Skip to main content

Building sales in a new age of independent and convenience retailing

Abstract: Thoughts on how to influence independent convenience retailers, a disparate audience that is becoming increasingly important for FMCG manufacturers. Combined they are as significant in size as a major multiple, but a tailored approach is needed to reach them as individuals. 


Independent convenience stores have a 13% share of the UK grocery market, says the Institute of Grocery Distribution. Sales will rise from £22.2 billion today to £29.4 billion in 2019 at a much faster rate than the grocery market as a whole. The growth story is driven by changes in how UK shoppers behave and also by the better store standards achieved by most independent retailers.

The challenge for FMCG marketers is how to effectively be a part of this growth story.

There is so much variability in the way that these shopkeepers operate. They are promiscuous buyers prone to chasing the best price available and from a wide range of suppliers. Even the many distributors, wholesalers, buying clubs and symbol groups between the manufacturer and the retailer have limited control over what is presented to the shopper.

Reaching the independent retailer

Many marketing disciplines developed in the multiples are exported to the independent channels. However the results are difficult to measure. Promotions through symbol groups and field sales activity are popular. However, FMCG marketers must consider that most independent shops operate with a large assortment of products but small volumes of each. The implications of this fact makes using retailer marketing services, such as trade press advertising and PR, attractive.

Analysis of chocolate bar sales helps to make the point. For example, take Twirl with a £15 million retail sales value according to Retail Newsagent’s What to Stock analysis of data from 2,200 stores as compiled by EDFM. Twirl 43g is available in 95% of these shops and is the top seller. Even so, this means the average shop sells 9.3 bars a week. While FMCG companies want to think in terms of selling pallet loads of confectionery, the average shop needs to buy just 10 outers from their wholesaler a year to meet demand.

What this means is that in order to optimise sales in the independent channel, manufacturers need to focus on eliminating out-of-stocks and in ensuring their brand is present at the point-of sale.

A tailored approach

Working with the independent channel requires an understanding of the factors that drive shopkeepers to make decisions. You need to give independents information in a way that is relevant to how they operate. While pushing promotions through the independent channel is important, the key marketing strategies should be focused on building distribution, ensuring the retailer keeps your brand on sale (puts your product on his shopping list) and displays your brand effectively in store.

Advertising, effective PR and promoting best practice through peer reviewed case studies are great ways of building brand awareness. Our research shows that retailers trust messages more when validated by Newtrade and are more likely to respond to them.

Empowering independent retailers by giving them quality advice and information is essential to take advantage of the massive opportunity in the independent channel.

This blog was first published on the Clarion PR talk blog.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Digital disruption in the UK wholesale space

“Twenty years ago I was driving boxes to the post office in my Chevy Blazer and dreaming of a forklift,” says Jeff Bezos in his most recent letter to shareholders. A blink later and he points out that the company has grown from 30,000 employees in 2010 to 230,000 now. But his ambition is the same. “We want to be a large company that’s also an invention machine. We want to combine the extraordinary customer-serving capabilities that are enabled by size with the speed of movement, nimbleness and risk-acceptance mentality that is normally associated with entrepreneurial start-ups.” Amazon is great at disruption because of its customers focus and the fact that the internet means it needs none (or very few) people between its warehouses and the shopper. The threat of Prime, its membership service, is the biggest challenge facing the UK retail market and the wholesale market by extension. It is both a direct threat and an indirect threat in that is inspiring countless numbers of othe...

New look: big copy small?

The owners of B&Q are talking up how they have cut the price of a store refit from £2.5m to £1m by using wood-effect vinyl instead of wood and painted MDF backboards for displays. Managers are learning to live with grey shelving instead of a warmer-looking cream. Shoppers notice the produce, not the fixtures, suggests one executive. Up to a point! Most local retailers will extract the maximum possible life from their fixtures, sometimes taking too long to change equipment that has become tired. As in all business, it is getting the balance right. Shops need to be refreshed and with a purpose.

What do shoppers see

I read a good post (http://www.newsagencyblog.com.au/2009/08/28/what-do-newsagents-charge-for-faxing.html) asking what price local shops charge for providing a fax service. The blogger had attached a photograph of his sign with his prices on it. What struck me was the message on the sign. "You drop, we fax," it said. "Pressed for time, drop your documents with us and we'll do it for you at no extra charge." That is a message that will persuade most shoppers that you want to give them good value, even if they stay to do the copying or faxing themselves.