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Business
Standard, Mumbai, February 28, 2011
Sayantani
Kar (with inputs from Preeti Khicha)
When some of Indias big retail chains banded together recently
to substitute Reckitt Benckisers products with private labels
to protest the latters decision to cut sales margins on
its products, they were doing something many global retailers
have done with great success. Part of their overall strategy,
especially for large chains in the US and Europe, is to develop
quality private label products that complement other pieces in
their marketing mix. While this is one way retailers can differentiate
their firms from competition, it also helps them flex their muscles
in their relationships with brand manufacturers. Indeed, retail
giants Tesco, Walmart and Carrefour have a significant portion
of their sales coming from private labels ranging from
10 per cent for Costco and 50 per cent for Tesco.
India is a back runner in the private label race, but it is
catching up. A Shoppers Trend Study by Nielsen found awareness
about private labels has gone up from 64 per cent in 2009 to 78
per cent in 2010 across 11 cities in India. Nielsen Director (retail
services) Siddharthan Sundaram says, Over the last three
to four months, we found an increased awareness of private labels
in categories such as staples, household products, personal care
products such as soaps, biscuits and packaged groceries.
Thanks partly to the recent economic downturn, there is greater
acceptance and even loyalty to such brands in India,
say marketers. Future Group Business Head (private brands) Devendra
Chawla reasons, A label on the shelf becomes a brand by
covering the two feet distance from the shelf to the trolley.
After all it is the consumers choice. Even in the
toughest segment for private labels to crack fast moving
consumer goods including food and personal care store labels
claim share of 19-25 per cent.
Low-involvement categories such as household cleaners were among
the first to see the entry of private labels (17-44 per cent of
sale in modern trade), bringing in huge margin-lifts for modern
retailers. In categories such as food products jams, biscuits
and staples private labels today contribute more than 25
per cent of modern trade sales. Little wonder, retailers are now
mining shopper data to make private labels shed their lowly
tag low involvement and low cost. Store chains are segmenting
their brands according to consumer needs, combining more than
one brand according to consumer behaviour, besides launching high-involvement
premium products and innovative packaging to give national brands
a run for their money.
Innovate or die
Retail innovation has had a big role to play in speeding up the
process of consumer acceptance. Future Groups retail arm,
which includes Big Bazaar and Food Bazaar, calls its in-house
products private brands not labels. It has a separate
team, headed by Devendra Chawla, to research and test FMCG products
before launch. The team has a range of private brands Tasty
Treat, Fresh and Pure, Cleanmate, Caremate, Sach, John Miller,
Premium Harvest and Ektaa. Look at how it is using shopper data
to improve its products. The insight that kids found ketchup bottles
cumbersome and had to be served making it inconvenient
if an adult was not around led it to change the packaging
that in turn gave the brand a margin advantage. By offering ketchup
in pouches, it saved on the price of the glass bottle and freight
(pouches take up less space in a truck, hence more can be fitted
in). While ketchup in glass bottles continue to be Rs 99 for a
kilo, its Tasty Treat ketchup pouches come in Rs 59 packs.
By working with vendors it has also come up with interesting
combinations for example, its Tasty Treat jam has three
small tubs packed as one unit, each tub containing a different
flavour to offer consumers larger variety.
Retailers have now donned the hats of product selectors
and product developers at the same time, points out
Third Eyesight CEO Devangshu Dutta. So far, most of the
retailers were just selecting products from vendors which are
mostly lower-priced knock-offs of manufacturer brands, he
says. Not any more.
Ashutosh Chakradeo, head (buying, merchandising and supply chain),
HyperCity Retail, explains the process his company follows: To
develop food products, we identify vendors, tie up with food laboratories,
chefs and consumers to be part of the tasting panels. Before launching
a private label we do at least a month of consumer testing. We
identify customers from our loyalty programme called Discovery
Club, which tells us who buys a certain category of product. We
give the relevant consumers our private label products for trial
for a month. We meet the customers at their homes, take their
feedback and these changes are incorporated into the private label
brand.
Our stores act as research labs and are a constant source
of feedback, points out Chawla of Future Group. Chawla estimates
3-4 per cent of the sales of private labels are ploughed back
into packaging and design innovation. Reliance Retail CEO Bijou
Kurien says, The teams are our main investment in private
labels. Our 100-strong designers across all the formats help in
coming up with product designs that fill a need gap or offer a
few more features at the same price as national brands.
Reliance Retail has recently launched its own brand of watches
priced Rs 149-199 which no national player can offer
points out Kurien.
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The edge
Most vendors directly supply to retailers distribution centres,
cutting out cost leakage at the distributors and carrying
and forwarding centres. Direct access to store shelves and aisles
also cuts out the high mainstream advertising costs that brands
have to bear. By clever product arrangements and in-store promotions,
retailers can sway the shopper and draw attention to the price
advantage. Chakradeo says, We display private labels in
heavy footfall areas in the store. We complement displays
so we keep our private label ketchup near the bakery.
To tackle the tricky personal care category of face creams and
shampoos that Aditya Birla Retails More chain has entered,
it plans to communicate promotional offers straight to its loyalty
programme members. It will help us induce trials,
says Thomas Varghese, Mores CEO.
Bundling products is another way to woo the value-conscious consumer.
Six months back, Future Group started bundling its private brands.
Chawla says, Take home-cleaning, which requires a floor
cleaner, glass cleaner, toilet cleaner and utensil cleaner which
we combined as a shudhikaran solution of our Cleanmate brand.
The combi-pack costs Rs 125, which would come to around Rs 220-250
if shoppers bought a la carte. The margins are still high at 26
per cent. Vendors are assured of volumes, points out
Chawla.
What it also does is convert the fence-sitter who has not yet
bought into a category. For example, consumers who avail of the
shudhikaran solution also get into the habit of using glass cleaners
a category which has a small base and gets most of its
sales from modern trade. Similarly, Future Group saw a 25 per
cent spurt in the sales of soups when it clubbed soup mugs with
its Tasty Treat soup packets based on the insight that Indians
preference to sip their soup out of a coffee mug.
Dont be surprised if you see MNC brands coming out with
combo-offers for their products, way bigger than the occasional
bucket with a detergent!
Growing up
There are signs the industry is evolving. Private labels in FMCG
are shedding their low-cost tags. But retailers know better than
to vacate low price-points altogether. Instead, they are segmenting
their brands just as a manufacturer brand would do. Chakradeo
of Hypercity says, Over a period, we hope to increase the
stickiness and the differentiation our brands bring to our stores.
Particularly, in staples where we have seen our private label
business grow rapidly. This is a very quality and price-sensitive
category. We started with basic products but now we have premium
daals (lentils) and basmati rice as part of our portfolio.
Future Group too has its good, better, best policy
firmly in place. In staples, the stores offer some products loose,
such as rice, wheat, lentils, which is at the bottom of the ladder.
Its Food Bazaar version of the products straddle the middle category,
and above the two is its brand, Premium Harvest, which retails
at a price higher than some manufacturer brands.
Stickiness may also result from the manner in which retailers
are positioning their brands. Future Groups brand Ektaa
will retail regional food and staples across its stores in the
country so that migrants can buy supplies they are comfortable
with. Be it Govindbhog rice and kasundi (a rice variety and mustard
sauce preferred by Bengalis), khakra (Gujarati snack) or murukku
(loved by Tamilians). Boston Consulting Group Partner & Director
Abheek Singhi says, Indian retailers are not cut-pasting
private label products from other markets but adapting them.
Are private labels a risk worth taking? Chakradeo says, The
entire product formulation for our cleaners was done in partnership
with Dow Chemicals, USA. We did not make any investment and we
gave them a percentage of sales as fee. Investments are not huge
in making private labels as in most cases it is partnered with
vendors. It is more of operating expenses than capital expenditure.
Future Group brought down logistics costs further by 6-8 per
cent by appointing vendors in more than one region for 10 of its
product categories to fill its distribution centres. Chakradeo
adds, As the volumes go up, we will be able to put up for
backend infrastructure facilities for development and R&D.
Should national brands be worried? Devangshu Dutta says, As
long as retailers have access to the production and development
and have customers for it, the private labels will remain profitable.
India Equity Partners Operating Partner V Sitaram sums up,
In modern trade, though the market leaders will face some
slip in market share, the number 3 or 4 brands might have a bigger
problem in certain categories thanks to private labels.
As retailers leverage consumer insights to deploy private labels
more effectively, national brands are aggressively fighting the
challenge. From sprucing up supply chains to galvanising in-store
promotions, they are covering all bases. KPMG Executive Director
Ramesh Srinivas says, Earlier brands had to adjust between
a modern trade and a general trade supply chain. The former had
to be serviced directly at the stores or had their own supply
chain while the latter used the manufacturers supply chain.
Now, some brands separate modern trade teams and even distributors.
Britannia Category Director (delight and lifestyle) Shalini Degan
says, We have divided our portfolio into three categories,
A,B,C, each having its benchmark fill-rate. We dont allow
fill-rates to drop below those levels. Why the segmentation? We
need to focus on brands which have a higher traction in modern
trade when servicing it, else we might end up focusing on brands
that are not modern trade-led.
Fill-rates denote how often and to what accuracy the retailers
orders for a product are supplied by the manufacturer. Low fill-rates
could mean lost opportunity since the shopper sees an empty shelf
or a private label instead of the brand she might have thought
of picking up.
Samsung Vice-President and Business Head (home appliances) Mahesh
Krishnan says, We have gone in for central billing system
4-5 months back with all large-format retailers. Orders are tracked
on a daily basis giving retailers more control over the chain.
In other words, private labels are here to stay and will evolve
as more and more chains gain national footprint and the economies
of scale kick in. Dutta of Third Eyesight says, Gross
margins for organised retailers are still low compared to global
standards: So, margin fights will continue for some time till
retailers gain a bigger share of the pie.
(Also read: The
Private Label Maturity Model.)
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