Monday, 20 October 2014

Flatline demand or wot?


A report in The Observer this weekend said everything in a graph...

As the chart shows, it is very rare for real wages in the UK to fall continually over a seven-year period. They have done so only three times in the past 150 years: after a deep recession in the late 19th century; in the 1930s, following the Great Depression; and again in the past seven years, the steepest fall in 150 years....

Given that in these circumstances, governments, banks and individuals have been paying down debt, it should be no surprise that very little spending money has trickled onto the market...

And given the extent of the fall in real wages, politicians' promises of an immediate upturn need treating with caution..

In other words, best to forecast product/brand growth at the expense of the competition, if you can...

While others await a return to 'normal'....

Friday, 17 October 2014

NAM-flu isn't a myth after all !!


According to The Telegraph, men get sick because they don't have the hormones that boost women's immune system.

The study by Stanford University School of Medicine, examined the reactions of men and women to vaccination against flu. The team hopes that, in the future, this knowledge could be used to enhance resistance to common and serious lung infections and prevent flu developing into more serious pneumonia.

However, according to an earlier study, only one in five British women believe that the debilitating "NAM-flu" disease which temporarily leaves male sufferers prostrate on the sofa watching televised sports is real, meaning that NAMs can now work on the remaining 80% with this extra evidence.

The survey, which questioned 2,000 British adults about health and wellbeing, showed that misconceptions and old wives' tales, including the myth that eating carrots improves night vision, prevail among the population when it comes to beliefs about common illnesses.

More than a third of people said that sugar makes children hyper, and 37% said they believed we lose most of our body heat through our heads -- the most popular misconception of the survey, despite millions spent on consumer health and education.

However, the survey is weakened somewhat by its endeavours to show that when illness strikes, almost half of people agreed that men exaggerate their symptoms to get attention, with 38% also believing that men take longer to recover from illness than women.

NB. This additional indepth research on man-flu diagnosis and treatment can obviously now be added to a NAM's repertoire of fact-based rationale for persuading those unsympathetic stakeholders that need convincing of the obvious, in these unprecedented times

Have a gentle, comfy weekend, from the NamNews Team!

Monday, 13 October 2014

Commercial Income fall-out: the open domain perspective?

The investigation of Tesco’s £250m overstatement issue by independent auditors and Tesco’s legal advisers has obviously impacted the share price and created considerable media coverage for a topic that is technically not in the open domain. The results of the review will need to be available to all, in order to attempt to reassure shareholders that the share price fall has ‘bottomed out’, corrective measures are in place and growth will be restored, under new management.

Any holding back in the interest of ‘commercial sensitivity’ will seem like a cover-up, resulting in shareholders acting with their feet…

In other words, all output is headed for the open domain.

Meanwhile shareholders, regulators, HMRC, retail competitors, media, suppliers and shoppers, await an explanation…

The issue is, what type of explanation will satisfy this diverse audience’s need for simplicity and clarity?

Any retrospective review of accounting procedure, with a combination of legal help and the benefit of hindsight, is bound to result in a call for unambiguous clarification of each element of Commercial Income.

‘Supply and Demand’ rewards could provide a useful basis for clarification.  In other words, classifying elements of commercial income as either facilitating supply economies, or optimising consumer demand, might help, but still leaves complexity....

Supply rewards could include:
- Central assortment & listing
- Timely and committed forecasts
- EDI
- Central credit, settlement terms, and payment
- Returns/write-offs
- Deductions

Demand rewards could include:
- Listings
- 'Appropriate' range/assortment
- Category compliance: shelf space & level, fair-share facings
- Promotional compliance, price support, POS compliance, additional placements/displays
- Post-audit recovery
- Sales achievement

It can be seen that, over the years, what was once a fairly simple buying and reselling process, with a retail margin to cover the effort, and sufficient free credit to bridge the gap between receipt of goods and payment by the shopper, has evolved into the complex package we now call Commercial Income.

All stakeholders will now insist upon clarification of each element, including the precise contribution that commercial income makes to a retailer's profits.

This will inevitably result in new auditing procedures aimed at transparency, defensibility and like-with-like 'comparability' in dealing with Commercial Income in retail accounts.

Moreover, as it is unlikely that all retailers will have evolved a uniform definition and treatment of commercial income, so any output from the Tesco exercise will soon result in the need for parallel reviews of other retailers’ accounts, in order to satisfy all stakeholders…

Meanwhile, suppliers could usefully prepare for the inevitable by reassessing each element of their offering in terms of purpose, cost, value and result, before the open domain demands an explanation…

Saturday, 11 October 2014

Normal? Moi?

                                                                                             Hat-tip to Adam Mehegan via Colin Doree

Thursday, 9 October 2014

‘One to show & one to go’ - minimalist stock control in retail

Mark Taylor built on Mike Anthony's link to the high cost of parked inventory by illustrating how retailers can re-allocate the cost of financing display-stock.

If we accept that the purpose of a facing-pack is to advertise the pack behind it, then it becomes logical to a retailer that the cost of the facing display-pack should be carried by the supplier. Moreover, since a consumer in general buys one pack at a time, it also follows that any back-of-facing stock, other than one-for-purchase, should also be carried by the supplier…

In other words, the only stock that should be financed by the retailer is one sales-pack per facing…!
It follows that all other stock, including pipeline from store-receipt to back-of-facing (minus one sales-pack) is the financing responsibility of the supplier.

This obviously challenges the fundamental purpose of Bricks & Mortar shops – are they really the ultimate ‘showrooms’ where consumers are reminded of the existence of the brand/pack, and then outsource the actual purchase and fulfilment to Amazon…? This leaves a sales pack available on shelf for those shoppers who insist on completing the purchase in the store.

In these fast-moving-consumer-goods times, it seems to me that strong retailers are in a position to insist upon the fair-share re-allocation of stocking-costs outlined above.

Time for suppliers to evolve a convincing counter-argument, or take another hit to their customer P&Ls?

Hat-tip to Mike and Mark


Optimising retail assets via after hours niche promotions

                                                                                                                                         pic: The Argus

According to The Argus, 8,500 students yesterday flooded Brighton’s Churchill Square shopping centre to take advantage of 20% discounts.

The Student Lock-in event, one of 40 events in 20 cities, is organised by the marketing company Total Students, takes place after normal hours starting at 6.30pm and ending at 10.30pm.

Students are granted exclusive access to one-night-only discounts, giveaways and competitions across on-site stores and promotional stands. A range of entertainment is provided, including meet and greets with famous faces; activities include climbing walls and surf simulators; on-site club features like bars, live music and DJ performances

Worth locking in some students for something really incremental in your category?

Wednesday, 8 October 2014

Commercial Income - the driver for large space retailing?

                                                                                      Shopper-density map Herb Sorensen

The current controversy ref retailers’ advance booking of commercial income and its impact on profit forecasts will be the subject of increasing press coverage in the coming months, especially as other major retailers feel the need to reassess and explain how their procedures differ…

In the meantime, Shopper-scientist Herb Sorensen, in his work The Problem: "Parked" Capital, and his use of shopper-density maps of retail stores, questions retailers’ use of large space.

The above extract is an accurate map of the time shoppers spend in the store. All those blue, and especially the dark blue areas, represent what he calls ‘parked capital’, defined as money tied up in real estate and inventory.

The data and map above are relevant to both inefficient use of floor space capital, but are also directly related to the massive unmoving inventory on most stores' shelves.

Sorensen goes on to suggest that the building of larger and larger stores has been driven more by the desire to offer more inventory - requiring more space - on behalf of the brand suppliers, who are paying for the space and other marketing services, than consumer need.

In other words, large space is NOT needed to accommodate the demands of the crowds of shoppers.

If this is the case, then following the UK's ‘re-audit’ of Commercial Income, redundant space may not be the only casualty…

Hat-tip to Mike Anthony for the pointer

Monday, 6 October 2014

3D printing - coming to a category near you?

                                                                                                  Hershey chocolate pic Technabob

TechRepublic have identified 10 companies using 3D printing in ground-breaking ways. Whilst six of the companies deal in engineering and allied fields, four innovators could present challenges in FMCG categories…

  • Nike: The Nike Vapor Laser Talon, was designed for players running the 40 yard dash on football turf in the 2014 Super Bowl.
  • Hasbro: In February, Hasbro announced a partnership with 3D Systems to “co-develop, co-venture and deliver new immersive, creative play experiences powered by 3D printing of toys for children and their families later this year.”
  • Hershey's has partnered with 3D Systems to make a special 3D printer for making chocolate
  • MakieLab: London-based MakieLab offers the ability to design your own Makie doll with MakieLab, which 3D prints 10 inch flexible fashion dolls from thermoplastic, allowing a choice of all of the features of the doll: face, eyes, jaw, smile, hair, and more

Still in doubt?
McKinsey analysts project that total 3D printed economic worth will be around USD$230-550bn per year by 2025, of which USD$100-300bn will be direct consumer products, such as toys.

Finally, see No 10 on the list:
Matter.io is a company that is making it easier to make, download, and share designs by embedding the files into websites so users can download and customise the designs…..