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Category: Food Packaging| Retail/Grocery| Stevens & Tate Speaks
29 Apr 2010Recently, our own Mark Beebe wrote a guest commentary article for the April edition of Private Label Buyer. His published article is below.
Thirty years ago, private labels in the United States were for the beans. Literally.
Private labels were found only on the cans of staples such as beans, peas, pickles, corn and other food products that were easy to store on grocery shelves. Not a whole lot of thought went into the design of these labels. The packaging was inexpensive and unimaginative — just basic information slapped on a can.
ALDI became one of the first U.S. retailers to make the leap from private label beans to burgers and bakery goods. Its German parent company brought the concept of private label to the United States in the 1980s to offer cost-savings to consumers.
More than 20 years ago, the principals with the grocer’s marketing agency, Stevens & Tate, proposed a marketing theory to ALDI executives: A smart package design attracts first-time buyers; high-quality product encourages repeat purchases.
ALDI agreed to test the theory by starting with three products: snack crackers, vanilla wafers and chocolate syrup. All three products were experiencing poor sales.
The creative team at Stevens & Tate overhauled the packaging design. Within a short time, ALDI reported that all three products were showing a significant increase in sales.
Based on the results, ALDI asked Stevens & Tate to redo all of the store’s private label packaging. The team took on 80 products, then 100, then 150, and so on — until 100 percent of the store brand merchandise had enticing packaging.
ALDI stores were enjoying an uptick in sales from these changes. The theory had been proved — smart packaging increases impulse purchases.
ALDI’s next challenge for Stevens & Tate was to brand an upscale line of food products. The Grandessa premium line formally was launched with an upscale package design and logo. The project also included display case artwork and a Grandessa Standards Style Guide. Today, ALDI’s signature line includes 78 products that range from German-roasted gourmet coffee to garden-fresh salsas.
Following the immediate success of the Grandessa line, ALDI — with the help of Stevens & Tate — launched Fit and Active healthy living products. This line now has 58 core products and more than 120 varieties geared toward today’s health-conscious consumers.
Today, nearly 20 percent of shoppers expect to buy more private label in the year ahead, a Roper survey says.
Young shoppers, in particular, like store brands, according to Chicago-based Information Resources Inc. (IRI). They expect retailers to help them save money with “functional high-quality” private label products. Young shoppers also are more likely to make impulse purchase decisions — and are less likely to use coupons and circulars or stock up on deals and bargains.
This leads IRI to suggest that traditional advertising media such as TV and print might not be as effective as they once were. To reach these consumers, it is critical for retailers to be more like ALDI — by investing in effective in-store messaging and packaging for private label products.
To read this article in its entirety, click here.
Category: Food Packaging| Retail/Grocery
15 Apr 2010With 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.
Category: Food Packaging| Retail/Grocery
13 Apr 2010Have 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.
Category: Food Packaging
21 Oct 2009At Stevens & Tate, we have seen brands jump in sales over 75% with just a re-design. It is never to be underestimated on the strategy behind a brand and the emotion that can evolve.
Walmart’s recent launch of the Great Value line isn’t trying to pass itself off as a clone of the brands it competes against, but instead letting that bland whiteness aim to set the brand apart with a distinct look and identity. Keep in mind the new Target strategy is not to have the word “Target” but just the bulls eye. Can your brand do that? Target’s new Up & Up line of private label doesn’t even show the bulls eye anywhere expect the back of each product very small by the promise statement.
As we tell all our clients, stay consistent and on strategy with every move you decide on your label. Good Brands just don’t happen, they change behaviors.
The article “Select the Right Food Packaging” highlights these ideas and stresses the importance of having your product stand out on the shelf so they are not overlooked.
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