Skip to main content

Tesco's challenge is also your challenge

Ed Garner of Kantar Worldpanel reckons he has the best tool for knowing what is happening in the UK grocery market and his data says Tesco's strategy does not work. Nine out of 10 people already visit Tesco regularly and no matter how hard it tries, this number is unlikely to become 10 out of 10.

Sitting in a room with 9 businessmen and one environmental campaigner yesterday I mentioned this 9 out of 10 statistic and they simply did not believe me. How many people shop at Tesco, the chairman asked and only two of us put up our hands. The other shopper said he mainly used Tesco late at night when he had to make a distress purchase.

Which got me thinking about my visit the previous evening to buy toothpaste. I had caught a train out of Paddington and planned to buy the toothpaste at Sainsbury's busy c-store in the station. Thinking ahead about this purchase and after hearing at the Independent Retailer Conference about how multiples organised their shops around shopper missions, I was looking forward to putting this to the test. This outlet, I am sure from previous visits, is chaotic. Successful chaos however as shoppers flood past on their way to and from the busy railway station.

However, arriving at the station my train was leaving in three minutes so I decided I would shop in Reading. At the station we have a Marks and Spencer and an independent c-store, one of a small chain in the town. Thinking ahead I wondered if M&S sold toothpaste and I wondered how expensive it would be in the c-store.

Sure enough, no toothpaste in M&S. I walked reluctantly into the c-store. This is a chain that looks outwardly impressive but I know from previous visits two things: one is that it premium prices everything. The other is that the staff never smile at the customers. They always make me feel like I am a shoplifter.

I go in and find some small tubes of toothpaste on a dusty shelf. The pricing is for a different product. My wife, the commissioner of the purchase won't be happy. I won't be happy.

But no worry, the Budgens in Emmer Green is a great shop. I will go there. But it is just after 9pm. Will it be open? I drive there, passing the Tesco Express that is open to 1030. As I approach, I see the lights are out and I drive back to Tesco.

In store I buy a loaf of Finest bread at £1.30, which seems a keen price, and go find the toothpaste. They have two the same, one larger than the other, but only the price for the smaller one. I take the toothpaste to the till (no queue, perhaps Budgens is correct to be closed) and ask the teller to tell me what the difference in price is. He scans both and tells me it is £6.22. I repeat my question. They both cost the same. To his credit he looks at the product with interest, sensing that one is better value for money than the other. I pay and leave.

This is an incremental purchase for Tesco. Its strategy of being open late is paying off. The threat to Budgens is: Where will I shop next time? If it is before 9pm, I believe I will still make an extra effort to visit Budgens as it is a well-run store with friendly staff and interesting promotions. But would other shoppers?

However, think about the proposition at the top of this article. Tesco is attracting nine out of 10 shoppers and most people don't realise this. While its strategy may not be helping it to grow - now when it cuts prices it cuts its own market share, says Ed Garner - it has this one fantastic strength that is nine out of 10 shoppers are already customers.

While opening more and more stores may be hurting its short term proposition for City investors, it is not hurting its long term  proposition of being available to shoppers when shoppers need something. That is only going to get stronger and you need to strongly differentiate your local store to ensure local shoppers stay loyal.

As to my group of businessmen - and one environmentalist - I would not build my business strategy on how they say they behave. Ed Garner's data is a much better guide to what's really going on.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Three secrets of great merchandising

Look at the ceiling and top wall of this McDonalds restaurant. There is a picture of two good looking healthy people having fun and some bright primary colours. Ask yourself what is the purpose of this picture? In the latest issue of Retail Newsagent in a feature on merchandising, Andrew Knight of RI tells its independent readers that they need to think about using sharp pictures of non-packaged products linked to people consuming goods. Perhaps this has been taken to the next level by the fast food chain - that is selling the feeling of being happy and healthy rather than the products. A second, related tip from the same feature is made by most contributors - it is vital to keep windows clean and clear of clutter. "I believe that less is more," says Roli Ranger, a retailer from Ascot, Berkshire. He has posters for promotions in between the windows that are regularly updated and discreet signs in the windows. Third, a highly visible well-stocked promotion at the entranc

Overcoming a price disadvantage

Planning for his speech at the Independent Achievers Academy last week, Theo Paphitis asked an assistant to buy a basket of six essentials from a Tesco, a Londis (independent operator in a symbol group) and a One Stop (Tesco's CTN/convenience chain). Tesco was cheapest by a big margin. Second came Londis. The most expensive was One Stop. Mr Paphitis understands the power of the supermarkets and he says the way to counter them is to focus on how to make the experience of shopping with you more relevant to shoppers or more enjoyable for them. John Heynan, sales director of Molson Coors, told Retail Newsagent at about the same time that occasional beer buyers will pay 13 per cent more for their beer in an independent convenience store, provided the retailer targets them appropriately. Tesco has carved itself out this 13 per cent head start. Looking at pricing, if Tesco is 100, then Tesco Express is 108, One Stop is 112, a good symbol group is 115 and non-affiliated independents

A sign of retail stress perhaps

It must have been four months since this window was broken in the Tesco Express on Pentonville Road and I simply cannot believe that it has not been fixed. This is the sort of lack of focus that independent shops usually get criticised for. The only purpose in sharing this image is to encourage those independents with high standards who are finding the going tough that they can do better than this.