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Retail/Grocery

With Consumer Spending Across Categories Back on the Rise, Ad-Spending Forecasts Are Also Up.

That’s the good news for brand marketers. The bad news is, so far, they’re largely staving off private label by reducing price gaps. That comes from a combination of the brand marketers cutting prices and private labels raising them as they catch up with hikes the branded players took a year or more ago, according to reports by Bernstein and Consumer Edge.

Share losses to private label are hard to regain. On average, brand marketers have gotten back 30% to 40% of the share lost to private label in past recessions. But it could be harder this time, Bernstein analyst Ali Dibadj said, citing his company’s consumer survey showing 77% of consumers who traded down during the recession found the lower-cost products they bought “as good or better” as those they replaced. Those consumers generally said an improvement in their economic circumstances or outlook alone wouldn’t get them to trade back up. “They need either a decrease in price [of the branded products] or a new product or improvement in quality,” Mr. Bernstein said.

But Sean Seitzinger, senior-VP consulting and innovation at SymphonyIRI, said most efforts to win back private-label share through price cuts have failed for package-good players, noting that volume hasn’t significantly been increased despite price cuts. “There are a lot of dollars being thrown [at price] but those dollars are delivering a very poor return on investment,” he said. P&G, Kellogg Co. and Kraft Foods, he said, are among manufacturers holding their own with private label by emphasizing the value of their brands in ways beyond price.

Marketers are more likely to succeed against private label through improved products or marketing better aimed at consumer segments, retailers and localities prone to switching to private label, he said. About 80% of package players in the past year, he said, have assigned executives specifically to combat private label.

To read this article, found in Advertising Age, in its entirety, click here.

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As in-store marketing grows in importance and marketers focus more at winning over consumers at the shelf, one discipline is seeing its star rise: design.

No less a giant than Procter & Gamble Co. has incorporated design into its comprehensive brand-building function under the group headed by Global Brand-Building Officer Marc Pritchard. After initially carving design shops out of its new “Brand Agency Leader” model for managing and paying marketing-services shops, P&G now increasingly includes them in the system, in which lead creative agencies essentially function as general contractors over other marketing services shops.

A Fresh Approach
P&G Global Design Officer Phil Duncan sees the Febreze Home Collection and Pantene’s new line of products as an example of the sorts of design-intensive initiatives that are growing business. The growing importance of the store has been central to Mr. Pritchard’s “store back” concept, in which all marketing ideas need to prove their mettle by whether they work at the shelf. And bringing design into the brand-building organization is a key part of implementing that strategy.

A study last year by Nielsen Co.’s Bases unit found in-store marketing clearly beats TV as the leading medium creating awareness of new package goods in the U.S. and five other key developed markets. About half of consumers in Bases’ survey cited in-store as their source of awareness of new products, vs. only a third citing TV. Peel the onion further, and it turns out of that half of consumers who became aware of products for the first time in store, 71% became aware simply by seeing them on the shelf. And what drives that shelf awareness is the package.

Early gains
It’s been less than a year since P&G incorporated design into the global brand-building organization, so the initiatives it’s started to develop under the new system haven’t hit stores yet.

But Mr. Duncan sees the Febreze Home Collection as an example of the sorts of design-intensive initiatives, with product, packaging and marketing seamlessly aligned, that the new order can help bring. Designers spent time in consumers’ homes and boutiques, segmenting consumers by home-decor preferences and developing fragrance and decorative ranges for each segment that include battery-powered flameless luminaries with changeable scented shades, along with reed diffusers, scented candles and room spays. The initiative has helped P&G add two share points in air fresheners since launching last year.

Bigger ideas are critical, because designers at P&G and other package-goods companies are staring at two huge dilemmas these days.

First, even as in-store marketing becomes more important, big retailers have been putting more restrictions on it as they adopt or toughen “clean store” policies that restrict use of displays and point-of-purchase advertising. That makes the role of the package that much more important, but the second dilemma is that under the banner of sustainability, retailers and consumers are also pressuring marketers to make their packages smaller.

“It’s a constant challenge,” Mr. Duncan said, “but one that makes design so critical.”

Big ideas
His solution to the problems is far more easily said than done: Come up with better ideas. When retailers see big ideas, they tend to give them more space, he said, so the challenge is coming up with big ideas that work in the store. “We’re really asking our communications agencies,” he said, “to vet [their] idea first in store, because that often can be the most challenging environment for us to communicate that idea.”

The clean-store movement is one Mr. Duncan supports, because he believes “the pendulum had swung too far to everyone trying to break through, which meant nothing breaks through.” Less-cluttered stores also mean the payoff for a big design idea that gets a green light from retailers can be all that much bigger, because shoppers see fewer competing marketing programs in the store.

Having more design impact with less space, less cost and less environmental impact is a classic “design thinking” challenge, Mr. Duncan said.

For Pantene, whose last restage didn’t go over so well with consumers, a “design thinking” session was the start of the solution, Mr. Duncan said. Design thinking, which includes heavy doses of consumer co-creation and prototyping concepts, helped lead to a lineup hitting stores in June in the U.S. and early 2011 in Europe that will include 25% fewer items, considerably less packaging material and cost, and more prominently color-coded packages that delineate product ranges for different hair needs.

“We’re paying attention, finally, to the things that matter to consumers, and stripping out the things that don’t, as well as thinking about footprints across the franchise,” Mr. Duncan said.

Herbal Essences
Five years ago, P&G began applying a similar “design thinking” approach to another hair-care brand in trouble: Herbal Essences. P&G took a team to its offsite Clay Street facility in Cincinnati’s impoverished but architecturally rich Over-the-Rhine neighborhood for what Mr. Duncan calls “design thinking on steroids.”

Pantene’s new line of products
The result was the launch in 2006 of a dramatically different look and product lineup that ultimately made Herbal Essences a survivor in the battle with L’Oréal’s Garnier Fructis and Unilever’s then-upstart, now largely vanquished brand Sunsilk.

But design thinking isn’t just about turning around hair-care brands. P&G is also applying it to a broad range of business issues. The decision to reorganize P&G’s beauty care and grooming marketers along women’s and men’s lines rather than product category lines, for example, also culminated from a design-thinking session, Mr. Duncan said.

For just about any problem, design thinking now can be a solution at P&G, he said. So Mr. Duncan spends a lot of time in meetings looking for problems, specifically ones he believes a design-thinking session could help solve.

Mr. Duncan is perhaps the highest-level outsider that traditionally promote-from-within P&G has recruited, though he wasn’t entirely an outsider. He started his career with P&G with four years in brand management before becoming a design executive for 13 years, ultimately with P&G shop Landor Associates, including a stint heading the Cincinnati office and the P&G account.

For design, he sees a lot of potential both for improving efficiency and breaking new ground in marketing.

So he’s in the process of helping P&G winnow a large palette of package colors built up from years of product launches by 30% to 40%. And he sees opportunities for electronic inks and other digital and packaging technologies to create breakthroughs in in-store marketing, like displays where each package becomes a component in a big-screen presentation not unlike an electronic billboard.

“You always have to be looking at frontiers of innovation for ideas,” he said. “It’s kind of like haute-couture fashion. It’s eventually going to come in. You may not recognize it in the same form, but it’s going to be there.”

To read this article from Advertising Age in its entirety, click here.

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Have you ever returned home from the grocery store to find that you mistakenly purchased the wrong product because it looked similar to the one you actually wanted or needed? Do certain grocery categories tend to confuse or mislead you?

About 70% of Americans have accidentally purchased a product in the last year, and many have made a mistaken purchase more than once. So, if most people have purchased a grocery product by mistake, which brands are suffering and which are benefiting? And, how much money is being lost or gained as a result of confusing, lackluster package design?

Advertising Age ran an article that centered around evaluating packaging ROI and how it should include impact on long-term brand equity. It also discussed a study done by The Brand Union in June 2009 that examined the above questions, as well as views on packaging-information hierarchy and new package designs. What was found could be unnerving for many CMOs.

Annually, at least $2.1 billion of grocery sales can be attributed to accidental purchases. And, out of 51 grocery categories, five types of products cause the lion’s share of confusion. If your brand or portfolio includes canned goods, beverages, bath products, over-the-counter medicines or hair products, you have reason to be concerned and increasingly so if private-label brands compete for your customers. The name brands that suffered most were not unknowns or recent category entrants: Del Monte, Campbell’s, Green Giant and Hunt’s were mentioned most often as being confusing or unclear. However, there are ways to ensure that products defend against copycat competitors and do not confuse customers.

Successful package design always achieves two objectives: It is clear as to where the product fits within its portfolio, and it differentiates from competitors. Rarely is a packaged product a freestanding item. Usually, the product falls within a portfolio of products with a similar look and structure. For this reason, it is extremely important to consider the impact of a single SKU design on the entire portfolio. Strong portfolios need to have a clear and consistent information hierarchy on packages so that customers can easily navigate between different products. Clear cues for differentiation, such as illustrations for scent variations or tertiary colors for flavor, need to exist. The recent debacle over the redesign of the Tropicana packaging is a case in point: Not factoring the need for stronger flavor cues across the Tropicana portfolio was one of the lead causes of a reported 20% drop in sales. The sparse nature of the Tropicana design was more often blamed in the press; however, brands like Method have demonstrated that clean design can also sell and differentiate.

Strong package design also needs to effectively differentiate from competitors, especially private-label brands. As private-label and store brands are becoming increasingly competitive, it is even more important to use design best practices to make one’s product pop on the shelf and capture the attention of shoppers. According to The Brand Union’s research, most confused shoppers have been misled by products with similar names and packaging colors. To differentiate from similar package designs or copycat brands, marketers must use proprietary design cues and structures to signal the quality and/or premium nature of the product. Packaging designers need to know how to make a product stand out within a category without losing the cues and conventions that shoppers expect.

Finally, The Brand Union found that 35% of people believe a new package design either means they will receive less of the product or that it is a way to increase the price. Clearly stating the benefits and reasons for the package change, or ensuring a new package is seen as a necessary evolution rather than a gimmick is key to launching a new design. These findings have significant implications for on- and off-package messages accompanying a redesign.

Package design is often thought of as purely tactical and below a CMO’s purview. Typically, brand managers are left to worry about packaging. But as the media landscape continues to fragment, and consumers become less easy to advertise to, not to mention more and more cynical, the package should be seen as one of the key touchpoints for a brand, to make an initial impression as well as reinforce loyalty. As such, the success of a package design should be measured not only on shelf impact and the ease with which consumers navigate the portfolio, but also on the key brand attributes communicated. Often, when packages are evolved, key brand cues are forgotten or left on the cutting-room floor, and this leads consumers to no longer believe in the brand itself. Evaluating packaging ROI should include the impact on long-term brand equity, not just sales and shelf appeal.

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Tim Itano

Senior In Name Only

Posted By: Tim Itano   Category: Retail/Grocery| Stevens & Tate Speaks

17 Mar 2010

Growing up, I have fond memories of both sets of grandparents. Images of diabetic hard candy, restaurant doggy bags, head scarves and polyester wardrobes, ace bandages, Old Spice aftershave and those weird, oval rubber coin holders, are among the most familiar images that come to mind.

These visuals are in direct contrast to those of my mom and dad, who, from my calculations are the same age today as my grandparents were when they started toting the above contraband. In their mid sixties and early seventies respectively, my parents dispel the majority of perceptions I would have expected from a “couple their age”. Some might say they are on the young side of the senior set and I would agree, but is it possible my parents are cooler than their son, creative director for a branding agency?

Here are some interesting observations. They vacation in San Francisco and Toronto, and shop like a couple decades younger (their favorite places to shop are The Gap, J. Jill, and Whole Foods). As you might expect, their brand loyalty is stronger than mine, perhaps in part because they have been buying the same names for decades longer than I’ve been on this earth. This doesn’t assume, however, that they won’t try new brands, in fact, they regularly shop new products, especially in the food arena.

They know all the American Idol contestants, and love to watch What Not To Wear, The Little Couple and The Discovery Channel’s Deadliest Catch (which reminds me, they also love sushi and raw seafood).

From a retailer perspective, one opportunity I see from their shopping habits is that they do research things a lot more before buying them. They shop more competitors, do more research online, and much like teenage girls, talk about purchases to TONS of friends and family. Maybe it’s the discretionary time they have (dad’s retired), but it might also be that they value their hard-earned cash. In any event, a retailer that provides robust support and education online and supports this message via internet advertising, through infomercials, in-store signage and knowledgeable sales reps are all elements folks like my parents, appreciate.

There is one “tell” that reveals their true age. When discussing some bigger ticket items they have their sights set on, I’ve heard them follow up their conversations with the phrase “because it’s the last one we might ever buy.” Yikes.

Yet, who can argue with their determination that for them, durability-beyond-a-lifetime is an essential product benefit? I can’t really say I’d be disappointed if my car, furnace, or say, my iPhone ever lasted that long.

Know any seniors who live like juniors? Please share.

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Jeanne O'Neill

The majority of taxpayers expect refunds this year. Although this is a smaller number than last year, the National Retail Federation’s recent survey purports that more recipients will spend their money on non-essential purchases they have delayed over the last two years, including electronics, furniture, cars and vacations, if not used to pay off debt or build savings. This is good news for marketers. And, with the continued growth in use of e-filing (now used by over 50% of filers) AND early filing (over 60% have completed their taxes by end of February), these refunds continue to be received earlier each year. So now, early Spring is the time for retailers, travel companies and investment firms to advertise for their share of the funds.

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Mobile phones are quickly becoming the way consumers find coupons, research products, compare prices and make purchases. It makes shopping easier for consumers, but that doesn’t mean retailers are thrilled at the prospect of consumers consulting mobile phones from their aisles – after all, does Best Buy want you to know that the item in your cart can be had cheaper at Amazon – and purchased right now on your phone?

“There is fear, but it is the new reality,” said Dan Butcher, a reporter at Mobile Marketer. “Retailers are becoming aware that consumers are using their phones in the store to make decisions. They’re realizing that they need to support that platform.”

Indeed, retailers who don’t embrace the technology now will be left to play catch-up in the years to come. But there is reason for retailers to be excited about the shifting mobile landscape. Many of the mobile applications coming onto the market actually benefit bricks-and-mortar retail by improving the in-store experience or driving traffic to stores that are either nearby or boast the best deals.

A recent article on AdAge points out some of the recent retail-related mobile applications on the market today:

SHOPSAVVY
What it Does: With this app, users can comparison shop by scanning a product’s bar code with a camera phone. ShopSavvy finds the lowest prices online and at nearby brick-and-mortar retailers, as well as coupons, and lets users make transactions. Last month, ShopSavvy reported more than 42 million scans. Available on the iPhone, iPod Touch, Android and Nokia phones.

YOWZA
What it Does: Using GPS to determine shoppers’ locations, Yowza delivers coupons to nearby stores. Users can set the parameters between 1 mile and 50 miles. The app boasts more than 1 million unique users on the iPhone and iPod Touch and an additional 4 million users through a syndication deal for BlackBerry, Android and Palm.

RETREVOQ
What it Does: More of a mobile advisor than an application, RetrevoQ uses texts and tweets to dispense info. Shoppers can text 41411 or tweet @retrevoq including the make and model of the electronics product they’re considering, and RetrevoQ will respond with advice on whether it’s a good buy, a fair price, the price range available online for that product and a link to reviews at Retrevo.com, a consumer-electronics shopping and review site.

FASTMALL
What it Does: This iPhone and iPod Touch app provides interactive maps of malls, highlighting elevators and the quickest route to stores, as well as helping shoppers find food vendors and remember where their cars are parked. A shake of the phone turns up the nearest restroom location. Shoppers can also make lists and access coupons.

THEFIND: WHERE TO SHOP
What it Does: Shoppers can find which stores carry the products they’re looking for and where those stores are located, as well as compare prices with nearby retailers and online retailers. The app will even calculate the driving cost to each store. It is available on the iPhone and iPod Touch.

GROCERYIQ
What it Does: Coupons.com acquired the popular grocery app in January 2009 and released version 2.0 in December. The iPhone and iPod Touch app allows consumers to create grocery lists, organize them, access coupons and share lists with others. Shoppers can also take photos of bar codes to add items to their lists and create lists of frequently or previously purchased items.

To read the article from AdAge in its entirety, click here.

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An article recently run on eMarketer discusses that retailers who want to connect with their target audience online should go to where their customers already are – social media web sites. According to the “2010 Social Media Report”, 69% of online shoppers regularly use social media web sites, with Facebook being the most popular.

59% of users surveyed regularly use Facebook, and 22% frequent YouTube. MySpace took the 3rd spot with 15% followed by Twitter (11%) and LinkedIn (8%) rounding out the top 5.

More than 1/2 of online shoppers who use social media choose to engage with brands on these sites by becoming their “fan”, “friend” or “follower”. While some social media users interacted with a large number of brands online, most were fans of only a few. Social networking users want to engage, but their time and attention is limited.

The report also found that the top reasons for interacting with brands on social media web sites was to get a good deal and learn about the products. Only a few users were interested in customer support.

To read the entire article, click here.

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The newest way to send an affectionate message this Valentine’s Day comes with a social media twist: “Tweet Me.”

Twitter and Sweethearts candy unveiled plans last month to stamp Tweet Me on the familiar heart-shaped, fruity candy that has embraced short messages long before Twitter was in existence.

For Sweethhearts, the move accelerates recent commercial tie-ins for the 145-year-old brand. For Twitter, it’s a freebie public relations coup with serious mojo. For the nation’s marketers, it’s yet another savvy step into the virtual world and away from conventional advertising.

The odds of landing a Sweetheart candy that actually says “Tweet Me” are about 1 in 80. This is because there are 79 other phrases also being used this year.

“We’ve always been short and sweet,” says Jackie Hague, vice president of marketing at New England Confectionery, maker of the Sweethearts brand. “In this case, the technology merged with the ritual.”

Sweethearts has also launched an iPhone app that allows users to send virtual Sweethearts boxes with personalized messages that can appear on anyone’s Twitter page.

“Tweet Me” isn’t the first high-tech phrase to zoom to the top of Sweetheart’s popularity list. Past techno phrases have been used include “Fax Me” and “Email Me”.

Sweethearts Candy

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Indiana-based Strack & Van Til Super Market Inc. has hired Stevens & Tate Marketing/Endora Digital Solutions to help the grocer in the marketing of the company’s 14 full-service food stores in Northwest Indiana and Illinois.

Stevens & Tate has a solid record of developing and implementing successful marketing and branding campaigns in the grocery category, including having served Aldi and its stores for more than three decades. Dan Gartlan, president of Stevens & Tate said, “Strack and Van Til is a company with strong family roots and ties to the community, plus a reputation for exceptional customer service. We look forward to helping this company – which shares many of our Midwestern values – grow its business by applying our extensive experience in retail marketing.”

Strack & Van Til operates 30 supermarkets in and around Chicago and northern Indiana. Stores operate under the banners of Strack & Van Til, Town & Country Food Market, and Ultra Foods. The regional grocery chain offers fresh and packaged foods and has delicatessen and bakery divisions in each of its stores. The company is owned by the Chicago-based grocery distributor Central Grocers, which also operates supermarkets under the Berkot’s and Key Market banners.

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Nicole Wagner

How fun was it to see the fabulous Chicago Bears’ Super Bowl Champions again and to be reminded that the Super Bowl Shuffle was introduced into our lives 25 years ago?

Boost Mobile did a nice job of taking a well-remembered spot and reigniting it for their own brand. By using a pre-existing ad and altering it, Boost Mobile showed that they could be the more cost effective company on air as well as with their service offering. But skimp they did not.

To generate more buzz from this spot, Boost Mobile offered a special website – BoostMobile.com/shuffle – where they play the full Boost Mobile Shuffle video, have interviews from the players and my favorite, Mike Singletary’s Party Police where you could submit friend’s names and phone numbers who were ‘violating’ a good Super Bowl party either by not having proper football knowledge or asking really dumb questions. If you sent in this person’s phone number they would get a recorded call from Mike Singletary commenting on the violation.

Additional features to the microsite include downloading ring tones and following McMahon on Twitter with a ‘headband message’.

This was a fun and unique way of generating more conversation on Boost Mobile even after the Super Bowl was over and a good use of they took advantage of Super Bowl advertising. And for Chicago, it’s fun for us to be a part of the Super Bowl again.

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  • JassiMostru: Hi Very nice and intrestingss story. [...]
  • Tim Itano: Agreed! On both your baby boomer comment and your admiration of oval rubber coin holders. I have not [...]
  • Elmhurst Erik: The Baby Boomers are unlike any generation. They revolutionized society and mass media. I love ov [...]
  • Tim Itano: Good post. And yeah, re: the "last meal" involved in the asteroid attack, I'm not sure I would use m [...]
  • Paul: I agree with you, technology is making it easier for marketers to reach their consumers at home, on [...]

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