Will supermarkets fade?
by Doyle, Mona
The Shopper Report • Feb, 2005 • combined power of P&G and Gillette will restore the
balance of retailer-vendor power
Reporters and consultants are asking me (and any other consumer and
industry watchers they can find) whether the combined power of P&G
and Gillette will restore the balance of retailer-vendor power. They are
also asking and speculating on what it might do to help or harm
supermarkets, drug stores, specialty stores, club stores, convenience
stores, dollar stores, and other not-yet-invented formats as they
struggle to compete against the Wal-Mart colossus.
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From our vantage point, consumer needs and wants do have the power
to drive many business and format developments. But when it comes to who
will win the retail format wars, consumers are up for grabs. They are
responders as well as drivers, which means that the winners will be the
best and friendliest providers, marketers, packagers and retailers,
those who do the best job of defining their turf and befriending (not
just serving) their consumers.
If supermarkets keep losing share of mind to other classes of
trade, their share of market will surely shrink and fade. If more food
is consumed within a few hours of purchase and consumers don't
think of supermarkets in connection with "food for soon,"
supermarkets will fade unless those who consumers think of first do a
lousy job of it.
Let's stick with salads as an example:
One young woman we talked with buys salad-bar salads from Whole
Foods six or more times week. She didn't know that that
ready-to-eat salads were also available at a convenience store and a
supermarket she passes on her way to and from work.
A part-time working mother buys bagged salads and cleaned heads of
romaine on her weekly trip to the supermarket, but stops at a
convenience store on her way to work to pick up a single serving salad
for her boss, and some days for herself as well. Is she aware that
single serving salad bowls are available at the supermarket where she
buys bags of salad? No, she has never noticed them there and
doesn't think of supermarkets in connection with food for soon.
Does this mean that convenience stores will keep taking
food-for-soon business away from supermarkets? Could they even take it
away from Whole Foods and Wild Oats? Spot checks of packaged salad
offerings at convenience stores and supermarkets in the Philadelphia
area found grab-and-go salads more visible at convenience stores but
slightly fresher (less tired or further from sell-by date) product at
supermarkets. Who wins the salad-for-soon customer is going to depend on
who has fresher product as well as who has the share of mind.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.