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October 30, 2007 

But first, a word about me

 

You may have noticed (or maybe not) that you haven't received this newsletter for a while, and that our accompanying blog hasn't been updated. I was in the process of closing down HoukTPM as a private consulting practice and joining Oracle Consulting. I'm extremely pleased with the change, and look forward to having a much greater range of resources to offer clients.

 

That said, this remains my newsletter, with no connection to Oracle, and I'll attempt to remain as impartial as possible -- please don't worry that this will turn into a lengthy Oracle ad. It's also important to note that Oracle bears no responsibility for anything I publish here. To put it plainly, and in big letters:

 

The views expressed in this newsletter are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Oracle.

 

For the time being, until I figure out what to do with them, past issues of this newsletter will remain on the HoukTPM site.

 

 


 

Is trade promo failure

a CPG thing?

 

We frequently hear numbers on the failure of trade promotions indicating that 70% or more of promotional events are unsuccessful for the manufacturer (though not necessarily the retailer), even with "success" being rather limply defined as producing enough lift to pay for the cost of the promotion. I've also heard it said that the average promotion returns 65c for every dollar spent.

 

Ouch. If I really believed that I worked in a business whose function was to subtract value, I'd look for another trade. The following is an example of results I've often seen, based on supplier and retailer promo profitability:

 

 

scatter

 

 

What I find interesting is that these horrific numbers always come from the CPG side of the trade promo world. Over in durables and business-to-business, the story is very different. 

 

bm2

 

This particular graph comes from the hardware/d-i-y world and represents sales growth results for retailers based on the level of their usage of a particular manufacturer's co-op/mdf program. In an earlier life, I did this same study for probably a hundred manufacturers, in a variety of durables and B2B categories, and the results were similarly positive in all but two or three cases.

 

I can think of four possible explanations for these apparently contradictory results:

 

1) Trade promotion doesn't work:  The CPG numbers are true, the durables/B2B numbers false -- a reflection of the more sophisticated analytics available in CPG. 

 

2) Trade promotion works:  The durables/B2B numbers are true, the CPG numbers somewhat false, because in CPG many promotions that are planned and paid for don't actually happen. Therefore the negative numbers in CPG are often the result not of unsuccessful promotions, but of promotions that never happened.

 

3) Trade promotion works if it's done right:  Both sets of numbers are true, and are reflective of the fact that durables and B2B trade promo programs have more in the way of rules and structure behind them, which leads to a more disciplined usage of trade promo funds. This is somewhat related to #2, since in durables/B2B, part of the rules/structure I mentioned is that documentation of events is generally required.

 

4) Maybe it works and maybe it doesn't:  Both sets of numbers are false -- which means we don't have a clue what's going on.

 

I have no way of proving any of these contentions, but my belief is that #3 is closest -- that trade promotion, when used in a targeted manner to promote to the end-buyer, and with the discipline of documentation behind it, generally drives increased sell-through.

 

The question for CPG manufacturers is how to re-introduce discipline in their programs. For durables/B2B manufacturers, who seem to be moving quickly toward the CPG model, the question is how to avoid following CPG over the cliff. I don't pretend to know for sure, but I suspect the answers lie in better analytics and better use of the resulting findings.

 


 

TPMA meeting  

 

TPMA had another good meeting here in Chicago. Good attendance (near 200, representing more than fifty manufacturers and a heartening turnout of retailers) and some great presentations.

 

As always, though, the most valuable (and enjoyable) part of a meeting like this is talking with all the smart, experienced people -- between sessions, at lunch, and at the various netweorking events. Here's a pic from the Tuesday event at the Lincoln Park Zoo's ape house

 

zoo

 

The next meeting will be April in San Francisco. The focus topic is directed to sales, marketing, and merchandising folks: "If you spend it will they come?"  The description is here.   I plan on being there and I hope to see you..

 

 

 



Meanwhile,
back at the blog ...

 

For more news and comment, visit our blog, TPMtoday.  Some recent topics:

 

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