Retail Political Power…a Force
for Change?
(How to optimise supplier and retailer's power, in
the aisle)
By Brian Moore, Global retail consultant and CEO
EMR-NAMNEWS, mailbox@namnews.com
Given their
sensitivity and ability to respond rapidly and cost-effectively to
consumer-shopper needs, based upon their intimate knowledge of their target
audience (name, address, income, shopping behaviour, hobbies, family
circumstances, financial exposure, health…) it could be said that retailers have
more political power than the politicians…
Anyone doubting the potential power of retailers should bear
in mind their ability to exercise real political power in two ways, direct
influence on the consumer-shopper in-store, and via direct impact upon the
economy.
They can use price, the ultimate persuader, to modify the
entire value-set of individuals, whilst they can directly affect the economy via
their leverage in terms of influencing/controlling inflation, the balance of
payments, direct employment of significant numbers of wage-earners, and
especially their ability to control access to in-store traffic-flow.
The
Retailers’ track-record
Specifically, doubters should reflect upon retailers’ track
record in unilaterally dismantling restrictive and out-of-date legislation
relating to limited shopping hours, Sunday trading, Resale-Price-Maintenance,
and the Net-Book-Agreement, in recent years.
Even if it takes a few ‘failed’ legal cases and prosecutions
to make the point that a particular law has passed its sell-by date - so be it;
especially when the publicity resulting from a £1000 fine not only reinforces
their image as the peoples’ champion, but would probably cost £250,000 via
prime-time TV in the real world.
Moreover, whilst politicians attempt to sway the public every
five years, a retailer manages to persuade most of the population to come to a
store and pay hard-earned cash for ideas, sometimes several times a day.
Whilst they may have slightly different perspectives in that
retailers see store traffic in terms of consumers and shoppers, politicians see
voters carrying shopping baskets…the potential for influencing change via
shopping behaviour soon becomes obvious to both sides.
And bearing in mind that all voters are shoppers, whereas not
all shoppers are voters, ‘captive’ store-traffic can represent a fruitful target
and potential source of votes for a political party…
Working with
retailer power
However, before the political parties discover the pulling
power of in-store posters/TV and attempt to monopolise available space, there is
scope for vendors to harness some of the retailers’ power via aisle-level
collaboration, use of their media, and jointly persuading ‘their’
consumer-shopper to shop the brand.
It is important to bear in mind that a superstore is simply a
large mom n’ pop corner-shop doing simple things well, with access to far more
potential knowledge of the shopper as a means of influencing shopping behaviour.
This potential shopping insight, combined with the added advantage of direct
ownership of powerful in-store media that can carry a detailed brand message to
a hand-in-pocket shopper, moments before making a purchase, makes it imperative
that vendors find ways of tapping into and sharing a retailer’s ability to
persuade, by releasing the synergies available from a combination of shopping
insight and consumption insight.
So what if the retailers are effectively running the country?
That is perhaps a problem best left for the professional politicians...
Sharing
Retail Power in the Aisle…
Left to their own devices, retailers will often try to use
the brand to attract appropriate shoppers to the store, there to be confronted
with the target brand, and alongside it a private-label equivalent, as good as
the brand and possibly 20% cheaper. A vendor is thus presented with a dilemma:
either produce the private-label and prevent the business going elsewhere, or
market the brand so effectively in the aisle that the retailer does not bother
to make a private-label available, preferring instead to share in the optimised
sale of the brand.
Provided the vendor has chosen the trading partner on the
basis of brand consumer-profile and shopper-profile congruence or near-perfect
fit, there is a good chance that vendor and retailer will share similar
aspirations with regard to optimising a shopper visit. It is obviously important
to then ensure that all members of the category are represented on a
‘fair-share’ basis in the fixture.
On the assumption that both parties are willing and able to
share synergies arising from the combination of consumption insight and shopping
insight, it then remains to communicate the proposition via in-store media.
The power of
in-store media
Retailer-owned in-store media, with its power of immediacy
derived from a wealth of named shopper data, and its ability to satisfy the
shopper’s appetite for specific detail at point-of-purchase, probably represents
the first real threat to traditional above-the-line media ever encountered……
Those in doubt should perhaps consider the difference in consumer attitude to an
unasked-for interruption to a favourite TV programme, compared with the same
consumer in shopper mode, hungry for detailed information on brand performance
at the checkout…
Add to this the power of store-specific marketing and
assortments, together with the vendor’s challenge of distilling national brand
advertising, brand positioning, and category approach to branch level, via
effective manning, and the opportunities and threats become clearer.…
Finally, having successfully overcome the above hurdles, it
is crucial to retain a very practical approach to getting basic things right in
retail, at local level.
Optimised use
of shopper data
One example may help to illustrate the pragmatic approach
required to optimise trading opportunities in the aisle:
As enthusiastic practitioners of open-minded data-mining,
Wal-Mart demonstrate the application of their pragmatic approach in their
ability to access their ‘Pentagon-scale’ database, and drill for examples of
linked purchases, discovering in the process a Friday evening connection between
sales of baby-diapers and six-packs of beer.
Many retailers would tend to dismiss the apparent
relationship as coincidence, but not Wal-Mart. They were not satisfied until
they established that the male in a partnership, shopping for bulk packs of
diapers on a Friday evening, tended to pick up a six-pack of beer on the way to
the checkout…
A more enlightened retailer might accept a direct
relationship, and mount a Friday evening promotion on six-packs of beer in the
alcoholic drinks sector, but not Wal-Mart.
Wal-Mart had the inspired pragmatism to acknowledge the link,
the self-confidence and appropriate trade partnerships to move some beer into
the Baby category and run a Friday beer promotion for new fathers.
Thus, uniquely in the world, Wal-Mart became the only
retailer to merchandise beer in the baby section, achieving a 30% incremental
gain in sales in the process.
Successful retailing is about doing simple things right, in a
living laboratory. A vendor’s innovation can take nine months to reach a shelf,
whereas a good retailer can put a product on a fixture at 0900 hours, and by
1600hours on the same day will know whether to de-list, or double the
order…
Ready for some real power-sharing…?