Showing posts with label retailing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label retailing. Show all posts

Monday, June 6, 2016

Another Retail Brand downsizing

Ralph Lauren, like some other luxury brands, has been struggling amid sluggish spending on luxury apparel and accessories. The company's margins have taken a knock as department stores discount heavily to get rid of excess inventory.



Ralph Lauren is closing stores, cutting jobs and focusing more on its most popular as part of a sweeping plan to lower costs and revive sales growth at the luxury fashion brand.

The changes are the first big moves from CEO Stefan Larsson, who replaced company founder Ralph Lauren as CEO last November 2015. Lauren is still executive chairman and chief creative officer of the fashion and home decor business he created.  The new CEO Stefan Larsson's plan includes restructuring in a move aimed at saving $220 million over the next year.

Larsson has also worked with H&M for about 15 years, where he helped grow the company's sales to $17 billion from $3 billion and introduced partnerships with luxury brands such as Versace and Karl Lagerfeld.

In order to create a leaner business that operates with fewer layers of management. Larsson also wants to bring the brand more in line with today's trends and better cater to what shoppers want, taking a page out of his time at fast-fashion brands Old Navy and H&M. He will reduce inventory and focus more on the company's core brands.

Moreover, the company's lower-end Polo and Lauren brands are facing competition from retailers such as H&M (HMb.ST) and Inditex's (ITX.MC) Zara, which are known for their shorter production times.

Ralph Lauren said on Tuesday it The company will focus on its luxury Ralph Lauren line and the lower-end Polo and Lauren brands.

The New York-based company, known for its polo shirts and pony logo, plans to close more than 50 stores, or about 10 percent of its total retail stores. It will cut about 8 percent, or 1,200, of its 15,000 full-time employee.

It will focus more on its three best-selling brands — Ralph Lauren, Polo and Lauren — and devote fewer resources to its smaller ones, such as Chaps and RLX. The company would try to reduce the time taken to get new products to shelves to nine months from 15.
Ralph Lauren expects the restructuring to save it between $180 million and $220 million a year. That’s on top of $125 million in cost cuts from last year. It expects to incur restructuring charges of up to $400 million for the year and inventory-related charges of up to $150 million.

For the current quarter, it expects revenue to fall in the mid-single digits and fall in the low double digits for the year.

The changes mark a significant shift for the all-American fashion house built on denim staples and branded polo shirts. But the company, where Lauren himself was at the helm until last year, has struggled under falling sales and profits, failing to keep up with rapidly changing retail trends and new style preferences. In the year ended April 2, Ralph Lauren's profit dropped by more than 22%, excluding restructuring charges.

The company said it expects to record restructuring charges of up to $400 million and an inventory reduction-related charge of up to $150 million, mostly in the current fiscal year.

The restructuring measures are expected to result in annualized savings of about $180-$220 million.
The company had about 493 directly operated retail stores and employed about 26,000 people, roughly 15,000 of who work full time as of April 2.

Friday, April 22, 2016

Fundamentals of Branding

Branding is one of the most important aspects of any business, large or small, retail or B2B. An effective brand strategy gives you a major edge in increasingly competitive markets. But what exactly does "branding" mean? How does it affect a small business like yours?

Simply put, your brand is your promise to your customer. It tells them what they can expect from your products and services, and it differentiates your offering from your competitors'. Your brand is derived from who you are, who you want to be and who people perceive you to be.

Are you the innovative maverick in your industry? Or the experienced, reliable one? Is your product the high-cost, high-quality option, or the low-cost, high-value option? You can't be both, and you can't be all things to all people. Who you are should be based to some extent on who your target customers want and need you to be.

The foundation of your brand is your logo. Your website, packaging and promotional materials--all of which should integrate your logo--communicate your brand.


Brand Strategy and Equity of the Brand

Your brand strategy is how, what, where, when and to whom you plan on communicating and delivering on your brand messages. Where you advertise is part of your brand strategy. Your distribution channels are also part of your brand strategy. And what you communicate visually and verbally are part of your brand strategy, too.

Consistent, strategic branding leads to a strong brand equity, which means the added value brought to your company's products or services that allows you to charge more for your brand than what identical, unbranded products command. The most obvious example of this is Coke vs. a generic soda. Because Coca-Cola has built a powerful brand equity, it can charge more for its product--and customers will pay that higher price.

The added value intrinsic to brand equity frequently comes in the form of perceived quality or emotional attachment. For example, Nike associates its products with star athletes, hoping customers will transfer their emotional attachment from the athlete to the product. For Nike, it's not just the shoe's features that sell the shoe.

Defining Your Brand

Defining your brand is like a journey of business self-discovery. It can be difficult, time-consuming and uncomfortable. It requires, at the very least, that you answer the questions below:

What is your company's mission?

What are the benefits and features of your products or services?

What do your customers and prospects already think of your company?

What qualities do you want them to associate with your company?

Do your research. Learn the needs, habits and desires of your current and prospective customers. And don't rely on what you think they think. Know what they think.

Because defining your brand and developing a brand strategy can be complex, consider leveraging the expertise of a nonprofit small-business advisory group or a Small Business Development Center.

Once you've defined your brand, how do you get the word out? Here are a few simple, time-tested tips:

Get a great logo. Place it everywhere.

Write down your brand messaging. What are the key messages you want to communicate about your brand? Every employee should be aware of your brand attributes.

Integrate your brand. Branding extends to every aspect of your business--how you answer your phones, what you or your salespeople wear on sales calls, your e-mail signature, everything.

Create a "voice" for your company that reflects your brand. This voice should be applied to all written communication and incorporated in the visual imagery of all materials, online and off. Is your brand friendly? Be conversational. Is it ritzy? Be more formal. You get the gist.
Develop a tagline. Write a memorable, meaningful and concise statement that captures the essence of your brand.

Design templates and create brand standards for your marketing materials. Use the same color scheme, logo placement, look and feel throughout. You don't need to be fancy, just consistent.

Be true to your brand. Customers won't return to you--or refer you to someone else--if you don't deliver on your brand promise.

Be consistent. I placed this point last only because it involves all of the above and is the most important tip I can give you. If you can't do this, your attempts at establishing a brand will fail.

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Advantages and Disadvantages of Online Retailing



Having worked for some of the Philippines fast-growing E-commerce pioneers such as Lazada.com.ph, and had one way or the other communicated with top titans of Philippine E-commerce business such as the managing director of CashCashPinoy, Business Development Managers of Ensogo, Managing Director of Zalora.com.ph. Indeed the e-commerce landscape business in the Philippines has made some dramatic turn around from several years ago.  Filipino individuals and households now embrace convenience online shopping and has avoided the dreaded Metro traffic turns to online marketplace to get their essential needs and wants such as gadgets, mobile phones, kitchen appliances, dining wares, clothings, shoes, and even freebies on spa, skincare products and many more.

Online retailing is growing at an astonishing rate, with online sales now accounting for around one quarter of the total retail market. Retailers who ignore e-commerce may see their trade lessening as customers continue to shift to ordering products online. However, you need to think carefully and weigh all the advantages and disadvantages - backed by good market research - before deciding on whether or not to trade online.

Advantages of online retail
The benefits of retailing online include:
·         Easy access to market - in many ways the access to market for entrepreneurs has never been easier. Online marketplaces such as eBay and Amazon allow anyone to set up a simple online shop and sell products within minutes.

·         Reduced overheads - selling online can remove the need for expensive retail premises and customer-facing staff, allowing you to invest in better marketing and customer experience on your e-commerce site.

·         Potential for rapid growth - selling on the internet means traditional constraints to retail growth - eg finding and paying for larger - are not major factors. With a good digital marketing strategy and a plan a scale up order fulfilment systems, you can respond and boost growing sales.

·         Widen your market / export - one major advantage over premises-based retailers is the ability expand your market beyond local customers very quickly. You may discover a strong demand for your products in other countries which you can respond to by targeted marketing, offering your website in a different language, or perhaps partnering with an overseas company.

·         Customer intelligence - ability to use online marketing tools to target new customers and website analysis tools to gain insight into your customers’ needs. For more information on driving sales through online advertising see how to develop an e-marketing plan, and for advice on improving your customer’s on-site experience.

Disadvantages of online retail

Some negatives of online retail include: 
·         Website costs - planning, designing, creating, hosting, securing and maintaining a professional e-commerce website isn’t cheap, especially if you expect large and growing sales volumes.

·         Infrastructure costs - even if you aren’t paying the cost of customer-facing premises, you’ll need to think about the costs of physical space for order fulfillment, warehousing goods, dealing with returns and staffing for these tasks.

·         Security and fraud - the growth of online retail market has attracted the attention of sophisticated criminal elements. The reputation of your business could be fatally damaged if you don’t invest in the latest security systems to protect your website and transaction processes.

·         Legal issues - getting to grips with e-commerce and the law can be a challenge and you’ll need to be aware of, and plan to cope with, the additional customer rights which are attached to online sales.

·         Advertising costs - while online marketing can be a very efficient way of getting the right customers to your products, it demands a generous budget. This is especially true if you are competing in a crowded sector or for popular keywords.


·         Customer trust - it can be difficult to establish a trusted brand name, especially without a physical business with a track record and face-to-face interaction between customers and sales staff. You need to consider the costs or setting up a good customer service system as part of your online offering. 

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Amazing Amazon

In recent months, after joining a company that does business at Amazon.com, I get a bigger picture of what the world’s largest online retailer in the US has been doing differently that attracts millions of people to its website and sells alot of books, and merchandise.  Amazon has turned out to be the world’s profitable retailer even beating Walmart.



From its humble start in 1995 selling books online to expand into a more diverse range of home improvement products, toys, kids stuffs, electronic gadgets, jewellery, watches, sporting goods, lawn equipments and home care equipment products and available in many other countries such as Canada, UK, France, Germany, Poland, Slovakia, Spain, China Japan and India. This remarkable company has grown into a behemoth of retail worldwide.

Many upstart entrepreneurs who even big companies have joined the fray in setting up an online store with Amazon, the best part is, you get your orders promptly when ordered at Amazon within 2-3 days time.  Much of the customer’s review also reveals an honest to goodness customer feedback, at times these are solicited in exchange for a free product or a discounted coupons.

Every online seller at Amazon has been clamoring to gain a foothold on the top page of Amazon when certain keywords are being type in the search bars by the customers looking for their product of choice.  These valuable keywords are imbedded within the product titles or descriptions that makes the search searchable.  Getting into the first two pages of the search result is one thing, and staying on top is another matter. 



If Amazon targeted towards home use buyers and retail customers is not enough, Amazon also offers, In 2005, Amazon announced the creation of Amazon Prime, a membership offering free two-day shipping within the contiguous United States on all eligible purchases for a flat annual fee of $79 (equivalent to $99 in 2015), as well as discounted one-day shipping rates.   Amazon launched the program in Germany, Japan, and the United Kingdom in 2007; in France (as "Amazon Premium") in 2008, in Italy in 2011, and in Canada in 2013.

Though considered to be a retail powerhouse, Amazon constantly evolves and conceptualizes new things such as coming up with Amazon Fresh and Amazon Business, This is one great company that never rest on its achievement but constantly comes up with better ways to help different customer’s needs and wants. 

This by far ensures Amazon will always be on top of its game, in an ever changing time and consumer preference.  A business model that will be hard to beat.


Friday, March 7, 2014

SALE SALE SALE


All year round, we see this most recognized four-letter word, that conveys a very powerful message.  No need for any further explanation yet all of us know that it certainly means, a more affordable price goods to buy, more value for our money, big savings.

Being in the retail industry myself, I would like to emphasize the many facets, benefits of what this word means for both retailers and consumers.

Most customers are appealed towards the word "SALE" being displayed alongside merchandise/goods being sold, and have you observed that this is most often being displayed store-wide during special occasions such as Graduation Day, Summer season, Back to school, Halloween, Christmas and New Year are the major "Sale season" and there are the "Payday Sale", "End-of-Season Sale", "Holiday Sale", "Father's Day Sale", "Mother's Day Sale", "Grandparents Day Sale", "Anniversary Sale" to name a few.

There are also the departmental Sale : "Toy Sale", "Furniture Sale",  "Lingerie Sale", "Mens Wear Sale", "Appliance Sale" and many other category or brand sale.

As part of retail, the reason "Sale" is being implemented in-store is to draw the buying crowd, especially during payday, another reason is for retailers to be able to deplete their stock inventories to free up the retail shelves and turn them into cash to have more cash-flow to purchase new items to be sold in their stores. This is the avenue for most retailers, department store, business owners to make customers feel being active part of the exchange of goods for their money.Stores are more likely to place sale signs on items with higher unit volumes.  Unit volumes vary across products.

Store sale sign and price strategies are entirely endogenous in the model, as is the impact of sale signs on demand.  Demand increases for products with sale signs because customers believe these products are less likely to be available in the future.

As for profit margins : stores are more likely to place sale signs on items with higher profit margins.  The shift in demand upon use of a sale sign can lead to higher prices and also higher unit volumes.

The effectiveness of sale signs by arguing that they inform customers about which products have relatively low prices, thus helping customers decide whether to purchase now, visit another store or perhaps return to the same store in the future.

Sale signs makes the consumers aware of price-markdown, big discounts that may translate to perceived big saving also increase demand for products.  The apparent effectiveness of this simple strategy is surprising; sale signs are inexpensive to produce.

On the part of the consumers, they most often have limited or incomplete idea of the true value of the products being put on sale, they may not have any hint if these are over-stocks, for depletion or are priced with higher margins.  The main point why customers are drawn towards "Sale" is their notion that they can find good deals of what they have wanted to buy in the past but limited due to the regular pricing, or they have the perceived savings to be made, this also hasten their decision-making in the urgency to immediately purchase even if the product does not immediately pose a need for the consumer.

In summary, its a win-win for the customers, if the retailers put on sale their premium and regular items that are not at all over-stocked or slow-selling, if its being offered all across product stock keeping units(SKU) and not just on the selected items that they deemed to be old stocks or non moving items.  For the consumers, they also would be giving the much needed help by buying the products put on sale be it discounted or full-markdown priced.  Since this will entail the business to have more cash-flow to buy new merchandise to put on display for their future shopping pleasure.


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Saturday, September 7, 2013

Merchandising and Retail Techniques

Merchandising is the arrangement of products in a physical or online store to maximize sales. The objective of merchandising is to close the sale after advertising campaigns bring customers into the store. Good merchandising frees up time, makes the selling process simpler, enhances the buying experience for consumers and drives sales growth.

Basic Techniques

Basic merchandising techniques include displaying related merchandise together, simple and clean displays, ample aisle space, well-stocked shelves and prominent featuring of promotional items. For example, a furniture store may create a mock living room with different pieces of furniture items and fixtures to generate sales in these products. Attractive floor displays of seasonal goods in high-traffic areas also drive higher sales and profits. The National Retail Hardware Association recommends storing slow-moving and low-priced items away from customers to encourage sales of high-margin items.

Enhancing the Appeal

The first impression is usually the most important one, which is why window displays in brick-and-mortar stores and landing-page layouts in e-commerce stores are so important. They grab customers' attention and bring them into the store, which is not a simple matter in a mall with dozens of retailers. A bakery may highlight its attractive cakes and chocolate creations, while a clothing retailer may display the most recent fashions in its window display. Proper use of lighting creates a mood and illuminates the merchandise, especially during peak holiday selling seasons.

Store Layout

The type of store usually dictates the floor and shelf layout. For example, grocery stores should have enough aisle space for shoppers to move their carts and accompanying toddlers around when they are doing their shopping. Retailers may often move items to the front of the shelves to avoid giving the impression of not having enough items on stock. Retail managers may use the sales-per-square-foot metric, which is the ratio of sales to total shelf and floor display space, to assess the effectiveness of a merchandising strategy and make the necessary adjustments.

Online Merchandising

E-commerce stores should have a simple layout and an effective search tool for customers to browse through the store effortlessly. Software has advanced to the point where a simple mouse rollover of an item activates a pop-up window displaying the product details and even multimedia demonstrations of how to use the product. Online merchandising techniques include cross-selling, which is the highlighting of related products in search results, making special promotions appear on every page and offering user-friendly electronic checkout facilities.

Other Techniques

End caps, which are the ends of store shelves, and power islands, which are free-standing displays strategically placed in high-traffic store areas, may draw attention to new and high-margin products. Taste testing, product demonstrations and how-to training sessions also highlight certain items and make the customer buying experience more enjoyable.
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Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Merchandising & Stock Replenishment

Merchandising and stocking are essential tasks in virtually any retail business. Effective merchandising techniques prevent a haphazard arrangement of goods that can hinder sales, while efficient stocking procedures ensure the merchandise is always available for customer purchase. While the merchandising and stocking functions are closely related, there are also some key differences between the two.

Merchandising Identification

Merchandising is a retail marketing process entailing the visual displaying of goods as well as product selection. Merchandising involves determining the proper product mix for the store, the shelf position of each item and creating and building attractive displays and signage. Merchandising also includes the creation of special promotions and pricing. When done effectively, merchandising serves as a type of "silent salesperson," as it draws customers to merchandise and displays, often leading to purchases.

Stocking Identification

Stocking is the process of filling the store's shelves and displays with merchandise for sale, commonly referred to as "stock." Stocking can also refer to the process of replenishing and storing goods in the store's backroom or warehouse. Store employees known as stock clerks are responsible for keeping the shelves full in their particular departments and reordering merchandise when supplies run low. In larger retail establishments, stock replenishment occurs with the aid of an automated inventory management system.

Relationship

Store management's merchandising policies and practices largely determine the stocking needs of a retail establishment. For example, in a clothing store, if management decides to run a sale on a new line of summer fashions along with creating a special display, store personnel will likely need to order extra merchandise and ensure the display remains fully stocked during the promotional period. If grocery store management decides to carry a new product, stockers need to place the item in the appropriate shelf location.

Job Duties

From an employment perspective, stocking duties are more physical in nature while the merchandising role requires more analytical and creative abilities. Stockers spend much of their time transporting and lifting merchandise while in the process of filling shelves and building displays. The merchandising role requires the analysis of sales data and trends, such as when determining what items to carry or to put on sale. Creative ability is helpful for thinking of innovative and profitable ways to display products.
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Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Brand Rescue of Clorox

Some blue-chip companies have adopted a longer view of brand management and are starting to show positive results. For example, Clorox, a leading consumer-packaged-goods firm, is ahead of the curve in its use of long-term metrics to steward its brand. Until the second quarter of 2005, the Clorox bleach product line was in a seemingly endless cycle of discounting. Almost once a month, the price of a 96-ounce bottle of regular Clorox bleach was reduced to $0.99 at retail—even cheaper than most bottled waters. The company had also reduced its advertising spending. From a short-term perspective, the promotions appeared to be quite profitable. Yet consumers learned to lie in wait for these deals, which increased short-term sales but decreased baseline sales.


In the midst of this, Stephen Garry, director of advanced analytics at Clorox, introduced long-term metrics to measure brand performance. The top chart in the exhibit “How Clorox Rescued Its Brand” depicts quarterly baseline sales for the brand and the projected incremental lift arising from promotions. Both measures are expressed as a percentage change from the corresponding quarter of the previous year to control for seasonal fluctuations in sales and to protect the company’s data.

How Clorox Rescued Its Brand
Garry found that before the third quarter of 2005, baseline sales were low (not depicted in the chart) and decreasing. Lift over baseline—which reflects price sensitivity—was extremely high (not depicted in the chart) and increasing. These numbers indicated weakness in the brand from the perspective of both sales and margins. In response, Garry initiated an effort to reverse this trend by reducing discounting and increasing television advertising. The changes, implemented in July 2005, are depicted in the middle chart of the exhibit.

As a result of the policy change, baseline sales increased dramatically and lift over baseline decreased. Consumers were no longer buying from promotion to promotion but were instead purchasing more volume at full price. These changes had a positive long-term effect on the company’s revenues and profits by increasing the brand’s quantity and price premiums.
As shown in the bottom chart of the exhibit, revenue (which was low before the policy change) eventually began to turn around as a result of the reduction in discounting. Clorox further indicated to us that profits, which continued to fall in the short term (the third and fourth quarters of 2005), rebounded sharply in the first and second quarters of 2006.
Note the implication for the analyst who typically focuses on short-term metrics such as quarterly revenue. In the third quarter of 2005, the analyst might have downgraded the brand as a result of revenue and profit decreases. Yet these short-term decreases reflect the time it takes for consumers to acclimate to the price changes and respond to the advertising. Clorox, with the foresight and temerity to monitor the attendant long-term changes in brand health, persevered with its strategy. The ensuing quarters yielded higher revenues and substantially increased gross profits. Without long-term brand-health measures, the analyst may have come to a misleading conclusion about the value of the brand or Clorox may not have realized the fruition of its strategy. Armed with long-term metrics, firms and analysts can assume a longer-term perspective on the brand, leading to improved profitability.
Brand management today is like driving a car by looking only a few feet ahead. The drivers can change direction rapidly, but they’re not necessarily on a path that will take them where they want to go. In the face of an increasingly fragmented media and powerful retailers, brand managers cannot afford to be steering their brands in the wrong direction. Mounting evidence suggests that a short-term orientation erodes a brand’s ability to compete in the marketplace. Accordingly, managers are well advised to refocus their attention on the basic principles that once made their brands ascendant.

Saturday, June 9, 2007

Consumers Price sensitivity towards Brands

The numbers tell a sobering story about the state of branded goods: From 2003 to 2005, global private-label market share grew a staggering 13%. Furthermore, price premiums have eroded, and margins are following suit. Consumers are 50% more price sensitive than they were 25 years ago. In recent surveys of consumer-goods managers, seven out of ten cited pricing pressure and shoppers’ declining loyalty as their primary concerns.



Brands are on the wane. For the many consumer-goods companies struggling against this trend, it’s tempting to blame the big-box discount retailers. Plenty of anecdotes support their point of view. Recall what happened to Vlasic, for 50 years a beloved brand in America’s kitchen cupboards, when it started discounting its pickles by offering them in gallon-size jars in the late 1990s. Wal-Mart began selling the product for an unheard-of $2.99—a price so low that Wal-Mart soon made up 30% of Vlasic’s business. The supercheap gallon jar cannibalized Vlasic’s other channels and shrank its margins by 25%. When Vlasic asked for pricing relief, Wal-Mart responded by refusing an immediate price increase and reviewing its commitments to the line. By 2001, Vlasic had filed for bankruptcy.
Wal-Mart and other powerful retailers have undoubtedly weakened some brands, but a number of consumer-product companies have done a better job than Vlasic at managing both their relationships with retailers and their brands. For example, when Foot Locker cut Nike orders by about $200 million to protest the terms Nike had placed on prices and selection, Nike cut its allocation of shoes to Foot Locker by $400 million. Consumers, frustrated because they couldn’t find the shoes they wanted, stopped shopping at Foot Locker. Sales at a competitor, Finish Line, increased. In the end, Foot Locker acceded to Nike’s terms.
At the core of the differences in how Vlasic and Nike managed their brands is a crucial disparity in strategic perspective. Vlasic used a short-term sales strategy, focusing on a single, large channel partner and discounting its product to attract consumers. In addition, the company reduced advertising by 40% between 1995 and 1998. Nike, on the other hand, positioned itself for the long term. It maintained strong relationships with a variety of retailers and invested in brand equity, allocating $1.2 billion annually to its advertising budget. By setting its sights on a distant horizon, Nike continued to own its customers—and its brand—while Vlasic ceded both to the channel.
Companies routinely overinvest in promotions and underinvest in advertising, product development, and new forms of distribution. As a result, powerhouse brands have been weakened, often beyond recovery.
Our research into the role of marketing strategy in brand performance indicates that companies are paying too much attention to short-term data and not enough to the long-term health of their brands. They routinely overinvest in price promotions and underinvest in advertising, new-product development, and new forms of distribution. As a result of these shortsighted approaches, powerhouse brands have been weakened, often beyond recovery. It’s time for changes in how companies measure brand performance, how they communicate about their brands to the markets, and how they oversee brand managers. Those changes won’t happen without a major shift in thinking at the senior-management level. Corporate managers have the ability to make these sweeping changes. Do they have the will?

The Genesis of the Short-Term View

One wonders how manufacturers became so myopic about their brands. We suggest three factors: an abundance of real-time sales data that make short-term promotional effects more apparent, thus pushing manufacturers to overdiscount; a corresponding dearth of usable information to help assess the effect of long-term investments in brand equity, new products, and distribution; and the short tenure of brand managers. We’ll discuss each in turn.


Data are proliferating.
Before the 1980s, brand managers had to wait up to two months to get sales numbers. Matching weekly discounts to changes in sales was a difficult and error-prone task. That all changed with the advent of store scanners, which gave managers real-time sales data. These figures made it possible to attribute a spike in sales to a price promotion. 
Although scanner data showed brand managers the clear link between discounting and sales, the numbers didn’t necessarily tell them much about whether a given promotion was profitable. For that assessment, they needed to compare sales at the discounted price with those that probably would have occurred without the promotion. To help brand managers predict the level of sales in the absence of a discount, and thus to assess the immediate profitability of promotions, baseline sales models were developed—in part by Leonard Lodish. (It’s important to note that, contrary to the belief of many brand managers, baseline sales are estimates—albeit very good ones—not measures of actual sales. Baseline sales are estimated by extrapolating from periods when there are no price reductions or other kinds of promotions.) This new metric further highlighted the short-term effects of trade promotions.
The profusion of data has had major consequences for the allocation of marketing dollars. According to various sources, from 1978 to 2001 trade promotion spending increased from 33% to 61% of firms’ marketing budgets. This growth occurred largely at the expense of advertising, whose effects play out over a longer time frame and are thus more difficult to measure. Advertising spending fell from 40% to 24% of marketing expenditures during this period. That level has held fairly constant in recent years.
The reallocation of spending away from long-term brand building and toward temporary price reductions was predicated on a short-term mind-set. Promotions yield an incontrovertible boost in sales, known as lift over baseline. This effect, however, is generally short-lived. To understand how promotions affect brands in the long run, consider some consequences of short-term sales approaches.
  • Changes in consumer behavior. Shoppers aren’t naive; regular sales promotions encourage them to wait for the next sale rather than purchase a product at full price. As more people make purchasing decisions exclusively on price (a behavior that results in decreased sales when the product is not discounted), baseline sales eventually decrease and lift over baseline increases. From a short-term perspective, this lift makes promotions look highly profitable, so managers push for more discounts. Eventually, most of a product is sold at a discount, and profit margins decrease. The average brand manager, who believes that baselines do not change with pricing policy, is left to wonder what went wrong.      
Shoppers aren’t naive; regular sales promotions encourage them to wait for the next sale rather than purchase a product at full price.
In addition, customers often stockpile a product if they think the price is particularly good. In the short term, this behavior may give the appearance of an increase in sales; over the longer term, however, customers simply delay purchases as they work through their inventory. In other words, stockpiling can amplify the immediate effect of a promotion without increasing overall sales.
  • Diluted brand equity. By focusing consumers’ attention on extrinsic brand cues such as price instead of on intrinsic cues such as quality, promotions make brands appear less differentiated. Consumers, over time, become more price sensitive, and the product gradually becomes commoditized. Even stores can be threatened with commodity status. A factor cited in Kmart’s bankruptcy was the retailer’s reliance on discounts to attract consumers to the store. When it tried to curtail price promotions, sales plummeted. By communicating to shoppers that low prices were its main draw, Kmart had given customers no reason to develop any loyalty.
  • Competitive response. When one firm increases its discounts, others usually follow suit. As a result, individual promotions increase but overall sales do not, further lowering everyone’s margins.
Together, these factors can substantially diminish the usefulness of sales promotions. In a study of 24 brands in Europe using data from 2002 to 2005, Information Resources, Inc. (IRI) found that the total impact of discounts is only 80% of their short-term effect (in other words, the effects measured over the long term turn out to be 20% less positive than they first appear). In contrast, the long-term effect of advertising can be 60% greater than its short-term impact. Research on 71 brands by a consumer-packaged-goods marketer in the United States resulted in a similar conclusion: Price sensitivity measured weekly is seven times higher than it is when the same data are assessed quarterly. This difference can be ascribed, in part, to the fact that weekly data recognize increases in purchases but ignore subsequent competitive price reactions and changes in consumer behavior. Nonetheless, the increased availability of short-term data dramatically affects perceptions of the value of promotions. As promotional measurement becomes even more granular (with daily and hourly data for sales available on demand), this short-term orientation will probably be reinforced.

Long-term effects are harder to measure.

While immediate increases in sales arising from discounts are striking, the effects of discounts and of other components in the marketing mix—such as advertising, new products, and distribution—can be understood only over the long term. However, because long-term effects are more difficult to measure than short-term ones, few companies pay much attention to them. Research to help managers take a longer view is increasingly available. Studies by Lodish and colleagues found that advertising has a small short-term effect on sales compared with the effect of a price promotion—but a TV advertising campaign that does generate significant sales increases during the first year will continue to do so for two more years, even if the ads are no longer being aired. The revenue arising from the first year of advertising approximately doubles over the subsequent two-year period. Equally important, if a TV campaign does not have a significant impact during the first year, it will have no long-term impact (and roughly half of all TV ads generate no lift in sales, according to some recent research).
One might conclude that TV advertising is difficult to justify on a short-term basis. We disagree with this view for two reasons. First, advertisers who test their ads in the market can isolate the campaigns that will increase revenues over the long term, since advertisements that are successful in the short run also have a positive long-term effect. Second, even campaigns that don’t do much to boost sales can increase margins by differentiating brands and thus allowing companies to raise prices. Indeed, Victoria’s Secret has conducted a number of regional and local TV advertising tests in which consumers in some regions were exposed to the ads and others were not. According to Jill Beraud, chief marketing officer of Limited Brands, the parent company of Victoria’s Secret, the brand’s TV ads do not generally increase short-term sales enough to justify the cost. However, Victoria’s Secret has linked increases in TV advertising to its ability to charge higher prices over the long term. The investment in TV advertising helps build the overall strength of the brand and decrease customers’ price sensitivity.
Companies have paid even less attention to the long-term effects of distribution and new products than they have to the effects of advertising. By coupling recent statistical advances with five years of data on 25 packaged-goods categories, Carl Mela and colleagues examined the long-term effects of distribution (the number and kind of stores carrying the product) and of product-line length (the number of items) and variety (the extent to which items are distinct). Results indicate that increases in the length and variety of a product line play a major role in boosting a brand’s baseline sales. Moreover, increased product-line variety and distribution in leading retailers reduce consumers’ sensitivity to price. Together, these results suggest that increasing variety and high-quality distribution raises sales and prices in the long run. Also of note, discounts had a deleterious long-term effect on brand performance.
An example of a company that has considered the effects of distribution is Lacoste, known for tennis shirts adorned with a tiny alligator. When the French company started selling the shirts in the United States in the 1950s, they became a fashion rage. General Mills acquired the brand in 1969, and it continued to sell well. However, in the mid-1980s, General Mills lowered the price on the shirts and broadened distribution to include discount outlets instead of adding high-end stores. The short-term effect was predictable: Sales increased. Yet the brand went from elite stores’ racks to clearance bins and lost its cachet. Lacoste repurchased the brand in 1992. The company limited distribution to higher-quality clothing retailers, advertised the brand through celebrities, and raised prices. A change in senior leadership in 2002 precipitated an even stronger brand focus. Since that time, sales have jumped 800%. However, in the initial years after Lacoste repurchased the brand, the company’s marketing efforts had little immediate effect on revenues. Had the company assumed a short-term sales perspective, it may not have been able to reinvigorate the brand.
Despite the growing evidence that marketing strategies—other than price promotions—yield positive long-term returns, companies continue to manage their brands with a short-term perspective. This orientation is exacerbated by Wall Street analysts who focus on quarterly figures to value firms and advise clients. Lauren Lieberman, Lehman Brothers’ equity analyst for cosmetics, household products, and personal care products, gave us a Wall Street point of view: “We analyze quarterly revenue and profit performance because it’s the best gauge we’ve got. But what we really value is sustainable top-line growth because we feel it is indicative of higher returns to shareholders over time.”
Of course this habit of looking chiefly at quarterly performance communicates itself to the companies being watched. Managers we interviewed at a major packaged-goods firm said that distribution in high-end stores and product innovation play the greatest role in increasing sales in the long term—but they focus their marketing programs and research efforts on discounting and advertising. When asked about the emphasis on discounts, they said they are judged on quarterly sales because investors focus on those numbers, and that the link between discounts and the current quarter’s sales is transparent. Thus, short-term numbers drive out those that tell the fuller story, leading managers to manage brands with the data they have, not the data they need.

Brand managers have short tenures.

The use of short-term sales data as a yardstick for brand performance can interact in unfortunate ways with the tenure of a brand manager—which is typically quite brief, often less than a year. Any brand manager who takes a long-term perspective—investing in advertising or new-product development—is likely to benefit the performance of subsequent managers, not her own.
In sum, the increasing availability of more thinly sliced short-term sales data has led to a greater emphasis on short-term marketing productivity, to the detriment of the long-run health of brands. Scanner data have been available for decades now, so it should be easier, not harder, to take a long-term view of brands. Unfortunately, most companies discard these data, unaware of how they can be used to track a brand not just over quarters but over many years.

A Long-View Dashboard

In the short term, discounts lift sales over baseline levels. But baselines and lifts are not immutable: They change in response to marketing strategy. Those changes signal a long-term shift in brand performance. Higher baseline sales mean that consumers are buying more of a product at full price. Think of this as a quantity premium. Whereas the baseline measure reflects only the volume sold when a product is not discounted, the lift-over-baseline measure represents the difference between discounted and nondiscounted sales. Smaller lifts reflect greater customer loyalty because loyals tend to buy regardless of the discount status. Brands with loyal customers face less pressure to reduce their prices and therefore enjoy a price premium. Together, quantity and price premiums reflect a brand’s long-term health. If both increase, demand and margins will be higher—along with brand equity and profits. If consumers pay less of a premium for the brand and baseline demand is decreasing, then the brand is headed in the wrong direction—and the firm has a problem.
A C-suite manager can monitor how a brand is doing in the long term by watching the following dashboard of measures each quarter:
  • Baseline sales. Recall that this is an estimate of sales at a nondiscounted price. This measure reflects a brand’s quantity premium.
  • The changes in baseline sales over months, quarters, and years and the statistical significance of those changes.
  • The estimated response to regular prices and price promotions. An increased response to promotions reflects a decrease in the price premium a brand can command.
  • The changes in response to regular and discounted prices over months, quarters, and years and the statistical significance of those changes.
Given the relatively short tenure of brand managers and the significant reallocation of resources that changes in long-term marketing strategy entail, someone higher up in the firm must track these measures. Such measures can also be useful tools for communicating the benefits of long-term marketing investments to a firm’s analysts.
To see what insights the dashboard can yield, consider the example of a large consumer-packaged-goods firm that, in conjunction with IRI, tracked the performance of one of its beverages from 1994 to 1999. The analysis revealed a 3% decline in baseline sales—an indication that shoppers were increasingly buying the beverage only when it was on sale—and a 14% increase in price sensitivity over that period. The overall brand decline was not obvious from the short-term sales data because the firm had increased discounts, which had led to a 7% growth in sales during the period. The damage to the brand became apparent when the company tried to raise prices in 1999. Consumers’ resistance to paying full price cost the brand more than $5 million in revenues. This debacle prompted a review of the brand’s strategy: Management discovered an 8% increase in promotion spending and a 7% decrease in advertising budgets.

How long-term metrics can redress short-term myopia.

We believe that the dashboard approach can improve brand performance over the long term in three ways.
First, this view prevents an exclusive focus on short-term data. If firms supplement sales data with data for quantity and price premiums, they will have a more complete sense of how various marketing programs affect their brands. Specifically, managers can establish whether price promotions have damaging long-term effects on brand equity and can therefore make more strategic decisions about marketing spending. Moreover, Wall Street analysts can use data on price premiums to get a better sense of a company’s profitability.
Second, brand managers’ performance can be judged on a combination of quarterly sales and quantity and price premiums. The temptation to discount a strong brand will be reduced, because damage to the brand’s long-term health will become more apparent. This will encourage managers not only to take a long-term view of performance but also to expend some effort determining which factors contribute to a brand’s strength. In addition, plots of dashboard metrics over time can serve as early warning systems to alert brand managers to problems.
Finally—and most broadly—long-term metrics inform a company’s marketing decisions. Consider, for example, the launch of a new product. When Kraft introduced DiGiorno Rising Crust Pizza, thereby creating a high-quality tier in the frozen pizza category, the company anticipated that the new product would cannibalize Tombstone, a mid-tier Kraft pizza. A recent study using long-term metrics shows, however, that the launch of DiGiorno had a consequence that Kraft did not anticipate: The new product did not just steal sales from Tombstone but caused its price premium—and that of all mid-tier pizza brands—to drop sharply. Apparently, DiGiorno made the mid-tier brands seem more ordinary to consumers; as a result, Tombstone was less able to withstand discounting from other pizzas like it. Ultimately, the introduction of DiGiorno was highly profitable for Kraft, but the company, unaware of the effect on Tombstone’s price premium, may have overstated the profitability of the launch. One can easily imagine that in other situations, a company armed with such metrics might have concluded that a launch would be unprofitable.

Data and methodology.

A company doesn’t truly have a long-term orientation unless it holds on to its data for longer periods and carefully analyzes the numbers.
We are astonished by the paucity of longitudinal data collected by the firms we visit. It is hard to see how companies can attain any insights into brand building with just 52 weeks of data, yet many firms have only that. Even major data suppliers such as IRI and ACNielsen discard data after five years—at the same time that they’re building more capacity and processing power to collect hour-by-hour measures. Hour-level data can undoubtedly be useful for monitoring stock-outs. However, it is difficult to imagine that local stock-outs affect market capitalization as much as brand equity, which often takes many years to build. Interbrand calculates the market value of the Coca-Cola brand to be $67 billion. This value developed over decades. It would be fascinating to study the evolution of Coke’s marketing mix—but in all likelihood it would be impossible to do so, because the data have probably vanished.
It is hard to see how companies can attain any insights into brand building with just 52 weeks of data, yet many firms have only that.
A detailed look at methods for analyzing long-term marketing results is beyond the scope of this article. The baseline sales and price sensitivity measures we propose for the dashboard are relatively easy and available from many data suppliers. Ideally, firms should collect and retain these measures over a long period—five years or more. Other analyses are more difficult. To assess the long-term effect of marketing strategy on brand performance, one would need to statistically link marketing policy over years or quarters to price and quantity premiums. This approach allows managers to gauge simultaneously the long-term effects of marketing campaigns on price premiums and the short-term effects of a given week’s discounts on that week’s sales.