Showing posts with label Hershey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hershey. Show all posts

Friday, January 3, 2014

Analyzing Shopper Behavior Gives Mondelez a Competitive Edge



Mondelez International is still rationalizing its brand and product portfolio after its 2012 separation from Kraft Foods. Witness the fact that Mondelez just agreed to sell a controlling interest in its SnackWell’s cookie and cracker brand to a private-equity firm. Also, Mondelez and its remaining bell-cow brands such as Nabisco are continuing to figure out the best ways to remain a global dominator in a snack market that provides challenges even as it grows disproportionately compared with other CPG staples.

Improving in-store marketing and merchandising will be crucial to realizing that goal. So Mondelez has set out to observe and analyze shopper behavior with the aim of raising consideration and purchase of Nabisco snacks in the supermarket. Their initiative relies on video and other gathered data of how shoppers behave in participating supermarkets and then integrates it with transactional, quantitative data supplied by the retailers.

“Our goal is to give our shoppers every opportunity to purchase our products, but do so in a way that is meaningful and aligns to shopper behavior,” Ameeta Jain, U.S. director of shopper insights and category management for Mondelez, told the annual meeting of the Category Management Association recently.

To that end, noted Priya Baboo, president of client solutions for VideoMining Corp., her firm’s “objective quantification of behavior helped [Mondelez] prove and disprove some of their hypotheses and helped them refine their shopper-marketing strategies based on a clear understanding of how people shop snacking categories in the U.S.,” including helping Mondelez to develop an understanding of “how things are the same or different” between American shoppers and those across the rest of the world.

VideoMining’s technology creates a “network” of cameras throughout the store, producing a “door-to-door, feet-on-the floor” tracking of each shopper, Baboo said. The network also captures every single one of the “do I buy or don’t I buy” moments, measures those moments in seconds, and then relates them to sales and conversion. 

Optimizing the growth opportunities available in global snacking was, of course, the main part of the rationale for splitting Kraft and a mature U.S. grocery-brands business away from Mondelez and its higher-potential portfolio of worldwide brands that range from Oreo to Ritz to Cadbury candies. In the U.S. market, for example, the growth rate for snack sales is about 5% -- more than double that for foods and beverages overall. And the potential to influence more purchases in crackers and cookies is palpable: 58% of snack purchases are unplanned when a shopper enters the store, according to research presented by Jain, compared with just 38% of other food categories.

Mondelez and VideoMining applied what they called a “5S” architecture to shopper behavior, describing a sort of funnel in which consumers first see, then scan, spot, show interest and select their ultimate purchases. The objective is to make sure that Nabisco and other brands are optimizing their products, advertising and merchandising at each level, Jain explained.

Thus: Is the category in a visible and relevant location so that consumers can “see” it? Then, is the category segmented in a way that is logical and easy to shop so that it can be spied as shoppers “scan” the store? When it comes time to “spot” particular items or brands, are they organized in a way that shoppers can find the one they want? To get shoppers to “show interest,” does the category have the right assortment for all shoppers? And to be “selected,” do the items have the right price, promotion and messaging to drive conversion?

At the upper levels of the funnel, for example, Jain and Baboo explained how Mondelez is trying to optimize the snacks category within the store in part by gaining placement in the most productive spots in the center aisles and by locating in-store advertising and promotions strategically. Jain observed that “everyone enters the store via the lobby and exits through the checkout” so Mondelez must “lever the real estate accordingly.” That could include, for instance, using the lobby to drive awareness of sales and seasonal promotions as shoppers begin their trip and the checkout to drive impulse purchases.

VideoMining research helped Mondelez understand how the supermarket is trafficked and the implications of that for the optimal location for snack and cookie brands. The back of the store is more likely to be trafficked earlier in a typical shopping trip, the front of the store later, Jain explained. That influences Mondelez’s efforts to “lever the perimeter to showcase categories that are more likely to be purchased earlier in the shopping trip, or center-store items that are complementary to the perimeter purchases,” Jain explained.

Baboo elaborated. “When people are near the beginning of their trip, they’re more open to messages and looking at impulse categories” such as cookies and crackers. That means “snacking categories may want to have a presence in the perimeter, or at least messaging or signage, to capture the attention of shoppers early.” 

Mondelez and VideoMining found that more shoppers are exposed to snacks by displays than shelves, 53% to 47%, and that promotion of the category is most effective in the lobby or the rear of the store.

Thus, Baboo said, if Mondelez “can stop the shopper with a message for Oreos or Ritz on the perimeter as they’re going to the dairy section, for instance, you’re more likely to be able to get them to walk into the cookie and cracker aisle because you communicated something that caught their attention and engaged them. But if signage is in the front of the store, shoppers are more likely to have completed their trip, and it’s less likely to be effective.”

Once shoppers move into center aisles, it’s also crucial to be in the most effective aisle. VideoMining’s recommends that Mondelez place its brands within the first six aisles in the typical store, where consumers move counter-clockwise around the store. “The first one-third of the store is where they need to be,” Baboo said. Jain observed that shoppers “have more disposable income early in their shopping trip and are therefore more likely to purchase discretionary and impulsive categories such as cookies and crackers” then. Thus, optimal adjacencies for snacks are complementary categories such as coffee and tea, and bottled juice, where more purchases are planned.

Within the cookie and cracker aisle itself, they said, a number of merchandising principles make Mondelez’s efforts most effective. One of them is to group cookies and crackers separately, categorized by manufacturer. Strong vertical blocks of brands and products are more effective than horizontal ones because shoppers use their peripheral vision, which moves side to side.

Bookending the aisle with each category’s highest-penetration and highest–awareness “signpost” brands, Oreo and Ritz, serves to draw shoppers into the aisle. Those brands are what Mondelez is counting on for much of the success of its overall business model. So making sure that they’re effectively getting in front of shoppers in the supermarket is a very important last step in a crucial strategy.

Shoppers tend to be active in the cookies and crackers aisle, especially with its Nabisco and other brands, if Mondelez can get them there. Now, with the help of some sophisticated technology, the global snacks giant can do a better job of delivering consumers to the right place in the store and getting them to spend more freely once they're there.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

The 2013 Top 15 Chocolate Candies in the U.S. Results Are In: Not Much Has Changed



Here at Food Dive, we love any holiday that gives us an excuse to look at candy trends. This week happens to be specials, since we have two reasons to consider American consumers' chocolate habits—today being National Chocolate Day, with Halloween hot on its tail this Thursday.
Candy companies are mixing it up for Halloween this year, and new launches and disruptions in the confections space are hard to miss. Mars and Hershey still own the hearts and minds of U.S. chocolate-lovers, though, and recent survey results from Experian Marketing Services and Packaged Facts show how much of an advantage the country's top five chocolate candies have over the the rest of the top ten.
Chocolate candy has actually seen a healthy helping of shakeups over the past decade. According to survey data on U.S. adults' most preferred picks, M&M's used to reign  supreme with 19% of respondents calling them a favorite in 2004. This year, peanut M&M's still command 12.3% of consumers' taste buds as a chocolate candy "eaten most often," and that stat is good enough for fourth place on our list. As a category, however, M&M's without peanuts (and all other varieties) trail behind sixth place with only 10.1% of survey-takers saying they eat them most often.
So who is No. 1 today? According to the data provided to us by Packaged Facts, it's Mars' Snickers bars. The well-recognized name scored as a favorite with 15.5% of respondents in 2004, but its appeal has since expanded to gain favor with 17.4% of the survey's chocolate-eaters.
Snickers bowl
(Image credit: Flickr user ranma_tim)

Right behind Snickers is Hershey's peanut butter cup category leader Reese's. You may have recently read that Nestle is trying to chip away at Hershey's Reese's audience with the launch ofButterfinger peanut butter cups in 2014. It's easy to see why when you read that Reese's has gone from a a 13.3%-favorite on this survey in 2004 to now boast a No. 2 spot and 15.6% rating in 2013.
As for the rest of the top 15 scorers on the survey, here's a look at who made the cut. Just remember when you look at the percentages that  there is some overlap, since survey-takers may claim to eat more than one option most often.

Brands of Chocolate Candy Eaten Most Often Among U.S. Adults, 2013
1. Snickers—17.4%
2. Reese's Peanut Butter Cups—15.6%
3. Hershey's Kisses—12.6%
4. Peanut M&M's—12.3%
5. Kit Kat—11.7%
6. Other M&M's—10.1%
7. Hershey's Milk Chocolate—9.2%
-. Butterfinger—9.2%
9. Almond Joy—8.6%
10. Hershey's Almond—8.0%
11. 3 Musketeers—7.5%
12. Milky Way—6.6%
-. Twix—6.6%
14. Baby Ruth—4.9%
15. York Peppermint Patties—4.2%
[Source: Packaged Facts, based on Experian Marketing Services, Simmons NCS Adult Spring Studies 12-Month. Base: Households. Copyright: 2013. Experian Information Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.​]

Friday, October 11, 2013

Hershey Adds First New Brand in 30 Years



Oct 10 (Reuters) - Candy is dandy for The Hershey Co., which on Thursday said it is launching a soft caramel creme candy that is its first new brand in the United States in 30 years.

The candy, named Lancaster, will be available in January and come in three flavors - caramel, vanilla and caramel, and vanilla and raspberry - the Hershey, Pennsylvania-based company said.

"You can really sink your teeth into it, but it is not very sticky on your teeth," said Steven Schiller, the company's senior vice president for sweets and refreshment, using the words "soft" and "meaty" to describe the new product.

Its name stems from the company's history. Founder Milton Hershey's original confection company was called the Lancaster Caramel Co.

"The introduction of the Lancaster brand marks a significant milestone for the Hershey Co, as it's the first time the company has launched a new brand that is not a brand extension or acquisition in the last 30 years," the company said in a statement.

Hershey, the biggest chocolate maker in North America, makes popular sweets such as Hershey's Kisses, Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, Almond Joy, Good & Plenty, Kit Kat wafers, Milk Duds, Heath toffee bars, Twizzlers and Jolly Rancher hard candy.

Introduction of the new brand marks a company focus on product innovation, said Erin Lash, a Morningstar equities analyst who follows Hershey.

"They are looking to grow," she said. Hershey is aiming to increase sales by nearly 50 percent, to $10 billion annually, by 2017, she said.

The company said it launched the Lancaster brand in China earlier this year.

PHILADELPHIA | Thu Oct 10, 2013 4:10pm EDT

Monday, June 3, 2013

New hires: Who’s on the move in June 2013? PepsiCo, ConAgra, Hershey, Hillshire Brands, Pinnacle Foods, Coca-Cola, GOED

Checkout who is moving on up and onward in the US Food Industry in June 2013!


The people over at Food Navigator - USA have put together a little Food CPG Movers and Shakers Slideshow to showcase the new hires for the companies who are making moves this month; Check it out here at FoodNavigator.com