelf placement, thematic displays, signage, mobile messages that are location-aware, shopper offers based on that shopper’s history, and master brand familiarity become the main vectors for creating meaning.  In this communications model, when someone encounters a product they were unfamiliar with they should be able make sense of it instantly; to tell YOU (the marketer) what the product is about, rather than you having to tell them in a concept statement.  After the product is bought and being used, there is more sense-making that occurs.  If the consumer is really into the product as they are using it, now you have an opportunity to build engagement:  they might join a community, become a fan in Facebook, share comments, start seeking out advertising and recalling it, seek out the brand’s “creation story”, etc.  In this scenario, the impact of brand narrative, brand values, social media engagement, etc. come AFTER the purchase, so they solidify rather than precondition the brand-customer relationship.

Could it really be that it all starts with the purchase?  Well, for certain types of products and retailing situations, I believe it does.  Consider this:

  • - Conduct a study to measure the percent of products bought for the first time that are discovered in-store (I got 50%+)
  • – Do you think the products bought for the first time on impulse in a Kroger’s, Trader Joes, Costco, Target, etc. are all the same and were previously known? If not, then you believe that brand adoption can START via the shopping experience.
  • - Consider shopping styles that people have, reflecting their relationship with a product category.  Can you imagine categories (e.g. artisan cheeses) where shoppers like to explore and find new interesting products to buy?

This last point is perhaps the most important.  People have different shopping styles for different product categories which means that the heuristics they use to make decisions are systematic.  You might not ever buy carbonated soft drinks the way you buy interesting dips that you just tried at a tasting station.  This is where behavioral economics intersects marketing; the study of how people decide is often more interesting than theoretical purchase intentions.  Hence, some products will predominantly be bought via a process that starts in-store.  Others will be bought based more on the traditional marketing model requiring awareness built via mass media. You need to study HOW people decide in order to understand when to start from the traditional end of the funnel and when you start from the other end of the funnel.

When it all STARTS with the purchase, everything that you thought was upstream becomes downstream and the thing that was the most downstream of all, the purchase, becomes the most upstream event.

This is “store back” on steroids.

Now, the researcher in me has to ask the rhetorical question, “Does the marketing community have the research tools to act on this new way of thinking?”  Rhetorical because, I don’t think we do.

____________________________________________________________________________________________

Joel Rubinson is a distinguished expert in consumer and market research and the President of Rubinson Consulting. He can be reached at joelrubinson@gmail.com

____________________________________________________________________________________________

The Problem With What You Do Best

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

By Doug Stephens

One of the first lessons I was taught in marketing was that when times were tough and sales were hard to come by, smart companies focussed on their core business.  They didn’t chase unproven concepts and ideas or explore unfamiliar ground.  Rather, they drilled even further into their primary occupation.  They “stuck to what they did best”.

I know now that nothing could be more untrue and that this pseudo-strategy has probably killed more companies than it’s salvaged.  And yet, we regularly hear CEO’s declare that they’re re-trenching around their core business in an effort to succeed.

When your core business IS the problem

The problem with simply focusing on your core product in tough times is that your core product might actually be what is making times tough in the first place. Focusing more intently on it  may only speed your demise!  Any creative or innovative thinking that could actually save the company is often stifled once the stick to what you do best mentality becomes pervasive.  Revolutionary ideas rarely see the light of day.

For the Apple’s and Google’s of the world, radical innovation is a daily breakfast item but the companies I truly admire are the ones for whom innovation is a painful leap of faith.  One can’t help but respect companies who have the courage to look outside their comfort zone for answers to seemingly insurmountable problems.

Below are what I consider to be three great examples of companies that chose NOT to stick to what they already know when times got tough but instead stretched to find new points of connection with their customers and in doing so, charted new territory for their brands.

Core Business WAS: Manufacturing a brand of automobile with little relevance, equity or appeal with young consumers.

What they DID: Instead of focussing on the automobile itself, Ford invested in Sync, a Microsoft designed system that seamlessly integrates phone, text messaging, web browsing and music through the car’s voice activated communication system.  Since its introduction in 2007, Ford has sold more than 2 million Sync enabled vehicles and claims that Sync-enabled models outsell non-Synch models twofold.

But the point here is really less about the technology and more about the message that Ford was sending to younger consumers.  In this decisive departure from its core product, Ford clearly told younger consumers that it “got them”.  The brand understood their need to integrate their personal technology into their driving experience and built a system that allowed them to do just that.

Core Business WAS: Manufacturing a low tech, old-fashioned toy in a market being increasingly dominated by video games.

What they DID:  Rather than waste effort trying to convince kids that plastic building blocks were cooler than video games, Lego reached beyond the safety of its core product, embracing the very technology that threatened its existence and making it part of the Lego experience.

The website offers video and online games, allowing kids to discover various Lego product sets in a fun and interactive way.Themed Lego kits correspond to popular movies, bridging the gap between passive entertainment and creative play.  They’ve also done a brilliant job of incorporating in-store technologies such as augmented reality to make the Lego buying experience truly exciting.

Core Business WAS: Making a brand of clothing that was being commoditized in the market and increasingly overlooked by younger consumers in favor of more fashion oriented, up-market brands.

What they DID:  Instead of focussing consumers on stitch-counts and pant styles,

Levis turned their attention to something well outside their core strength… music.  In 2010 they launched the Levis Pioneer recording sessions, a collection of 12 recordings by contemporary artists re-working classic songs that they’ve been inspired by.  The tracks and subsequent videos served as an allegorical bridge between the old and the new, a marrying of the classic and the contemporary.

Furthermore, it broke through the din of unremarkable messaging in the apparel market, sending a clear message to younger audiences that classic can indeed be cool.

Sticking to what you do best isn’t a strategy

These are only a few examples of brands that’ve had the courage to explore beyond their core.  There are others.  And in fairness, there are also a few notable examples of companies who did intensify their focus on their core offering to better serve their consumers – Starbucks being one of them.

But don’t let anyone convince you that simply sticking to what you do best constitutes a long-term strategy.  It’s more often the battle-plan of frightened business leaders who’ve simply run out of ideas.  They fail to realize that the core business of all great brands – regardless of what they sell – is innovation.

Innovation is what great businesses do best.

Generosity

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

By Doug Stephens

Generosity: noun~ Willingness to give or share; unselfishness

All successful relationships are underpinned by generosity.

The willingness to give or share without expectation of repayment is central to healthy, human interaction.  It doesn’t matter what you give.  It can be your time, your praise or simply your attention but without generosity, relationships tend to vanish in a cloud of selfishness and resentment.

This is equally, if not more true with business relationships.  Long-term success in retail comes down to fundamental beliefs with respect to the whole concept of generosity.  Specifically, you either believe that generosity is almost always rewarded or almost always abused.

You can easily spot businesses that believe the latter.  They’re the ones that have you deposit a quarter to use their shopping cart.  The ones that refuse refunds without a receipt. Those who link any charity work they do to a sales goal or promotion.  They cut the holiday employee turkey to save a few dollars. And you probably can’t use their restrooms either.  All because their belief system suggests that generosity is something that is abused and taken advantage of.  As the English poet Alexander Pope wrote “…all looks yellow to the jaundiced eye.”

Rare businesses, however, take the contrary view.  These businesses believe that the simple act of giving – whether to customers, employees or the communities they operate in is simply the right thing to do –it’s just good karma.  They provide their employees with great places to work, their patrons with great places to shop and their communities with businesses that give back.  They regard customers as people – not mere transactions.  Employees are part of the team – not simply headcount.   They give based on the belief that people are basically good and that their generosity will indeed be repaid – if not today then tomorrow and if not tomorrow then someday.

The unfortunate thing is that generosity is no guarantee of success.  Indeed, some of the most successful businesses in the world are also the greediest.    The consolation, however,  is that only those businesses who give generously will leave a positive impression on the world.  And perhaps that’s the truest definition of success.

Retailing In The Absence of Recovery

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

By Doug Stephens

Recovery is a word we hear a lot these days.  It seems that each week experts sift through the tea leaves of economic indicators looking for even the faintest sign that the fabled “recovery” has begun.  We’ve taken to measuring retail performance a week at a time in search of any positive sales data.  Marketers continue to bait the consumer with discounts and promotions, hoping to get even a brief spike in foot traffic (regardless of the long-term impact on their brand).  Wall Street applauds corporate cost cutting measures and layoffs with higher share prices, while secretly wondering how much further budgets can be cut in lieu of meaningful sales growth.  Each day we wait and watch for the “bounce-back”.

 The problem with monitoring the recovery in this way is that it is as short-sighted and speculative as the behavior that brought on the recession in the first place.  Hinging decision-making on the basis of any shred of positive data is a recipe for disaster that fails to acknowledge the deep, underlying issues that led us to where we are now.  This recession is like an oak tree, with tangled roots that stretch back decades and it will take time, hard work and some sharp tools to fell it.

 Looking back to see the future

 In order to really understand our current problem, we need to look back as far as the late 1970’s.  It was then that many of the causes of our current situation were born.

 I point here to some fascinating research conducted by attorney and law professor Elizabeth Warren.  In what was an exhaustive study, she compared the relative household economic condition of the average American family (married with two children) in 1979 to the same family in 2005. All the data was meticulously scrubbed and adjusted for inflation.  Some of the key findings were as follows:

  •  Throughout the period 1979 to 2005, the average personal income of men remained virtually stagnant.
  •  Any gains in household income were a result of entry into the workforce of another wage earner, often the female of the household.
  •  Whatever gross gains were made as a consequence of the additional wage earner, were generally nullified by the enormous escalation in the cost of living though that period, particularly in the areas of home ownership (+80-100%), child care (+100%), health insurance (+103%), automobile expense (+70%) and tax rates (+25%).  This doesn’t even take into account 2005 costs that simply didn’t exist in 1979, such as cell phones.

 The net result was that the average American family in 2005 was significantly further behind economically than the same family in 1979.  

 After paying for their basic needs, the average family had less money left over at the end of the day than they had almost 30 years earlier despite having more family members working. 

 This fact, however, seems completely incongruent with the level of consumption and spending that was taking place in most parts of North America throughout that period.  Despite a few economic speed bumps along the way, consumerism was rampant, particularly from about the year 2000 on.  If in fact, consumers had less discretionary income, then where was the money coming from to fuel this spending? 

 The answer lies in a leveraging of historic proportions that began in the 1970’s but really hit stride in the mid 1980’s.  As the graph below indicates, throughout the period of 1970 to 2005, the average personal savings percentage went from 12.5% to negative 1%.  Americans were banking twelve and a half cents on every dollar earned in 1970. They were spending a dollar and one cent of every earned dollar in 2005.  By corollary, household debt outstanding grew to unprecedented levels.

 Savings Rate

And the leveraging didn’t end at the consumer.  Institutions and governments were following the same course, running up dept and deficits the likes of which were never thought possible.

 During the week of October 6, 2008 the entire house of borrowed cards collapsed and the consumer found themselves caught.  Their investments declined, including in many cases their only real nest egg… their home; they had no cash in the bank and a mountain of unforgiving debt.  And on top of it all they now had the added worry of job loss to contend with.

 The uptick you see at the far right of the graph is the instinctive hoarding of cash that took place immediately following the declines on Wall Street and the collapse of several financial institutions, where personal saving rates rebounded and continue to rise even now.  It’s that upward trend in savings that has had even the most aggressively discounting retailer scratching their head as to why their goods aren’t selling; the consumer is rebuilding their war chest.  How long the savings rate will continue to push upward is unknown but a return to a double-digit percentage isn’t inconceivable.

 The long road to recovery

 What all of this amounts to is that the economy will only begin to heal in a real way when the average consumer feels decidedly less vulnerable and scared.  This means a suitable amount of cash in the bank, relative job security and signs of sustained growth in the value of their investments and holdings.  Until these things are firmly in place, any potential recovery will be stymied. It took decades to get into this situation.  Recovery could take many years and be painfully gradual.  There is simply no cogent arguement for a fast recovery.

 For retailers the ultimate question is how to survive the waiting game.  While there’s no single correct answer, there are a few broad realities worth paying attention to and developing strategy to address.

 1.      Reckless price cuts are not effective: Consumer spending has been squarely realigned to necessities until further notice. Simply lowering the price of non-necessities will have a very minimal impact on sales but may erode margins and brand image to the point of disaster for unwitting retailers.  

 2.     Middle of the road propositions will fall flat: Bringing the consumer to spend on anything but necessities will call for remarkable propositions that either provide extraordinary value or extraordinary experiences.  For example, Apple concluded a record sales year in 2009 – the height of the recession – by providing consumers with high perceived value that they felt couldn’t get elsewhere.

 3.     Baby Boomers are receding as consumers:  According to the Bureau of Labor statistics, consumer spending declines precipitously after the age of 50.  The peak of the Baby Boomer generation is now 55 years old.  So, the generation that fuelled record consumption is sidelined, due in part to the recession but also as a consequence of their natural dénouement as consumers. 

 For this reason, retailers will have to capture new market share among younger age cohorts or pry Boomer market from competitors by addressing their evolving needs more effectively.

 4.     Generation Y are not their parents:  Many are holding out hope that Generation Y will be the catalyst for recovery. It’s true that this is a huge generation that has a solid track record for spending but they’re also different in almost every respect from their parents’ generation.  Only those retailers who truly understand and respond to their unique needs and preferences stand a chance of engaging them as consumers.  The old rules of retail no longer apply.

  Knowing all this isn’t likely to make you feel much better about our current situation but if nothing else perhaps it lends a perspective based in reality as opposed to blind optimism – although I’m hoping for the best just like everyone else.  Perhaps with a keener understanding of the root causes of the current consumer paralysis we can market and retail with a greater degree of empathy and ultimately speed the process of recovery.

Never Bring a Knife to a Gunfight

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

It’s been called the first rule of modern warfare – “never bring a knife to a gun fight”.  Although I’m not certain who coined the phrase, I can almost assure you it wasn’t the guy who brought the knife.

And as obvious as this idiom is, every day I see independent retailers walking into fights they can’t win.  It happens every time they focus marketing efforts on business attributes which they can’t possibly dominate in. Shootout

I use the word dominate and not compete because frankly, competing is a nebulous term and doesn’t really carry any assurance of success.  Domination signifies that you maintain an own-able position in the mind of the public, distinct from competitors and truly remarkable.    For example, all professional athletes compete but the ones that really stand out actually dominate in their sports.

That said,  independent retailers sometimes have difficulty identifying how they can dominate in their chosen market.  They struggle with isolating the aspects of their business where they can consistently reign supreme.  As a result, they attempt to be good at everything, which usually renders them exceptional at nothing.  In other words, by trying to be good at everything, they actually weaken their competitive position.

Stop trying to be the good at everything

The 2001 book by Fred Crawford and Ryan Matthews titled The Myth of Excellence, is an account of an extensive study examining the competitive attributes of a wide range of highly successful businesses.  Although almost a decade old now, I think the findings are even more relevant today than they were then.

The key discovery from the research was that none of the best businesses were the best at everything.  However, all of them clearly dominated in something.  Almost without exception, there was a single competitive attribute on which the best businesses stood head and shoulders above the competition. 

With this information in hand, any business can begin to map out a coherent competitive strategy.

Start with your dominant attribute

There are 5 basic competitive attributes across which a business can compete.  First pick the one that your business can realistically dominate in relative to other players in your market.  And although it might seem obvious, make sure that the dimension you choose is both relevant and tangible to consumers.

To Dominate In You need to be remarkable for things like…
Product 
  • The widest selection
  • In-stock position
  • The highest quality goods
  • The most unique items
  • The most desired brand(s)
  • Most hard-to-find items
  • One of a kind and customized items
Price 
  • The lowest every day price on the most items
Service 
  • The highest level of expertise
  • The best after-sale support
  • The friendliest and most helpful staff
  • The most liberal return/exchange/refund policies
  • The best in-home services
  • Best warranties/guarantees
Convenience 
  • The most stores
  • The best locations
  • Call ahead services
  • The longest store hours
  • The most efficient systems
  • The best delivery program
  • The best online shop
  • The best payment options
Store Experience 
  • The most fun/enjoyable
  • The best learning experience
  • The most interactive
  • The most relaxing
  • The most welcoming environment

Now you need to select another attribute where you can be good, relative to competition.  You don’t have to dominate but you should noticably excel in this attribute.

Lastly, you need to be at least average with respect to the remaining attributes.  Not necessarily excellent but acceptable.

Here are some examples

Starbucks is highly regarded as being dominant in store experience while having a good product.

Dollar General dominates on price and offers good convenience through numerous locations.

Apple dominates on product, while offering a good store experience.

So, it doesn’t matter how you dominate – only that you do.

Now tell them

Once you’ve established your ideal mix of attributes, build all marketing messages around it.    Don’t waste energy talking to customers about what you’re average at.    Focus the message almost exclusively on what you dominate in and why that’s worth caring about.

Using this approach will create clarity on all fronts.  Customers will be clear on why they should shop you.  Staff will be clear on what they should be delivering to customers.  And you, the owner will be clear on what you’re taking into your next gun fight.

____________________________________________________________________________________________

The Road to Remarkble is an interactive workshop aimed at assisting retailers in deveoloping own-able competitive positioning.  If you would like to schedule a session of the Road to Remarkable for your group, contact us.

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes