The Color of Market Share (Redenbacher Remix)

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In response to yesterday’s The Color of Market Share post, here’s a guest post from Brian Crockett, Managing Partner at the Customer Imperatives Group, with some great insight into how the retail shelf space game works.  Brian, thanks for the note!  And take it away…

Brian says: "Dominant companies such as P&G, General Mills, Kraft, etc. exert enormous influence at retail.  They often assume ‘category captain’ roles, which means that the retailer essentially delegates a lot of the tactical management of a category/section to the manufacturer.   The category captain recommends a shelf set, which determines how many facings each SKU receives and where those facings are located on the store.  In most cases, the # of facings (and location on the shelf) that are recommended to the retailer by the category captain have a very strong analytical basis.   

The planogram (great word, meaning the layout of the SKU’s on the shelf) is typically based on the # of turns per SKU per store per week.  Turn a lot and you get the prime spot.  Turn a little and you get relegated to the top row or the bottom row (or you ultimately get thrown out).  It’s all about maximizing the profitability of a store category.  There are some special circumstances – back in the early 90’s, we helped a manufacturer design a planogram for the popcorn section, which in most stores takes up a standard 6-7 shelf, 4-foot wide section.  The dominant brand was Orville Redenbacher, the challenger was Pop-Secret (our client).  Orville had about a 45% share, Pop-Secret about a 25% share, and the rest were lesser competitors and the store brand.  We came up with a solution that positioned Orville on the right (on shelves 2, 3, 4), Pop-Secret on the left, and the store brand in between.  Lesser brands were on the very top row (hard to see, hard to reach), and the Jiffy Pops, poly bags of kernels, and the jarred kernels were on the bottom rows.   We called it the “Twin Tower” program (long before 9/11).  Retailers loved it because it favorably displayed their store brands.  Pop-Secret loved it because it signified to consumers that Pop-Secret was comparable to Orville.   Other manufacturers didn’t like it, because they were relegated to a far lesser status, but they didn’t have the retail presence (in most cases) or strength in the category to prevail.  But the net result was that this shelf set helped Pop-Secret gain market share.

In the case of Tide and other big brand names, there’s another big factor … the amount of money that the manufacturer spends on their brands, both in terms of advertising (which pulls consumers to the store looking for the brand) and merchandising/promotion dollars that P&G provides the retailer (which incents the retailer to provide better displays and even shelf placement in order to earn the manufacturer’s promotion dollars).   Those merchandising dollars (in some cases) make up a big share of total retailer profit.   Pay enough to play and you increasingly call the ball."

Brian, thanks for the note and the insight.  Great to hear from you!

The Color of Market Share


  The Color of Market Share 
  Originally uploaded by christophercarfi.

Why does Tide dominate the laundry detergent aisle at my local grocery store?  Why does it have over 40% market share?

Was walking down the laundry detergent aisle, and was stopped in my tracks by the wall of orange that took up (literally) almost my entire field of view when standing in front of the section.  A quick count of facings showed that Tide had about 50 (yes, FIFTY) different facings for different sizes, options, and formulations.  The next closest brand had about five.  Not scientific, but it appeared that Tide controlled over half the available shelf space.

So here’s the question.  What do you think — did Tide’s dominant distribution strategy (get as much shelf space as possible) drive its market share?  Or, because of its market share, was it able to convince the grocery that it should be given an utterly dominant percentage of the shelf space?

(By the way, I did need laundry detergent.  I bought the store house brand.)

Where Did I Leave My Keys?

Keys
There’s an interesting storm a-brewing regarding who will own the key to your online identity.  In the last couple of days, both Facebook and Google have made announcements where their respective online ID systems can be now used to log into other websites.  (For example, you could use your Facebook login to log in to NYTimes.com, or you could use your Google login as the key to your eBay account, hypothetically speaking.)

A bit of context, then a poll at the bottom.

  • Mashable on Facebook:"Facebook Connect is now open for business,
    allowing any developer to let users login to their websites using their
    Facebook credentials. Additionally, other key Facebook features, like
    your friends list, can now be integrated into third-party applications,
    which can in turn send data back into Facebook and the News Feed."
  • Mashable on Google: "Google Friend Connect, the company’s identity management offering for developers, is now
    available for anyone to signup without waiting to be whitelisted.
    Similar to Facebook Connect and MySpace Data Availability, the basic
    premise is that you can login with your Google (or Yahoo, AIM, OpenID)
    credentials on third-party applications without signing up for a
    separate account."
  • TechCrunch on Facebook: "Not an hour after Google announced the general availability
    of Friend Connect, Facebook is doing the same for its competing
    Facebook Connect service. Now any third party website that wants to
    pull personal data about visitors from Facebook – and send back
    activity reports to their news feeds – can do so by first filling out a
    self-service application"
  • TechCrunch on Google: "The battle over who will control
    access to your online identity is heating up. In the wake of more and
    more partners finally starting to take a shine to Facebook’s competing
    FB Connect (which we just implemented on Techcrunch), Google’s Friend Connect
    is now in an open beta. Before it was in a limited preview release, but
    now any website can add Google Friend Connect as a login option."

In addition to Facebook and Google, a project called OpenID is also adressing similar issues. [UPDATE:  Kevin Marks from Google noted that, for clarity, Friend Connect can accept either a Google ID or an OpenID.  So, if you have OpenID, you can use Friend Connect as well.]

(If you can’t see the poll, please click here to participate.)

I’ll let this run for a bit, and share the responses at the end of the week.  If you have thoughts on this sort of "linking of identities" across sites, leave them in the comments.  Very interested in hearing what folks think about this.

photo: grwal

Take Change.gov With You Anywhere

Changechicklet
You can take it with you…Change.gov is now iPhone, mobile and widget-enabled.  (You can even put it on your iGoogle start page.)

Yesterday, a post appeared on Change.gov, the website of the Obama administration’s transition team.

"President-elect Obama has championed the creation of a more open, transparent, and participatory government.  To that end, Change.gov adopted a new copyright policy: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License:
this weekend. In an effort to create a vibrant and open public
conversation about the Obama-Biden Transition Project, all website
content now falls under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.

‘Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is
licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. Content
includes all materials posted by the Obama-Biden Transition project.
Visitors to this website agree to grant a non-exclusive, irrevocable,
royalty-free license to the rest of the world for their submissions to
Change.gov under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.’

Copyright Professor and blogger James Grimmelmann explains what this means:

‘Talk about doing the right thing. Now the collaborative
power of Change.gov isn’t limited by what the transition team itself is
able to enable. Anyone can take the policy points and discussions from
the site and create their own remix or branch of it. This is a very
good sign of the transition team’s attitude towards their task. It’s
also a good license choice. Attribution 3.0 is the Barack Obama of CC
licenses: modern, dignified, generous, and tolerant.’

Professor Lawrence Lessig
also commented on his blog, noting the complexity of working through
such issues: “This is great news about a subject that’s harder than it
seems.”

This opening up of the content on Change.gov has the stated intent that "anyone can take the policy points and discussions from the site and create their own remix or branch of it."  Here’s what a few other folks had to say:

  • Politico – "The Obama transition made a subtle, but dramatic, change to its
    intellectual property licensing yesterday, and the groups pushing for
    freer use of content on the Internet are releasing a letter this morning requesting two more changes to the way the transition is handling its online content."
  • ReadWriteWeb – "This act of support for progressive intellectual property policy is big news, but it also makes us wonder – what’s next?"
  • Joi Ito – "I know the transition team is super-busy right now with very important
    things and I’m very thankful that they had the time and the will to pay
    attention to this kind of important detail."

Thanks to this important step by the administration, we were able to create both mobile and widget versions of the site using Cerado Ventana.

IPhone version (You can get the iPhone and other mobile versions here)

Changeiphone

Widget version (You can get the widget here)

Changewidget

What does this mean?  It means the following:

When (technology + information + inspiration) are allowed to work together, astounding things can happen in the blink of an eye. Innovation can happen, anywhere, at near-instantaneous speed.

Thank you again to the Obama administration for opening up Change.gov with Creative Commons to make this possible, and thanks to everyone here on the team.  You have been building killer technology, and have enabled us to create this new conduit for citizens and government to connect.

Black Friday on your iPhone, Blog or Start Page

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Had the good fortune to have coffee last week with Shashi Bellamkonda from Network Solutions and Geoff Livingston of Livingston Communications when they were out here in the Bay Area.  As part of the conversation, we came up with the idea of seeing if we could pull together a useful tool for customers who were trying to get their holiday deal planning together.  After bouncing around a couple of ideas, we ended up putting together a plan to create an iPhone app and web widget using Cerado Ventana.  Success!  It shows both the deals, as well as the Twitter buzz about Black Friday (click on the "buzz" link to see it).

Dave Jeyes had some nice things to say about the iPhone version here.  (And here’s a link to the iPhone version directly, at http://bffeed.com.)

Here’s the widget itself, if you want to use it online as well.

 

One thing that is super cool is that it’s only two clicks to add this to an iGoogle start page.  Just click on the "Get Widget" link above, then click on the big "G" – super easy.

The Grand Intrusion

On November 6,  Azadeh Ensha wrote in the New York Times:

"Web telemarketers don’t take aim at just your e-mail
account. In order to block pop-up and banner ads when surfing the
Internet, download the Firefox browser from http://firefox.com, then download (mozillaaddons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/1865). Also be sure to enable Firefox’s built-in pop-up blocker (also available on Apple’s Safari browser and Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 8) to take care of sneakier ads.

And
if all of the above fails, turn off your TV, shut down your desktop and
pick up a book. Advertisers haven’t cornered that market — yet."

Today, Randall Rothenberg, President of the Interactive Advertising Bureau, responded in the Times in kind:

"To the Editor:

Re “Tactics That Tame Intrusive Advertising” (Business Day, Nov. 6):

Those
online banner ads that you recommend blocking with browser add-ons pay
for the free content on the Web — the e-mail accounts, video shorts,
interactive election maps and myriad other new forms that entertain and
inform our citizenry.

Moreover, these ads help companies grow, something everyone ought to be concerned about as we head into a recession.

Randall Rothenberg
President and Chief Executive
Interactive Advertising Bureau
New York, Nov. 6, 2008"

Randall, time to start either (a) working on your business model; or (b) make the things that you put in the "ad" spaces on the web engaging, not intrusive.