Home   Contact us   Terms of use
SEARCH: Advanced Search
-
THE RTMA Main Header Banner
-
 MEMBERS <->  EVENTS <->  RESOURCES <->  DISCUSSION <->  RESEARCH <->  ABOUT THE RTMA
SPONSORS

VIA
Co-founders of the RTMA.

RTMA NEWSLETTER

If you would like to receive regular news of RTMA events and activities, please click on the subscribe button below.
SUBSCRIBE
Should Channel Management be a CXO role?
Yes, it should rank alongside Marketing & Sales
No, It should be part of the CMO/Marketing Director's role
No, it should be part of the CSO/Sales director's role
No, it cuts across all functions
SUBMIT
Poll results
Poll archive
ROUTES TO MARKET

WINNING AT RETAIL
In the previous feature, we mapped out how retailers are changing their approach to suppliers. But how does this work out today? How do you nurture and improve your relationship with buyers and category managers? Here we look at the things you need to get right today - to ensure a seat at the table tommorrow....

Rating: 2.5 / 5 | Rate this article

SAVE Save PRINT Print EMAIL Email


Everyone loves to bad mouth big retailers. Their buyers are notorious for demanding more margin, for insisting on extra marketing development funds, for forcing price drops.

Today this image is not confined to personal anecdote, but has become a powerful media image, as organic farmers and craft producers in Europe and the USA line up to recount their personal horror stories. In France it is even the subject of a comedy movie - La Verite Si Je Mens II.

For many suppliers, things are getting worse, not better. "Buyers know that to get promoted they have to force margins down by 2 percentage points. Both buyers and salespeople change jobs more and more frequently, so it becomes increasingly difficult to form strong relationships," says Michael Trupp, who heads up Interactive Ideas, a British games software distributor.

"Today there is an MDF rate card with a fixed price."

Suppliers also say that retailers are increasingly insisting that they spend extra money on marketing development funds (MDF). Jo Wood at Mediagold, which represents a number of software publishers in Europe, says: "A few years ago, MDF would have been a discretionary item - today there is an MDF rate card with a fixed price." Some companies have become so bruised, that they have given up trying. In IT alone, names like Amstrad simply decided that it was impossible to make money selling through big retailers.

And yet there are signs of change. As the recent VIA survey of senior retail managers shows, they are willing and ready to change. PC World, one of Europe's largest information technology retailers, even went so far as to promise change at its last conference.

"PC World showed two slides. In the first, the supplier was kneeling in supplication at the foot of the buyer. In the second, both were on their feet. PC World says that this is how things will be from now on," says Wood.

Other vendors say that specialist stores are beginning to change their approach. Said one: "Specialist retailers have come to appreciate that, long-term, they may not be able to compete on price with food retailers, who benefit from much higher foot traffic. So they need to differentiate themselves by offering different products and greater expertise. They are prepared to partner to get that."

Many suppliers will be laughing hollowly at this point. And indeed, even Michael White at VIA, the author of research suggesting that retailers want alliances with suppliers (see page 5), says that today almost all supplier-retailer relationships are still stuck in the traditional, confrontational negotiation around price.

Yet, if you scratch the surface, it is quite easy to find suppliers who have cracked retail by forming closer relationships with stores and through creative marketing and branding.

This is possible even with basic standard commodities such as read/write CDs and other data storage media, as Memorex shows. By sponsoring MTV and developing cool and whacky packaging, it has developed a product range which it can sell at a high price to the youth market which all the major retailers are also trying to reach.

Cracking retail can be immensely lucrative. Take Symantec, the anti-virus software vendor. In December it outsold Microsoft in value through UK retailers, and on average its sales are up around 40pc to 50pc year-on-year. That compares to year-on- year growth of 10pc to 15pc for anti-virus software in general. SymantecÕs strategy has been to push its name as the expert in security software, and to back that up with comprehensive training programmes for retail staff.

So how do you win at retail?

"Most suppliers are still driven entirely by quarterly targets. The purchasing managers can see and smell the desperation."

Suppliers say that a clear, long-term strategy is essential. That may sound obvious, but all too often suppliers' retail strategies are simply a set of ambitious sales goals based on projected marketshare figures.

Mike Trupp at Interactive Ideas says: "Most suppliers are still driven entirely by quarterly targets. The purchasing managers can see and smell the desperation. You have to be able to think long term."

Kuerten at Memorex says clear thinking is the foundation: "For Memorex, there were three factors - we wanted the programme to be Pan-European, we had a limited budget and we wanted results to be measured by both sell-in and sell-through at retailer level." These criteria led Memorex to sponsor MTV across Europe.


1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Next

Related Articles
Using information to win the retail blitzkrieg
Max Hotopf
Why routes to market will be so important over the next decade
Julian Dent
Retail: Time to end the game of ‘beat you up’
Michael White
The alternative to the discount default
Michael White
Snuggling up to big retail
Julian Dent




Apply now

Executive education
Check out INSEAD's new program on distribution channel management
Read more...
-
The Routes to Market Journal
The quarterly channel management Journal
Read more...
-
-----
© 2008 The Routes to Market Association // Tel: +44 (0) 20 7585 3399 // Fax: +44 (0) 20 7924 5284 // Email: info@the-rtma.com
-----
Registered number 3579985 England //
The Routes to Market Association, 4th Floor, Sterling House, Great Eastern Wharf, Parkgate Road, London SW11 4NQ //
Site powered by WORKSsitebuilder