MKT
CATEGORY MANAGEMENT: THEORY AND IMPLEMENTATION IN AN ORGANIZATION
by
Daniel Christian Hansen
PROJECT SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
UNIVERSITY OF NORTHERN BRITISH COLUMBIA
April2014
© Daniel Hansen, 2014
Abstract
The Category Management process has assisted retailers with achieving sales and
profitability growth during advantageous economic periods while maintaining profitability
during economic declines. Through a comprehensive literature review of the Category Manager
position as prescribed by AC Neilson compared with practical training of the Customer Product
Manager position from within the Overwaitea Food Group the author will review the Eight Steps
of Category Management to find parallels and deviations between the two roles. Through
analysis of the two positions; strategies that are aligned will receive minor review while those
strategies that have belong to only one party will be revisited in an attempt to achieve
consistency between the two very similar roles and responsibilities. It is observed that the
Customer Product Manager position is imitative of the fundamental Category Manager position
with minor alterations.
The fundamental findings of this research will be designed in such a way as to assist
future Customer Product Managers with an additional tool to further understand the roles and
responsibilities of a new career path. The study will clearly address the relevance of such a role
in the industry, while exposing areas for further development. Recommendations will include
methods to educate all facets of the Overwaitea Food group retail operators about the Customer
Product Manager duties and responsibilities in an attempt to align the two separate entities to
share one common goal. Through research, key areas of inadequacy will be addressed such as
the elimination of any education by AC Neilson pertaining to Vendor meetings, merchandising
contribution fund attainment and SKU rationalization for the category review chapter.
Recommendations of key findings will not be limited to either party, as the purpose is to find the
most practical business solutions to accommodate future growth.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Abstract
Table of Contents 11
Introduction IV
Objectives and Methodology VI
Chapter One Company Overview 4
Chapter Two AC Nielsen Overview 6
Chapter Three Training Process 10
Chapter Four Category Management 19
Chapter Five Category Definition 23
Chapter Six Category Role 25
Chapter Seven Category Assessment 27
Chapter Eight Category Scorecard 32
Chapter Nine Category Strategy 35
Chapter Ten Category Tactic 40
Chapter Eleven Category Plan Implementation 44
Chapter Twelve Category Review 46
Chapter Thirteen Vendor Meetings 50 Negotiations
Chapter Fourteen Recommendations 53
Bibliography
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Appendix 1 Application Training Schedule Vl
Appendix 2 Category Role Flow Chart X
Appendix 3 Ten Rules for Choosing Product Assortment Xl
Appendix 4 Eight Steps of Category Management Xll
Appendix 5 Proposed Alternative to Traditional Eight Steps Xlll
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Introduction
This paper will serve as a guideline to assist those newly trained Customer Product
Managers with additional information that can be utilized to complement previous required
training. This training is designed to become a self-study tool which will provide additional
industry insights to ease the transition into a new role within the Overwaitea Food Group (OFG).
The intention of this paper is not to replace, but merely enhance the rigorous training process to
which new CPMs have previously been exposed.
The purpose of this paper is to serve as a guideline to support and complement the pre-
required Overwaitea Food Group training offered within the Langley Office. This will aid
Customer Product Managers to become familiar with the eight steps of Category Management as
prescribed by AC Nielsen and allow an understanding of how these steps correlate with the in-
house training. It is important to recognize that this paper will not replace OFG training but is
simply developed to augment the training. The following sections will outline the objectives and
methods of the paper, followed by an overview of the focal retail company and the role of AC
Neilson in the retail merchandising process. Next, the position of Category Management in the
merchandising process will be outlined and the initial training that new category managers
receive when beginning their new position within the Overwaitea Food Group will be detailed.
The remainder of the paper will further develop the role of the Category Manager based on
relevant literature and on the author' s personal experiences over his first several months in the
position. Taking into consideration that the Category Manager position requires continual
growth, personal observations and experiences discussed are limited in scope to the duration of
the paper. The paper will conclude with recommendations regarding improvements for the
training process and suggest areas for future studies.
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Objectives and Methodology
At the end of this paper users will become familiar with:
• The eight steps of Category Management;
• How each of their training sessions tie in with the eight steps;
• The modified approaches of Category Management;
• The rationale for each technical system from the original training;
• The importance each application of training has within the eight steps of Category
Management;
• The importance and the flow of each application learned through the OFG training.
Industry specific discoveries will be learned through a literature review process in conjunction
with personal observation as a basis to complete the paper and come up with some key
recommendations .
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4
Chapter 1 Company Overview
This chapter will provide a very brieflook into the rich history of The Overwaitea Food
Group, a privately owned grocery retailer that has been operating in British Columbia for nearly
100 years. Overwaitea Foods currently has over 140 retail locations throughout British Columbia
and Alberta.
"Over weight tea Foods" 1 originated in New Westminster in 1915. The first store was
created by R.C . Kidd with the guiding principal of giving back to the community. Kidd's
strategy was to give 18 ounces of tea for the price of 16. This single store concept did not last
long and as Kidd expanded his operations he altered the name to Overwaitea Foods. The type of
business that was being operated at that time would now be considered a convenience store.
There have been many changes for a company operating in the same industry over nearly 100
years. (unknown, 2012)
In 1968 there was a considerable change to how Overwaitea Foods operated. Jimmy
Pattison, a Canadian entrepreneur, purchased the Overwaitea Food Group with plans of
expansion through vertical and horizontal integration. While Mr. Pattison' s accomplishments
have been well recognized in British Columbia (The Jim Pattison Group Investments and
Partnerships, 2013), his accomplishments within the food industry have been even more
impressive. The Overwaitea Food Group currently operates 129 locations under 6 different
banners: Save-On-Foods, Overwaitea Foods, PriceSmart Foods, Cooper Foods, Urban Fare and
Bulkley Valley Wholesale. There are over 15,000 unionized employees working in these
locations, approximately 500 head office employees and over 500 non-unionized management
1 "Over Weight Tea" was the original nick name coined for Overwaitea Foods. The name was derived because R. C. Kidd was famous for selling 18 ounces of tea for the cost of 16 ounces every day.
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members working in the stores. With further plans of expansion underway, including the
possible acquisition of other retail locations as well as the creation of several new locations over
the next couple of years, there is a constant need to address every possible opportunity for cost
saving measures to keep the working capital freely flowing. During the last 45 years OFG has
addressed everything from manufacturing to point of sale, ensuring that the correct functions
have been tendered to third parties while taking care of what our people can best accomplish
while saving the company money. OFG has their own product lines amassing as many as 3,200
SKUs.
This paper focuses on the functionality and requirements of Category Managers (CPMs),
Customer Product Managers at OFG. With millions of Point of Sale (POSf purchases weekly,
the role of CPMs is to best capitalize on sales opportunities within the organization. The
purchasing and selling concept must fully be understood within the organization to take full
advantage of every key opportunity. Along with this, the concepts of strategizing alongside key
vendors and suppliers to accomplish common goals of sales and profitability are of the utmost
importance. With further expansion of the company, greater impact can occur from the decisions
that are made by CPMs. Each decision can potentially impact the company by hundreds of
thousands of dollars and a strong emphasis needs to be placed on overall decision making
process.
2 POS is terminology for Point of Sale (items that have been rung through a sales register for purchase by the consumer).
Chapter 2 AC Nielsen Overview
This chapter will provide a minor background on the AC Nielsen Company which is the
leading provider of market research data serving more than 25 countries.
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"AC Nielsen Company of Canada measures and compiles statistics on television
audiences." (Bloomberg Businessweek, 2013) AC Neilson sells the stats and data to a various
group of organizations including: media, advertisement agencies, television channels, local cable
stations, radio, and retailers. The reason a company would purchase statistical information varies
in each industry all with one common goal of obtaining information to empower the ability to
have a better understanding of the needs and desires of consumers.
AC Nielsen's headquarter is located in New York City. (Business
Intelligence/ACNielsen: Retail Riches- See more at: http://www.baselinemag.com/c/a/Projects-
Data-Analysis/ACNielsen-Retail-Riches/#sthash.4eJAkoqb.dpuf, 2005) AC Nielsen was
established in 1923 and as of 2005 had over 20,000 employees working around the world. In
2001, Walmart made the decision to stop supplying market information to AC Nielsen. In fear
that research would become de-evaluated, Nielsen needed to come up with alternate
arrangements to seek out the information. Through this difficult time Nielsen created Home Scan
(Panel. , 2004-2013). This innovative system for obtaining customer product knowledge is very
primitive. AC Nielsen went directly to the source and hired regular consumers from several
different demographics to utilize product scanners and essentially scan every item they purchase
from every store. The benefit of a program like this is that they are seeing real time purchases;
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the drawback is that this is currently a small sample size. AC Nielsen currently has over 250,000
households participating in Home Scan covering over 25 different countries.
AC Nielsen states their objectives: "We are a leading global information and measurement
company that provides clients with a comprehensive understanding of consumers and consumer
behavior. We deliver critical media and marketing information, analytics and industry expertise
about what consumers watch (consumer interaction with television, online and mobile) and what
consumers buy on a global and local basis. Our information, insights and solutions help our
clients maintain and strengthen their market positions and identify opportunities for profitable
growth." (About Us, 2013)
AC Nielsen delivers consumer analysis in over 100 countries, including both established
and emerging markets. AC Nielsen has some competition but maintains market leadership
throughout the industry in most of the services they provide. The analysis that is provided by AC
Nielsen is realized through continual evolution of their data collection process. They continue to
challenge the traditional formats of obtaining information through innovative measures. This
company has a strong research and development team focused on continually improving the
process to ensure that the largest focus group can be obtained.
"We align our business into two principal reporting segments, What Consumers Watch
(media audience measurement and analytics) and What Consumers Buy (consumer purchasing
measurement and analytics) . Our Watch and Buy segments are built on an extensive foundation
of proprietary data assets designed to yield essential insights for our clients to successfully
measure, analyze and grow their businesses. Our Watch segment provides viewership data and
analytics primarily to the media and advertising industries across television, online and mobile
screens, while our Buy segment provides retail transactional measurement data, consumer
behavior information and analytics primarily to businesses in the consumer packaged goods
industry." (About Us, 2013)
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The idea is to link the two systems so that they work in sync to provide the ultimate
advertising experience for the suppliers and companies that utilize AC Nielsen. By analyzing the
consumer needs and shopping patterns by varied demographics AC Nielsen makes advertisement
recommendations as to when, where and who the advertisements should be focused.
John Larkin representing Spectra3 (John Larkin, 2000) discussed the importance ofbrand
awareness and product knowledge going into the new millennium. What John Larkin probably
could not have foreseen at this point was the technology that his company would produce
through collaborating with AC Nielsen. Currently Spectra and AC Nielsen are in the
developmental stage of a brain monitoring system that consumers who are employed by AC
Nielsen will wear while they shop. The electrodes will monitor the thought process of all
employees while they shop to determine what impulses they have while they are perusing the
shelves. AC Nielsen wants to fully understand what emotions are triggered in which
demographics and how these impulses can affect the daily shopping patterns. This next phase is
in its infancy, but time will tell if this plan fully comes to fruition.
When most people think of AC Nielsen data they tend to envision Nielsen reports which
are television ranking systems. While television and radio stations are rated based upon Nielsen
data, the common consumer is unaware that much of the innovation that occurs in most retail
stores are derived from consumer data collected from AC Nielsen. As previously stated, Walmart
3 Spectra is a technology company that provides web based functionalities for AC Nielsen
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stopped utilizing AC Nielsen data in 2004, however in 2011 Walmart decided after more than a
decade to once again share some of their POS 4 with AC Nielsen. (Cheng, 2011) "This expanded
relationship with Nielsen will provide Walmart and Sam' s Club with deeper insights into
customer purchasing-and unmet needs-both nationally and in key local markets," said Cindy
Davis, head ofWalmart global customer insights, in a statement from Nielsen. This turn of
events occurred while Walmart ' s store sales were in a constant state of decline in the United
States market. The one important implication of renewing their partnership with AC Nielsen is
the knowledge that the American competition would be able to receive due to all the information
that Walmart would then be contributing to the network. In Walmart' s absence the validity of the
information being utilized by AC Nielsen was in question. Eliminating retail sales information
from the number one retailer in the world definitely had an impact on the quality of information
that was being provided by Nielsen. In addition, adding Walmart back into the AC Nielsen
portfolio further enhanced the credibility of the data which allowed AC Nielsen to develop
additional relationships with new businesses to which they had not previously been connected.
"It ' s going to help everybody get a realistic picture of their market share," said John Long, a
retail strategist at consulting firm Kurt Salmon.
This partnership has provided Walmart with greater capabilities to fully understand the
consumer while enhancing credibility for AC Nielsen.
4 POS is an abbreviation for Point of Sales . (Cash registers)
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Chapter 3 Training Process
This chapter will provide readers with an introduction to the training requirements that
are currently practiced within the Overwaitea Food Group for new Customer Product Managers
prior to commencement of their new position.
There is a well-structured three week training course designed to ensure that new CPMs
have the fundamental skills and knowledge to fulfill their new role within the Overwaitea Food
Group. (For training schedule refer to Appendix 1)
On the first day new CPMs meet with the General Manager of Merchandising. At this
time they will be provided with a brief overview of what the job entails with some names and
contacts ofkey stakeholders that can assist with direction and support if needed. The following
lessons come from existing CPMs who prepare recruits for what the first week of training should
look like and they are told that over the next five days they would see every process necessary to
perform the functions of a CPM. This is where the process becomes a little overwhelming. The
remainder of the day consists of having an office tour which is daunting (it can take new people
five days to be able to self-navigate their way to the cafeteria without a map). After the tour and
introduction to well over 1 00 people, which is difficult enough, trying to remember all the names
becomes problematic. New hires then start in on sessions with department managers of different
tools and resources needed be able to do the daily tasks .
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In the first day recruits meet with the manager in charge of the AMP software. 5 This is a
computer system that was produced in Europe and is utilized to input all of the sale items in all
banners6 throughout the company. New CPMs are then taught in a single two hour session all the
processes involved in creating a flyer, creating in-store sale items, building regular retail prices
and inputting pricing families 7 and categories. This system is quite daunting and even employees
who have been in this role for several years still find challenges with the system, but the
overview is necessary as this becomes one of the most important tools for any CPM.
On the same day recruits are trained by the lead manager in charge of A-series software. 8
This system allows CPMs to input original pricing, check on warehouse stock levels, product
availability and timeframes of when new purchase orders will be arriving to warehouses and
when they will hit store levels. This software is primarily used by category buyers , but is still has
functions that CPMs use such as approval of cost increases, decreases and the acceptance of new
line SKUs.
During that same day recruits meet with OFG ' s head financial analyst for the
merchandising department. The financial analyst discusses the importance of Category
Management and the pricing strategies for each banner and how segmented locations, regions or
geographical areas can assist with the CPM role. Recruits are then trained on price elasticity and
the need for clustering stores to the need of the consumer versus simply basing merchandising
5 AMP software is the advertisement, marketing and pricing software utilized in OFG for regular and promotional pricing of every item in every store for the company. 6 Banners are a term to explain different names of stores operating in one organization. 7 There are several different names of the grocery stores that belong to the Overwaitea Food Group. Generally for contractual purposes these different names have appeared over several decades . Currently OFG operates stores under the name of Overwaitea Foods, Coopers Foods, Save-On-Foods, PriceSmart, Bulkley Valley Wholesale and Urban Fare. 8 A-Series -Inventory management tool.
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decisions independently on geographical location. The head analyst educates recruits about price
points, sales, flyer positioning and key drivers and opportunities.
The next training opportunity is given by the director who acts as a liaison between the
stores and the office employees. Discussions involve understanding the difference between each
operating banner and what CPMs can do to better support the retail locations while ensuring that
goals and objectives are met without sacrificing the needs of the customers at store level. Such
sacrifices could include only selling items with large margins or items that vendors have offered
great rebates on without considering the demand of the customers. Other areas of concern to the
customers could include the oversaturation of the sales floor with additional displays that is not
necessary, and could hinder the ease and speed of the customer' s shopping experience.
To conclude the first day CPMs visit with the General Manager of Corporate Brands.
Discussions will involve what the role of a private label entails. Western Family is the private
label used by the Overwaitea Food Group and the lessons cover the profitability of the category,
as well as the importance ofleverage9. It is common knowledge that corporate brands, which are
often produced by the national brand manufacturers, provide consumers with a more affordable
offering at a higher margin for the store, but what seems to be less known is the power of
leverage that a good corporate brand product can provide against the national brands. When a
company has a strong corporate brand the cost structure can become significantly reduced when
negotiating with vendors based on the consumer loyalty that the in-house brands provide.
9 Retailers use their private label to ensure that national branded vendors understand that there is an alternative to support the needs of the customers. If the cost structure is not adequate from the national brands many times companies will merchandise their private label more frequently, reducing the demand for the national brand which usually coincides with the national branded companies offering cost reductions to once again rebuild their market share .
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The next day, the first few hours start with a lesson about the Aztek computer system
with the manager in charge. Aztek is a third party vendor that works in the Overwaitea head
office and though Aztek operates in many different chains throughout Canada, the Langley office
team works exclusively for Overwaitea Foods. The Aztek system essentially monitors every POS
transaction to ensure that schematics (plano grams) are designed to optimize key sales and
profitability opportunities. All transactions are taken into account when the layouts are
processed. The shelf design is developed to ensure the right items are positioned in the right
space to create customer awareness as necessary for each product in each store throughout the
entire company.
Next CPMs will visit with AC Nielsen; another third party provider that has a division
working exclusively at Overwaitea Foods. Recruits will be led through a two hour presentation
regarding the benefits of AC Nielsen data. They are shown the functionalities that will be most
prevalent to their specific role, such as: vendor scorecards, how to evaluate a supplier based
upon their monthly or year-to-date purchases, sales by unit, sales by value, profit, scan margin
and "spend" 10 • Their spend within OFG is completely broken down by: scan backs (money
received back from the vendor based upon the units that are sold during an allotted time period),
flyer allowance, newline listing fees, tribute ads, half page flyers , gatefold flaps , product recalls,
volume incentive programs, charitable donations and in store programs and contests. At the
bottom of the scorecard the two final numbers that are important to review are the net scan
margin and the net profit margin. This is a very good tool for analyzing current business with a
certain vendor versus previous history with the same vendor, as well as how vendors with similar
product lines compare to one another. Another excellent tool from AC Nielsen is the supplier
10 Spend is a term for the portion of revenue that suppliers reinvest in the firm by nature of advertisement or display allowances.
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Meeting Report. This report analyzes how the supplier' s products are performing in OFG versus
the current performance in the market place. CPMs can assess the previous 12 weeks or the
previous 52 weeks and see how the performance matches up against retailers in Western Canada
or the entire country. This is a useful tool because it allows analysis with regards to marketplace
positioning and aids in the decisions regarding over- and under-development in certain
categories.
During the initial training there will also be meetings with software engineers employed
at the Langley office. These engineers designed and developed company specific versions of a
software system which is called QlikView. QlikView is another analytical tool which feeds off
the POS system and creates reports based on actual sales through the till . These reports are
exceptionally useful for forecasting potential sales lifts based on promotional activity during a
time of promotion. These reports hold years of data that can be retrieved at any time based on
criteria chosen by the end user. The information is extremely effective because the user gets to
set the criteria parameters. As an example, each week when anticipating the expected lift of sales
items that have been put in the promotional flyer eight weeks in advance CPMs can have a report
run to advise them of how many units have sold of any item at any given time in the past. Items
are then analyzed to assess expected unit lifts versus estimates the forecasting team anticipates.
This becomes useful as the buyers can focus eight weeks in advance to decide how many units
will need to be procured from the suppliers. The relevance of this process is to ensure that OFG
will have adequate stock to support the advertised specials when the time arrives. If an item is
expected to have a specific percentage of lift, the supplier will need to ensure that they have
produced adequate stock or OFG will be shorted and customers will become dissatisfied.
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The next lesson pertains to the Portal 11 . This system is designed as a tool to work directly
with suppliers to ensure that they pay as agreed. Vendors pay for items such as flyer space,
warehouse listing fees , shelf allocation space, volume buying when a great promotional offer is
on, larger than normal advertisements such as half page ads or gatefold advertisements 12 and any
special offerings such as Scan and Win promotions or customer giveaways and donations. The
Portal system helps alleviate paper trails and ensures that contracts are paid in a timely manner
while mitigating potential errors. Upon submission of a contract the CPM logs into the portal to
ensure that the funding , time frames and offer locations are all submitted correctly. Assuming all
has been input accurately, the CPM needs to accept and approve the contract which then gets
sent through to the merchandising clerk for the category who processes the bill for payment. This
is similar to an A TM process which ensures that funds are made available and are paid
immediate! y.
An experienced CPM will train recruits about the attributes of the 931 and the 933
report 13 • These reports are also generated from the POS and are utilized to analyze items based
on their categories, families and individual SKUs to tell CPMs how many units have been sold
and what the value is, what the scan margin 14 is off each item or family, as well as potential
profit for each item and other variables. These reports are great tools for SKU optimization when
researching end plans or display ideas. The reports allow CPMs to dive in and see where the
department is trending compared to the previous year on certain items.
11 The portal is directly related to the Spend that was discussed in footnote 5. 1212 A Gatefold advertisement is the folding flat that protrudes over the front or back page of an advertisement flyer. This provides Overwaitea with additional advertisement space that can be sold to suppliers . 13 Inventory management reports that contain product descriptions, variant numbers, units sold, pricing and profitability. 14 Scan margin is a KPI that tradition retailers use to determine the value of product costs verse product sales . (Retail-Cost) I Cost= Scan Margin percent.
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The most crucial lesson regards the overall planning phase of the business. This is where
an existing CPM coaches new hires on how to take all the aforementioned tools and put them
into practice in conjunction with the vendors to decide when to display products and at what
frequency and price. At this point there is no standard version or template for the planning phase
for the CPMs to use; however the process remains the same. A 52 week electronic template is
chosen and by working with the vendors, CPMs find when each item is best displayed with the
goal of optimizing sales and profit for the category. Certain items sell better at certain times,
such as seasonal items (an example would be turkey at Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter).
After deciding when items will be advertised, the frequency of advertising and the pricing
strategy next needs to be discussed. Aztek or QlikView can be utilized to check on sales lifts
pending on suggested retail. The idea is to ensure profit dollars for the company break even
based on sales forecasted lift. There needs to be anticipation that a reduced sale price on an item
pays off the investment by selling enough additional units so that the penny profit 15 is equal or
greater than if the item had not been advertised. A CPM must keep in mind that there are times
when loss leaders will be advertised and there will not be incremental gains off of every item
advertised all the time, even with scan backs 16 and vendor support. Next there is a need to put the
items onto a weekly planner that can be printed off and kept in a 1-52 file or book for record
keeping and ease of recovery when needed. After the planning for the week is completed items
are entered into the AMP system by their variant number 17 so that it can actually become an
advertised price. Prior to the week of the advertisement there is follow up to ensure that the
pricing and product descriptions are accurate in the flyer. After the sales week has been
completed the reports discussed above all need to be processed to ensure that the sales proceeded
15 Penny profit is a term to define the actual profit in form of value as opposed to a percentage based margin . 16 Scan backs are the volume buying incentive money provided by suppliers to supplement a reduced sale price. 17 Variant number is a number attached to each product that is used for ordering of the product.
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as expected. CPMs measure their estimated sales against the realized sales to measure the
accuracy of their assumptions . These reports become part of a greater database with additional
information for the next time the product is on sale. There is a great deal of analysis involved to
ensure that the right item is advertised at the right time, with the best frequency to optimize sales
and profitability.
A method that CPMs can use to fully understand what pricing should be established for
sale items is a pricing calculator. This item is especially useful when putting on in-store
promotional activity. The pricing calculator is a tool to measure the scan margin and scan dollars
of potential sales by reducing the price of a product. The way the system works is by first putting
in the base sales knowledge that can be taken from the Aztek or QlikView systems. First thing
necessary is to establish a base price on the item that is being reviewed. 18 Once the base price is
established, CPMs can then look onto Aztek or QlikView to see how many units of the item sell
at the regular price. The base price and base units sold are used to calculate how much profit is
made from the sales of the product without any form of advertisement. The next step is to decide
on the suggested reduced price. Once a price is decided a CPM can once again use Aztek or
QlikView to determine how many units of the product have sold in the past at a similar price
during a relatively similar time frame during the previous year. Once a suggested amount of units
are established, the new price and units are than put into the calculator. The calculator then does
the math to advise the CPM what the new profit will be by reducing the sales price. If the
advertised item generates reduced profits than it would if it were not to be advertised there needs
to be some justification. Occasionally there are additional reasons for a CPM to feature a product
when they are reducing profitability. Occasionally targeted sales for a particular family of
18 Base price is the regular price that the item is sold when void of any discount or offering.
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products may be underperforming compared to targets agreed upon between CPMs and vendors.
If there are set targets that come with a financial payout for achieving year end quotas, the CPM
may sacrifice profitability for an item in a weekly flyer to try enhance the unit sales to ensure
that targets are achieved by year end.
There is a great deal of additional knowledge addressed in the first three weeks of the
CPM position, however most is too detailed for this report. (For application training refer to
Appendix 1)
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Chapter 4 Category Management
This chapter will guide readers through several insights that assist retailers with reaching
decisions that impact the purchasing concepts used by retailers to cluster products into groups of
related products.
Category Management has been defined "Category Management is a retailing and
purchasing concept in which the range of products purchased by a business organization or sold
by a retailer is broken down into discreet groups of similar or related products; these groups are
known as product categories (examples of grocery categories might be: tinned fish, washing
detergent, toothpastes). It is a systematic, disciplined approach to managing a product category
as a strategic business unit. " (Category Management, 2013)
The first clarification that is necessary is that Overwaitea Foods employees under the title
of Consumer Product Managers or CPMs are actually known as Category Managers throughout
the industry. I will use these terms interchangeably throughout the provided literature.
Overwaitea Food Group will be written as OFG for the remainder of the paper. The phrase
"Category Management" was first used by Brian F. Harris in the mid 1980s. In CPM positions at
OFG the categories have been pre-defined and selected 19 by the Directors ofMerchandising
(formally known as Senior Customer Product Managers) 20 . The categories are broken up into
various strategic units and in case the role has yet to be defined, a few examples include: frozen
foods , dairy, pop and chips, cereal and portable snacks, bulk foods and natural foods . Though
there are many other categories it would prove redundant to list them all.
19 All categories already have a definition in OFG. There are many categories already divided into sub-categories. Examples would include: Frozen foods (Classification)- Ice Cream (Category) -Seasonal Ice Cream (Sub-Category) -Novelties (Sub-Category) 2° Category Managers report directly to Directors of Merchandising who reports to the General Manager of Merchandising.
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The key concept of the position of a CPM is to increase sales performance of the category
while contributing positively to the bottom line and overall objectives of the company. There are
many different strategies that need to be considered with regards to this goal and these will be
expanded upon in the latter sections when comparing the training programs that new hires have
previously attended with the eight steps of Category Management as reviewed in AC Nielsen' s
Consumer-Centric Category Management by AC Nielsen with John Karolefski and Al Heller,
2005.
Another key reason for the development of CPMs is strongly tied to the relationships
between the suppliers and the retailers. It is important to fully develop not only one brand of
product but to develop the entire category. If there are too many feature promotions on one brand
of product and very limited feature promotions on the corporate brand or the competitor the
prices and profits will become eroded and soon enough the one featured company will essentially
have a monopoly of the category as the competitors fall off or become discontinued. 21 Items
generally will become discontinued when sales do not meet a sustainable level for the supplier to
continue with production of the product.
Category " Captains" are often utilized in the grocery industry. This is when the retailer
selects a supplier who has great insight into the overall needs of the category and is able to share
an unbiased opinion of what needs to be done within the category to increase both revenue and
profitability. In OFG these suppliers have often subscribed to a higher level of Aztek data 22 (see
below) and can provide specific product data such as increased sales, price perception, consumer
21 Discontinuation means the failure of a product to continue existence. Many times retailers will use the term discontinue when they simply mean removal of product . This misleads consumers to believe that the product no longer exists when it may just not be available in their store any longer. 22 (Aztek is the company that OFG uses to create all schematics within the company.)
21
demand and brand loyalty. Some of the analysis that Aztek utilizes to develop a schematic23
include sales lift, sales volume, profit percent, incremental lift and product positioning as well as
many other key factors . This information can be observed at a macro level such as all brands and
all markets, or can be broken down into smaller sample sizes such as Western Canada. There will
be further explanation on Aztek in subsequent chapters. The suppliers can purchase packages
with schematic programmers quite similar to cable bundles that one may purchase for home use.
The larger the supplier and the more money that they spend with the Aztek Company, the more
information becomes available to them. Generally speaking these are the suppliers that become
category captains, however in certain situations a small company could become the Category
Captain. The role of a Category Captain usually includes development of schematics,
recommended pricing strategies, advice on key products that are important drivers of the
category as well as industry information such as innovation. It is very important to comprehend
the importance of the selection process when choosing a Category Captain. This decision is not
one to take lightly. The chosen Captain must provide impartial, practical advice designed to
better the category, not only their brand. This is a very difficult skill for many suppliers to attain,
but some of the greatest companies in the world have chosen a strategy to provide the "what' s
right for the category, not what ' s right for their company information." A few of the largest
suppliers in the world that often become Category Captains because of their substantial category
knowledge include Kellogg ' s cereal and P&G. P&G is a very interesting company because they
have mastered their categories with such dynamic passion as a result of the substantial portfolio
that they oversee.
23 Schematic is synonym for planogram. The most simplistic definition would a detailed diagram of every item in the section and where they belong on the shelf.
22
The Competition Bureau, which is regulated by the federal government has some
concerns about the increasing involvement of Category Captains as they feel that there exists a
potential for the suppliers and the retailers to collude on prices, but with the advanced technology
and tools readily available for alternate suppliers this does not occur as often as one would
suspect. As a new Category Manager the role with Category Captains will become obvious when
attending vendor meetings. When meeting with a supplier, key indicators such as verbal and
written information can be observed that is either supplier specific in nature or is directly related
to the overall industry. Once identified, these key suppliers will become highly useful when
performing an overall category review (the process of dissecting the entire section, such as a
pizza schematic), or when implementing schematic changes that involve the discontinuation of
certain products. One may need to discontinue products because there is often limited physical
space available in each section. When product innovation occurs and the choice is made to
introduce new products into the schematic, something needs to be removed. This is not only at
the store level. Just because there may be additional facings of the product on the shelf does not
mean that picking slots24 will be available in the warehouse. The warehouse is also designed like
a schematic. Each item has a specified spot with a correlating pick number and once all those
spots are filled there becomes no readily available space and an item will need to be removed
from the system in order to introduce the new product. As well as CPMs, Category Captains
have access to information from both the AC Neilson data bank and Aztek to in the decision
making process as to what items should be removed.
24 A picking slot is similar to an allocated spot for a product in the store with the only difference is that this is in a warehouse. The warehouse is also designed by schematic.
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Chapter 5 Category Definition
This chapter will discuss the factors that contribute to the inner decisions that retailers
must make regarding the structure of each individual category and the products that belong
within said category.
Category definition as defined in an article by Jerry Singh, a managing partner for a
Category Management firm "The process requires identifying the structure of the category and
all the items (SKUs) that belong to the category. The output of this step is the category definition
file that will be used to drive all analyses needed for the category plan. There is no formula for
how a category should be defined. The definition can be broad or narrow depending upon how
the retailer's target customers shop the category and the retailer's marketing objective." (Singh,
2000)
New Category Managers at Overwaitea Foods have already had their categories defined.
However, there is no definitive completion of this stage, as the grocery industry is a very fluid
environment. Within each of the categories that have been predefined for CPMs there are many
subcategories and it becomes an important aspect of the job to implement strategy to enhance the
revenue and profitability of these subcategories. As an example, let's discuss a new product line
of cereal being introduced to the market place. If the category were so broad that it just became
part of a cereal category there would be no merit to the classification. The category then is
broken down into many subcategories; is it an adult cereal25? Could it possibly be a children' s
cereal? 26 Is it hot or cold cereal?27 Is this cereal going to have a value offering28 or is it a
25 Adult cereal is categorized as a cereal that has greater nutritional content, traditionally with less sugar. 26 Children's cereal is categorized as a cereal which is merchandised towards children. Traditionally these items will have further offerings such as toys in the packages, increased sugar levels, vibrant colors and packages with mascots, etc.
.·i
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destination item?29 There are many things to consider when deciding how this product should
become subcategorized. The success of the new item could very well depend on the strategy and
definition that has been chosen for the new item. Choosing wisely can set the item up for
success. Many items fall into sub-categories quite obviously when they are listed. Going back to
cereal for a moment, ifCheerios introduced another flavor (which they will, because they are
constantly innovating) it is fairly obvious which category they will become part of, since all the
Cheerios are in one familiar family. However; if a new cereal is introduced by a relatively new
company and the item is first to market, there will be much more thought required.
Part of the definition of the product is to understand where the item fits in. We need to
comprehend where the customers are going to look for this product. This is generally done
through researching information from data banks such as AC Neilson. If OFG is first to market,
the thought process should revolve around with which products the consumer might most
identify the new product. If the product is similar in nature to another product, returning to the
Cheerio example, then the product can become part of that pricing family which will initiate a
sales item through the AMP process30 when putting any other Cheerio on sale. New items are
often in need of high merchandising exposure as well as frequent promotional sales opportunities
to become successful.
27 Hot cereals are defined as any of the oatmeal products or cereals that are traditionally heated before consumption. 28 Value offering can be defined as a package that offers a greater price perception . Warehouse boxes or bagged cereals will traditionally fall into this category. 29 In the cereal category a destination item would pertain to an item that is exclusive to a certain location, usually a niche product or one that is generally more difficult in nature to procure. Items such as Gluten Free or Organic cereals would be common destination items. 30 When pricing products into a family in the Advertisement, Promotions and Marketing software each time any of the products in the family are promoted the entire family of similar products will fall onto the same advertised sales price. The advertisement may only picture one item, but all similar products will be priced accordingly.
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Chapter 6 Category Role
This chapter will provide clarification of why different categories are represented in the
manner that they are. Information will be provided about eight different manners that categories
traditionally become allocated in and the different concepts of marketing that correspond with
each assigned category role.
The category role is "to identify the importance of the category to the retailer. This is the
role the retailer wants the category to play within their store. A category can be used to bring
customers into the store, increase foot traffic, support routine shopping needs, be a destination
for seasonal/occasional purchases, a one-stop shop, or for convenience. Retailers may assign
different roles to categories within their stores depending on the customers they want to attract."
(DAN@CP54CPG.COM, 2012) (For a category role flow chart refer to appendix 2)
When managing a category this is a very important area of focus . All definitions
of category role are as vague as the one above, which tends to imply that this is a one-time
project-assigning the role and then leaving it alone. However, this is a mechanism that needs to
be revisited many times throughout the year for each category and subcategory. As discussed in
previous chapters there are subcategories that get broken down. We will use a tree as an analogy
for the category. A tree has branches, and then leaves, pine cones and a tree trunk. Applying this
analogy we can use frozen foods as an example. Frozen Foods may be the tree; the pizza
category could be the branches, with family pizzas being the leaves and snacking microwavable
pizzas being the pinecones.
Each category may possess different opportunities for the store. The first step is deciding
what role this category should have within the organization. The most traditional roles that
categories or subcategories play in the overall scope are: routine categories, impulse categories,
26
occasional categories, and convenience categories. However there are many other roles that a
category may play within the organization: seasonal, traffic builder, consumer loyalty, etc.
Returning to the frozen foods example above, the overall frozen foods department is seen
as a basket builder. That means that the average customer who purchases frozen foods items
tends to have a larger ring size3 1 because they generally have a shopping cart with them, and
because these are a semi non-perishable resource, they can stock up larger quantities. Looking at
the subcategory of pizzas, this could fall into many roles such as convenience, traffic builder and
price perception32 roles. The pizza category has oversaturated the marketplace. There is always a
brand of frozen pizza on sale and consumers are educated enough to know that there is always a
pizza on sale. Most consumers are not so brand sensitive that they will not purchase an
alternative product. However as we work our way down the tree, the microwaveable pizzas fall
into the convenience category, as there are very limited brands and they are not often consumed,
but they do provide a convenience for children or for a specific occasion. One way in this
example that an item could play a destination role would be if the department lists locally
manufactured products or niche items that no other stores else carry.
31 Ring size is retail terminology which defines the dollar value that each customer spends when they purchase an order. All individual transactions are totaled up daily and divided by the amount of customers to establish a daily ring size. 32 Price perception role is an item that consistently is priced at a greater price reduction than all competitors. Similar to an EDLP where the consumers understand the value of an everyday low cost item, but differing in the approach as these items have a floating retail price because when another competitive item is advertised this product will be reduced to remain the lowest price product in the market place.
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Chapter 7 Category Assessment
This section will describe the need for data analysis and the tools that are available within
The Overwaitea Food Group to run the necessary queries.
Category assessment can be defined as simply as it sounds. It is the process of assessing
the category to seek opportunities to increase revenue through sales growth. To perform a proper
assessment of a category one must dig deeper. Assessing sub-categories, brands and particular
SKUs becomes a very important part of this process. As a Category Manager it is very important
not to allow personal feelings for suppliers or personal tastes and beliefs in a product to control
business decisions. Almost all business decisions need to be fully supported through quantitative
and qualitative research. If the tools are appropriately used, then a truly impartial process for
each item can be made.
This step in Category Management is where previous decisions are reviewed to ensure
there are no alternate methods that can improve the category position in the market place,
remembering that the role of a Category Manager is to strategically align the category with the
objectives of increasing the overall company revenue or profitability. In order to clarify the last
statement, the reason that the overall company ' s position is emphasized and not the category's
revenue or profitability, is that there are categories that are set to either lose money or not make a
lot of money as a strategic plan to drive traffic or fend off competition. Soda pop for example is a
loss leader33 . In the current market place retailers are not making money off the large suppliers in
the soft drink category. If a Category Manager were simply to look at the cost and prices of the
items in this category it would be easy to surmise that the retail pricing would need to go up so
33 Loss leader can be defined as those items that are advertised below cost to drive customer transaction;a cost to the store undertaken to try and sell other items with enhanced profitability.
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that the product line can at least hit a break-even point, because after all, the objective is to
increase revenue and profitability. However; that narrow perspective needs to be expanded. One
should consider what the competition is doing, what the relevance of the potential loss of sales to
the company is and whether the foot traffic will diminish if the prices are raised. There are
certain items in every category of which consumers are price conscious and the price sensitivity
of these items is increased to such a level that if the price were to be raised the consumer may
take their entire weekly shopping elsewhere. If a retailer were to raise their prices beyond the
market on Coca Cola, Ketchup, Milk, Eggs or Bananas the customer will shop elsewhere. There
are many processes that Category Managers at OFG can use to assist with finding out what is
right for their department. Consulting with the lead financial analyst could be a tactic, but there
are many other tools readily available. The POS data that is available helps determine the sales
levels of each item. This system is so intricate at this point that it can be determined what
percentages of consumers who spend certain increments of money on their shop purchase each
item in the store. As an example, a report can be run to advise how many people who purchase a
Coca Cola 12 pack of pop spend over $200 in total, and the POS data will be able to retrieve this
information. This data can also be utilized for multiple purchases, through POS reports, CPMs
can find out who purchased a 12 pack of pop along with a bag of chips, or who purchased those
two items together with salsa. This may all seem redundant, but the reason for the example is to
show that we can run enough data to assist our comprehension as to the importance of each item
in the role that we have chosen for it.
Some of the tools that OFG utilizes include AZTEK, POS data and AC Neilson,
QlikView, Crystal, 931 and 933 reports. As a company CPMs also have access to community
profiles to allow for store by store demographic concentration.
29
AC Neilson is used to set benchmarks and to see how all channels in grocery are
performing. This information can be gleaned at a category level, a brand level and a product
level. Information can be based on total Canadian sales or Western Canada sales exclusively.
However, a main drawback of AC Nielsen is that the information cannot be driven down to a
store specific level, that the information is always at least a month behind schedule. This system
allows measurement of the performance of each category, brand or product versus the rest of the
retailers in the marketplace. Looking at AC Nielsen can have some significant impact if a
category is observed as underperforming in the market place. There might be a clear reason. It
could be that the item is just not a focus for the company, or the problem could be of a more
substantial nature such as pricing issues or product exposure. This information only tells a
portion of the story and Category Managers must utilize all resources available to paint the entire
picture.
The Aztek system works jointly with the POS system. What becomes observable when
reviewing this system is the quantity of items that are sold at each retail price. This allows
decisions to be made as to the best pricing strategy for each product. This is not a simple process.
Just because more units of an item are sold by reducing the price does not mean the right choice
was made.
The 931 and 933 reports that have been previously referenced provide information that is
very useful to the department. From these reports CPMs can see what the costing, retail prices
and sell have been through the year. From these reports each item in the entire department can be
reviewed to check on individual sales, profit, and units sold. This can also be reviewed from a
category or subcategory perspective so that accurate decisions can be made on poor performers
or on high performing SKUs. From these reports we can determine the needs of the store and
30
how to spend any additional display space or where to trim the displays down. If when reviewing
a certain item on these reports it is noticed that there is an item holding down four spaces on the
schematic but only moves an average of 3 units weekly in each store, it may become quite
evident that the facings 34 are not justified and this space can be better utilized for new innovative
items. Extra space could also be used to expand further on other lines that require additional
holding power.
QlikView is another POS generated system that is extremely beneficial for Category
Managers at OFG. This system is designed with functionality that allows many different levels
of data analysis. Information can start at a broad level company view; can be broken down to
banner35 specific information or all the way down to store specific. Information can be reviewed
about areas from sales to profit in this system based on categories, subcategories, vendor lines,
product lines or individual SKUs. This information can be used this to assist with the
understanding of sales, units, profit margin per item, sales lifts generated from reducing retails ;
penny profits, date specific information as well as current or two year trends. Category Managers
can compare data from specific days or weeks versus any metric from previous time frames that
are chosen. There is virtually no limitation as to what can be learned about the products that are
carried within the stores. The only limitations to QlikView are the same as with Aztek or POS
data, this information can only tell the story for what has already sold within the company. There
is no information on new lines, innovations or items that a store may want consider that have
been selling in other retailers . For this information Customer Product Managers must conduct
34 Facings is a retail terminology for how many of the exact items are side by side on the shelf. Typical facings will be the width of a case in grocery so that items can be put on the shelf in a cut case to reduce handling individual units. 35 Banner specific is the division of a company into alternate banners. In this context, information can be reviewed by Overwaitea Foods, Cooper Foods, Save-On-Foods, PriceSmart Foods or Urban fare .
31
alternate research such as AC Nielsen or Home Scan to observe the success or failures that other
retailers have had with these items.
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Chapter 8 Category Scorecard
This chapter will explain the use of category scorecards, where they can be sourced from
and how they are useful for explaining the contribution of a department or category.
"Category Balanced Scorecard development requires identifying the appropriate metrics for
category business development. The identified opportunity gaps are used to establish the
scorecard targets. The scorecard should include metrics for sales, profitability, turns, and
consumer loyalty." (Jerry Singh, 2000)
Category Managers in OFG mainly use scorecards that can be taken off of the AC
Nielsen site. Access with emloyee number and password is required, not just a generic AC
Nielsen site. Once the site is accessed the CPM number and password are used to access all the
necessary vendor scorecards. These scorecards provide valuable information that is important to
understand when having meetings with suppliers. This information (scorecard) will be broken
down into subcategories by vendor. An example of this would be pulling a General Mills vendor
scorecard. General Mills is a company with a portfolio that expands across several departments
throughout the store and printing one scorecard would not highlight any relevant information. By
utilizing a Category Managers password the AC Nielsn data becomes specified to the established
categories of responsibility. However, that is not detailed enough. What area of General Mills
needs to be researched? The next input required is the category such as vegetables or cereal,
assume for this instance that cereal is being reviewed, there then becomes a need to expand
further and obtain a scorecard based on children's cereal or adult cereal. Once the inputs have
been completed there is a mechanism in place to complete the desired search. This scorecard is
essentially no different than the AC Nielsen reports that have been discussed in alternate sections
33
of this paper. The AC Nielsen report provides market information, based on either Western
Canadian or the total Canadian marketplace compared with the stores sales. This information can
provide a snapshot that allows a vendor and a Category Manager at a quick glance to decide if
their product is performing to market standards. Again, there are further reports, background
information and additional analysis required in order to fully understand the subcategories
success or challenges.
This is one version of a scorecard. All reports can be viewed as a scorecard depending on
what the goals and focus of the category are. Scorecards are relevant in any business because
they essentially are how the goals are reviewed. Understanding the goals of each category and
subcategory is a very important process, which is why this step follows along the 8 step process
of Category Management as detailed by AC Nielsen. First defining the category, next assigning
the role and the third step is running the analysis to assess the department, category or
subcategory. Understanding what metrics are important in each area becomes crucial. A few
examples that may interest a Category Manager include: revenue, units sold, profit, sales per
square feet of merchandising space, profit dollars, profit margin as a percent, days of supply,
inventory turns, customer counts, basket size, customer satisfaction, customers retention or
penetration to the market place. CPMs should attempt to have a strong relationship with
suppliers to support and create common goals and internal scorecards far greater than the
simplified AC Neislon version.
There may also be targets and goals from certain suppliers that carry special clauses such
as incentive bonuses and payouts for the company should the sales targets, unit targets, lift
targets or other strategic goals be met. If any of these targets are established, expansive review of
the key metrics would need to be completed on a routine basis to completely understand the
34
business and know what the performance levels are in order to maximize the opportunities for
success. Many times mistakes are made when establishing GIP 36 or exclusivity contracts. 37 The
primary mistake is that CPMs will occasionally see the large payout at the end without fully
understanding the potential loss of profits during the established time frame. By entering into a
deal that provides large payouts based on performance such as growing sales by percentages as
high as 25% with no new product offerings companies essentially form a partnership to provide
additional merchandising activity for the supplier' s products, many times at reduced pricing,
much reduced than previously has been done. When this is done profit are lost throughout the
year. CPMs need to fully analyse the situation to understand if the payout will fully
compensateion for all lost profits. However a CPM must also look at opportunity costs. What is
the impact on the items that are being advertised less frequently by a competing supplier or that
may become completely eliminated? Would the return be greater by continuing with the original
strategies with all exisiting vendors? All these items need to have full profit analysis research
completed prior to executing any exclusivity or GIP targets .
In summary there is no one version of scorecards that will work as a stand alone tool to
provide a crystal clear portrait of the department. Many reports such as the AC Nielsen vendor
scorecard, financials statements, Qlikview, Crystal, Aztek, 931 and 933 reports as well as daily
sales sheets may be necessary to gain all the required information for an area of interest.
This is as critical stage as any in the process because goals need to be established in order
to succeed. Without a clear understanding of targets and goals failure becomes inevitable.
36 GIP is growth incentive plan . This is where targets of sales growth are mutually agreed upon and once goals are met there becomes an incentive payout for the company. 37 Exclusivity contracts are when a supplier offers a CPM an incentive for the company based on severing ties with a competing vendor or limiting the availability of certain products to create larger than anticipated sales growth .
Chapter 9 Category Strategies
This chapter will discuss the strategies that retailers must decide when looking into
departments, categories, product lines, or individual SKUs. This step closely ties in with
previous steps including category assessment but provides further analysis to delve into the
measurement of each strategy. This is the application of the previous steps and how successful
the implementation was.
35
"Category strategy development is the step in the category
business planning process when strategies are developed to deliver the category role and the
category performance targets . The purpose of this step is for the retailer and supplier to develop
strategies that capitalize on category opportunities through creative and efficient use of the
resources that are available to the category. Strategies may relate to marketing and product
supply strategies." (Rao, 201 0)
One of the debatable concepts surrounding the eight steps of Category Management
involves the order of which the steps are performed. Many companies have altered the eight
steps by deleting steps that they don't find beneficial to their operation or have simply altered the
flow of the process by reorganizing the steps. The development of category strategies essentially
ties in with steps 1 and 2. Once the category has been defmed and the role of the category has
been established the strategy of the category and subcategories would now become the next
logical step. The rationale for this would be that it is fairly hard to assess a category if the
strategy of said category is not understood and documented.
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There are several different strategies that a category could take on within the store. Each
strategy can cause extreme swings as far as sales profitability and success of the category. The
most common strategies that retailers concentrate their focus on include: traffic building,
transaction building, profit generating, cash generating, excitement creating and turf defending.
Each one of these roles is very pivotal in the overall operation of the company, but some of them
may make a category look like a weak financial performer. For this reason it can be assumed that
the strategy must be implemented prior to the assessment.
Traffic building strategies are those items that have either been put in your flyer at a great
advertised retail price or that customers know that will have the lowest retail on an everyday
basis. In order for a product to become the traffic builder the chosen item needs to be a customer-
centric38 item. If the focus is not on the consumer it does not matter what price point is offered;
the purchase ratio per customer will not increase and additional traffic will not be driven. As an
OFG Category Manager there are many resources discussed in previous sections that can assist
with measuring the success of items. As a reminder, the POS system works directly with
QlikView and Aztek which can support any theories that may have been established concerning
the sales of specific products. As an example data can be pulled to see how many customers
come in the store on each day of the week and at what times when Heinz ketchup I L is on sale as
opposed to Western Family ketchup. If continually retailing Heinz Ketchup at an aggressive
retail produces 10% more frequency of shoppers than taking a loss on the item would be
beneficial to the store and this item would be considered a traffic driver.
38 Customer-centric items are those items that are focused on by the customer. Customers have a strong sense of product pricing strategies when dealing with items that they frequently purchase.
37
Similar measurement through the POS systems can be generated to assess
whether certain items result in a larger basket size by the consumer. Any particular item can be
measured to see what type of shopper generally purchases certain items. A few examples of this
include: the average consumer who shops for coffee pods for a Tassimo Machine spend on
average just over $120 every time they make a purchase. These are generally the higher end
consumers with more disposable income. Another good example of transaction building is the
frozen foods department; those who tend to shop for frozen foods are shopping with a shopping
cart and filling their pantries.
Next, there are profit generating departments. These pertain primarily to the high impulse
items that are either infrequently advertised or belong to a highly innovative category. Examples
of this would include: General Merchandise such as toys, books and batteries, as well as personal
care items such as shampoos and hair care. These are the items that are generally priced higher in
each retailer and are often a way to compensate for the items in the store that are far less
profitable.
Cash generators would be those items, usually with a high retail ring, that do not deliver
high profitability. Commonly these items will also fit seamlessly in the traffic and transaction
building categories as well. Case lot sales are a prime example of a cash generating strategy.
These offers promoted at OFG 2 or 3 times annually will have a negative impact on the bottom
line but they are a great opportunity to ensure that our customers are being taken care of with the
best retail prices available on the market. The only problem with items or events such as these is
the fact that they tie in with very little scan margin which can actually create a net loss when
factoring in all expenses.
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The excitement creators are those items that are either unique to an establishment or those
events that a company does a better job at than their competitors. Items in this field would
pertain to events such as Sunrype apple month, owning BC39 , Save-On-Foods recent inclusion
into the Guinness Book of World records for the most pumpkins carved in one spot in history, or
the new restaurants offered in Save-On-Foods Calgary. These are the items or events that the
local communities cannot stop speaking about and will come directly to certain stores to see. As
Category Managers excitement can be created as well. Generally this will consist of transaction
building because it will usually come with an expense. An aggressive sale in the flyer that is
unlike what a competitor has done will cause a stir in the community like none other. The
problems with running a feature of that nature are twofold, first the consumers are going to
expect to find a promotion of equal or better offerings at another point in time and secondly the
competitors are always paying close attention and they will want to have an equally successful
campaign of their own. Category Managers should also be cognizant of the bottom line which
generally gets affected when running an overly aggressive promotion. Another form of
excitement that can be generated by Category Managers is the listing of new items and
promoting them accordingly. If a company is not the first to market on new innovation,
especially when there is national media exposure, getting an item in the flyer so the consumers
understand that this product is now available in the company will cause excitement.
Turf defending is the last strategy. This is the everyday product that the consumers
require when they come to shop. These are not the "sexiest" items on the shopping list, but they
are necessary for the consumer to complete their one stop shop. Items include light bulbs, pet
food, and single non popular SKUs throughout the store. These are those items that customers
39 Owning BC is Save-ON-Foods initiative to always offer more local British Columbian products than any competitor in the world.
39
expect that the store will carry when they need them; they are purchased with less frequency than
most but are also not flyer items. These are the items that you do not generally advertise because
there is not a huge sales lift when you do. Take for example the foil rings kept under stove
elements. Even if advertised for 50% off the consumers are still going to purchase them only
once a year when they need them.
There is not a "one size that fits all" approach when deciding on the best appropriate
strategy. Each category, subcategory, product line and individual SKU may have a different
strategy under the category umbrella. To fully understand the relationship between each item and
what strategy they belong to, it is imperative to run all the data through AC Neilson, Aztek, and
QlikView. This may sound like a daunting task and it would be if a CPM was expected to do all
of this work on their own. Most suppliers already have this information readily available to them
since they own their product line and they have already completed the analysis of each of their
SKUs to best understand what strategy works best for their items. Utilizing the information from
key suppliers is crucial. Once again it must be stressed that relationship building with suppliers is
a very crucial step in Category Management.
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Chapter 10 Category Tactic
This chapter discusses the importance of overall corporate processes pertaining to
optimization of assortment, schematics new product listings and pricing strategies. Readers will
be exposed to advantages retailers can receive by the tactics they choose and the effects of
corporate positioning.
This step simply expands on previous steps. If the marketing strategies are in place the
Category Managers now need to focus on what is required to align department goals with those
of the company. AC Nielsen quoted "How do Category Managers know that their assortment,
price, promotion, merchandising, and supply chain decisions support their retailers ' overall go-
to-market strategies"? (Heller, 2006)
A Quantum research document suggests, "The first issue to address is the assortment of
the mix. What process do retailers need to go through when contemplating assortment changes?
The increasingly competitive nature of the grocery industry has enhanced the relevance for
retailers to optimize their assortment to reduce the impact of an expanded market place. This
process not only can dramatically increase margin and sales, but can also help localize store-
level assortments and increase the efficiency of customer shopping experiences. When retailers
offer too many choices, it can cause headaches for shoppers and supply chains alike, force
unnecessary markdowns, and ultimately will take a toll on margin." (Retail, 2012) The only
problem with this theory is the concern of eliminating SKUs from the mix that have brand
loyalty. When assembling the mix there are numerous factors to contemplate. Allotment
variation can be expensive on the warehouse and supply chain as suggested. The big concern is
who retailers are competing with. Traditionally the stores that are able to succeed when dealing
41
with low assortment levels are the EDLP stores. 40 The concept of most EDLP providers is lower
SKU levels to reduce the RSP41 frequency. Most EDLP providers essentially still provide an
occasional high low opportunity by offering promotional activity on products, but this will occur
less frequently than in traditional retail chains. The way the lower SKU level saves money for
the company is by reducing the handling of the product. By having fewer SKUs there are less
pick slots to fill in a warehouse, which maintains warehouse simplicity, less handling at store
level because the employees will fill a larger quantity of one item to the shelf, less flyer activity,
fewer signage maintenance issues, fewer IT42 issues and there is less pressure on operating
systems. The greatest cost savings that occurs for retailers choosing the EDLP approach is
volume buying incentive opportunities. The more a retailer purchases of one SKU the greater the
reduction in the cost of goods. So, the main detriment to this style of pricing is trying to compete
with Walmart, Costco and other EDLP companies that have mastered this system by reducing
inventory levels and maintaining a lean cost structure.
Retailers need to understand their customer demographics when choosing the assortment
strategy. Are they serving a niche market? Who are their customers? In an article by Gilon Miller
(Miller, 2012) he shared his ten fundamental rules to choosing product assortment. (Refer to
Appendix 3 for the Ten Fundamental Rules for Choosing Product Assortment, by Gilon
Miller)
Invariably there are infinite strategies of assortment mix in retail and choosing the correct
strategy comes down to effective research of the demographics for each location and
marketplace to ensure that the customers are given what they need.
40 EDLP (Everyday low prices) Walmart, Costco, and other warehouse style retailers. 41 RSP (Retail Sale Price) 42 IT (Information Technology)
42
The pricing strategy can also be complicated. Though companies traditionally have a
procedure in place that identifies the corporate pricing strategy, each category can have
segmented pricing strategies. There are certain items of the overall product mix that data
research indicates consumers will switch the location they shop at if the pricing is non-
competitive. These prices are traditionally the ones the customers relate the most to and can
cause several emotions during the customers shopping experience. Grocery items of this nature
would include items such as: milk, bread, eggs, pop, chips, toilet paper, frozen pizzas, bananas
and ice cream. Items that are considered to have low price sensitivity would be those items that
are purchased far less frequently and customers do not relate to the pricing as they probably have
not made a similar purchase for a year or more. Examples of these items could include: light
bulbs, general merchandise, oven cleaners etc. In 2013 many retailers have expanded well
beyond choosing a pricing strategy and trying to adequately implement it. There are several
software companies that have developed price optimization software that links competitive
pricing strategies to POS software to help choose the most appropriate price to attain the goals of
the department. OFG chose Revionics43 as a price optimization tool. The system is developed to
a point where subcategories can be assigned individual tasks. Data can be input into the system
to direct the item or family of items to become drivers in different opportunities. These
subcategories or product lines can be chosen from any of the categories defined in category
strategy and need to relate to goals that the CPM has for the given items.
Promotion and merchandising work hand in hand. The next idea after choosing the
pricing strategy concerns the promotional activity ofthe product. 44 How often should the item be
43 Revionics is a brand of software utilized to generate the optimum regular price on all items based on strategies chosen by CPM's 44 Promotional activity is the frequency that the item is advertised at a reduced sales price offering.
43
advertised and what pricing should it become offered at? Assuming that the idea is to generate
additional profit for the company the idea would be to run some calculations based on previous
sales history to determine optimum price that will generate enough of a sales lift so the penny
profits are covered offby selling enough additional units. This math can be completed either on a
profit wheel or the pricing calculator that has been defined in previous sections of the paper. As a
quick reminder, the information is retrieved from QlikView or Aztek, which get the information
from the POS. Regular sale price and regular units sold are entered into the pricing calculator.
Next data pertaining to expected sales that we anticipate based upon the data retrieved as well as
anticipated sale price are input and the calculator provides the number of units actually needed to
sell to have profit equaling what there would be if to the item was not advertised at all. This
would be an ideal system, but as previously indicated there are times when retailers take a loss
on an item to increase revenue and hopefully attract customers that may make an additional
purchase while in the store. When choosing promotional activity, consideration needs to be made
with respect to merchandising activity. Some items need additional display space to maintain
stock levels for the customers, some items need to get the attention of the customer to drive
additional sales and some items have additional display space paid for by suppliers. Retailers
also need to decide where the items are going to be displayed, for how long, and how elaborate
they will choose to build the display.
44
Chapter 11 Category Plan Implementation
This section describes how Customer Product Managers must ensure that their creative
vision for their department align with corporate goals and the goals of the suppliers they do
business with. The idea is to create a shared vision that encompasses goals from all parties so
that the journey has shared goals and values with measurable performance indicators and
timelines.
Once all previous steps have been defined and areas of concerns have been addressed it is
time to ensure that all supplier plans coincide with the category plans. Ensuring that there are
regular meetings scheduled with key suppliers will assist with this step. In addition to the
regular meetings with the vendors it is best to have a special meeting set up with key vendors
prior to the beginning of the fiscal year to discuss the yearly plans, strategies and goals. By doing
this the company and key suppliers have the opportunity to align goals and work through any
potential problems prior to implementation. Working with the key suppliers will also assist
CPMs as the suppliers generally share information pertaining to unsuccessful tactics that they
have seen elsewhere. This is also a great time to discuss the plans and assumptions that CPMs
have concluded in previous chapters. It is a good time to discuss pricing and promotion
strategies, merchandising opportunities and schematic changes. After having the yearly meetings
with all key suppliers it then becomes time to implement the chosen strategies. Implementing the
strategies begins with a strong plan and requires support from all levels. The plan is only derived
in the office with the support of the office team as well as the suppliers, but it needs to be
implemented at store level. Sometimes it can be a challenge getting support at store level and
unless the stores can become aligned with the overall vision, the project or plan will fail to
materialize. The store employees are integral in achieving the goals. Appropriate implementation
45
of strategy can either become a success or cause grief to employees, therefore upon
implementation of any strategy whether pricing, advertisements, assortment mix or
merchandising it is always important to ensure that upon completion of implementation there is a
full review of the strategy. Checking the supplier scorecards, assessing the profitability of the
department, category or subcategory is integral to this step. Even if the strategy is smoothly
implemented there is a common error in assuming that it will become a success. Many plans fail
so CPMs constantly end up back at the drawing board to contemplate new strategies that will be
required to once again be implemented, evaluated and updated. The Category Management
process is quite alive with daily changes. As customer demographics, wants, needs and desires
change, so do the goals and requirements of the retailers .
Chapter 12 Category Review
This chapter will guide readers through the final step of the traditional "Eight Steps of
Category Management" by AC Nielsen. In this unit the tools that are available to analyze the
success of the implemented strategies will be explained.
"The final step in the business process is the review of the progress and of the actual
achievements against the targets set for the category. Review aids in the taking of decisions at
the right point of time. Category Management is considered to be a "scientific" approach to
relating in the mature markets, largely because it is date driven and fact based. The successful
adaptation of Category Management at pantaloons shows us how the returns on the particular
product/category can be maximized by keeping the focus on the customer and creating systems
and processes within the organization to aid such a focus." (R.yuvarani, 2009)
46
The first thing to establish when looking into any item in a new category as a Category
Manager is that the process never ends. There is no finish line. Every time that it may appear that
processes are wrapping up a new curve ball will appear. The innovation never ends as companies
are always trying to evolve their brand and their company for the same reason that OFG has
implemented Category Managers; to increase revenues and profitability for the company. If the
process started correctly with a need to make a change to the category, whether introducing a
new item, a pack change, or an overall change to the schematic layout, and all the steps were
followed, the implementation will finally get to the review of the category. Essentially this is
where the work originally began and will need to begin all over again, this time assessing the
changes that have been made to decide whether the new strategy was correct. As an introductory
user of the 8 steps of Category Management, the process can be thought of as starting with the
review. Unless originally completing a review there is little chance that a change would be
successfully implemented, hence the need to create a continuous process.
47
There are different levels of reviews that can be completed. Some reviews take a matter
of seconds for a quick decision, an example would be the replacement of an existing product
with a new line that is a similar but updated product and has the same packaging dimensions.
This would be a simple transformation. Category Managers must have reviewed the new product
and decided that it makes sense for the business to put forward a plan to implement this product
into the category. As simple as it sounds there are still many steps and challenges that need to be
addressed. The first step is filling out a new line notification form with all the relevant
information filled out accurately. This information contains product size and box dimensions,
new flavor, product name, product cost, product retail, product description, UPC number and
variant number. The form must also include where the anticipated item will go and what item
will be eliminated from the existing schematic or planogram. After delivering this notification
form to the schematic clerk that is responsible for the category, the clerk will take some time to
review the information to ensure that nothing was missed. While waiting for the process to be
confirmed, CPMs can then have a meeting with their merchandising clerk to ensure termination
of the old item out ofthe system, "discontinuation," and activation ofthe new item. Another step
is meeting with the product buyer that is responsible for the category to ensure that they cut off
all purchases of the old SKU and create an original PO (Purchase Order) for the new SKU. When
the new SKU arrives in the warehouse OFG has a policy wherein there is a forced distribution of
one case to each and every store in OFG so that they have the item in advance for the schematic
that will be released by the schematic clerk. After the schematic clerk releases the schematic to
48
store level there is an approximate lead time of three weeks for stores to implement the
schematic.
As observed there is quite an extensive process involved in changing one item in a
schematic, therefore these changes should be well thought through to ensure that changes are
made as infrequently as possible. The way to achieve this is by working with suppliers to come
to an understanding as to when their innovation is going to hit the market and try to get
competitors to list their new lines at a common time. There is a new line fee that compensates for
portions of the work done in the office and at store level to implement said changes, but these
fees are often not significant enough to cover the costs and any savings that can be made
contribute to the bottom line of the category. New line fees are a debated concept considering
that they are very infrequently applied in the United States of America. Suppliers will advise of
their concerns regarding new line fees on a regular basis. There is, however, valid justification
for these fees in Canada. The US traditionally practices rackjobbing. 45 In Canada most retailers
operate in a unionized environment which prevents the use of suppliers when performing
schematics. The cost of a simple new line replacement can be excessive. There is the labor of the
CPM putting the plans in motion which will generally exceed one hour of time, as well as the
wages of the Aztek group building the schematic which will be in excess of 3-4 hours because
OFG 46 has multiple schematic sizes for each schematic based on overall space in each store.
Every store then has to have the price change department print new labels for the new item and
then there needs to be a grocery clerk in each of the 144 stores implement the schematic by
removing the old product scanning it as discontinued,
45 Rack jobbing is when suppliers have hired clerks that are required to stock shelves and implement schematics on behalf of the suppliers. This saves the stores a great deal of cost when new schematics occur. 46 When scanning product as discontinued OFG will receive full cost recovery on the affected product, however all profits are sacrificed in the process .
49
Completing a full category review is important when the innovation expands beyond
initiating a schematic change for entering a few items to replace a few discontinues. A complete
category review becomes necessary when the innovation is so dramatic that the entire planogram
needs alteration. Another reason for a complete category review could be if a category or
subcategory is lacking in the market place or the section has become antiquated. In General
Merchandise, many times a complete category review becomes initiated because what was last
year' s innovation often becomes this years "old news. " Cereal aisles, air fresheners and
shampoos often trigger category reviews as these items tend to change semiannually due to
companies always seeking innovation or completing package changes to keep their shelves fresh
and current in the consumers' minds. (Refer to Appendix 4 to review the 8 steps of Category
Management flow chart)
Chapter 13 Vendor meetings
This section will share the practical process that is involved with hosting a vendor
meeting. Recommendations will be made about preparation techniques as well as what
information traditionally is open for routine discussion at each different style of meeting.
so
When hosting a vendor meeting it is imperative to arrive fully prepared. A CPM should
never allow a vendor to schedule a meeting without an established agenda. With all the planning
and computing aspects of the position, time is of the essence. Vendors should be required to
arrive with all pertinent paperwork including AC Nielsen data, Aztek data and a full plan of what
they expect to accomplish with their meeting. Some meetings are simple in nature, consisting of
monthly, quarterly or yearly review of statistics and what level of targets they would like to
achieve for the following time period. Some meetings are more advanced , consisting of the
planning piece for periods as great as one year in length. Generally these meetings have the
vendor arrive with sales data based upon the previous year sales and what they would like to do
to maintain similar sales patterns for the following year. Vendors typically attempt to repeat the
same flyer offerings as they had the previous year to accomplish equivalent sales. If the vendor
wants to attempt to earn greater sales they could try to add merchandising frequency or attempt a
different pricing strategy. A recent trend by suppliers involves implementing an EDLP strategy
where the flyer activity is greatly reduced while offering a more competitive price structure on
an everyday basis. Some companies may bring data that indicates they had over-invested in
merchandising activity without reaping the rewards. Sometimes sales lifts are not as great as
forecasted and this can impact future flyer opportunities.
51
The enjoyable meetings are when a new product line or launch is requested. These
meetings are very similar to a " Dragon' s Den" television show. 4 7 The vendors will arrive with
samples of their product to try to persuade CPMs into believing in the product. Next the vendors
present sales data from alternate business locations such as competitors. If the item is to become
first to market48 vendors should provide forecasted sales opportunities based on similar items. It
is always preferred that the vendor has a suggestion of what item in the category is under-
performing and it is even better if this item is a product that belongs to their portfolio. The
difficulty in this stage is that many vendors will arrive with many more innovative products than
items they plan to delist. The concern then becomes deciding on what items to consider for
delisting. 49 A great concern for a CPM with regards to the delisting of an item is choosing the
correct product that does not contain brand loyalty. There are many items that though they may
not have high sales, do cause consumers to switch markets if they cannot complete their shop
with a particular item. Biases are also included in these meetings and CPMs need to remain
cognizant at all times ofvendors who may suggest the removal of a product line from a
competing supplier. There are times when the data presented may contain a high degree of bias
and the CPM is responsible for deciphering this. A CPM can alleviate some of the bias concerns
by doing additional research on their own prior to the meeting. By printing off vendor scorecards
for the presenting supplier, as well as close competitors, a CPM can take a few moments to
establish sales opportunities or suppliers that have products in a state of decline. Once a product
is fully reviewed with the vendor it is important for the CPM to ask all required questions to fully
47 Dragon's Den is a reality television show where entrepreneurs arrive and pitch their business proposals to millionaires with the anticipation that they may invest as Angels or partners in their company. The main difference is that most of these entrepreneurs require additional capital to grow their business and the vendors that are proposing their ideas to CPM's merely require shelf space and flyer activity. 48 First to Market is exactly as it sounds, the first retailer to introduce the new product to the public. 49 Delisting is the removal of a product without the discontinuation from the supplier. Essentially the store discontinues the item.
52
understand the needs that they may have for the supplier. Obvious question after deciding that
the product may have opportunities should include: package size, case size, how many cases
need to be ordered at a time for delivery to the warehouse, forecasted sales, anticipated cost and
margins for the new product as well as many other individual concerns. A CPM would be best
advised to never confirm with a vendor that they will take the new product on the initial meeting
as there are many steps to ensuring that the product will be successful or even relevant to the
market. Personal tastes and preferences sometimes need to be cast aside to ensure that the overall
good of the company will prevail.
Should a CPM decide that a new product or an entire line of products should become part
of the schematic all the steps detailed above will need to be implemented. Before this phase can
even occur, CPMs will need to utilize effective negotiation skills with the vendor. Areas up for
negotiation can include but are not limited to: listing fees , reclamation process 50 , product cost,
what items should be discontinued, terms of payment and case size. Many times vendors will
arrive with the figures all detailed in a contract form but this should not impact the CPMs
decision to ask for a better offering. Most meetings will include the vendor telling the CPM that
there are not many funds for listing fees, but it is quite evident that this becomes a cost of doing
business and they will need to supply listing fees to contribute toward the fees associated with
the launch of a new schematic. Most companies have established policies that can assist with the
negotiation process but great gains can be made by increasing the terms of payment and earning
a greater return on reclaim fees. Generally negotiations should include a case of product to be
shipped to each store for initial set up. These meeting are an opportunity for CPMs to truly
utilize all the skills they have to try earn a greater profit margin for their category.
50 Reclamation process is when a product becomes dated or damaged and needs to be removed from the shelves . The negotiations will include what percentage of fees involved will be passed on to the vendor.
53
Chapter 14 Recommendations
This chapter will allow the author to provide recommendations pertaining to areas that
could be open for improvement opportunities. These are areas that do not seem to be covered or
addressed at this current time but there may be some need for inclusion in the future.
Upon review ofthe literature and key findings there seems to be a lack of information in
certain areas .
Recommendation 1
The first recommendation would be for the AC Nielsen group. The eight steps of
Category Management seem to be misaligned with the needs of the business. According to AC
Nielsen the eighth and final step of Category Management is the review process.
Recommendation would be to reallocate the review process to become both the first and the last
step of the process. No changes should be implemented until there is a complete review of the
business needs. It is virtually impossible to understand the need of the overall business without
pertinent information and a thorough analysis of both the KPis 51 and the strategic needs of each
business unit. (Refer to Appendix 5 for proposed "Nine Steps of Category Management"
flow chart)
Recommendation 2
There also needs to be substantial change to the review process. When trying to fully understand
the category prior to implementing any changes, one key process does not seem to be discussed
in detail by AC Nielsen. There is insufficient evidence of any processes relating to the training of
51 KPI ' s are Key Profit Indicators
54
SKU rationalization. Fully understanding what items should be included in or excluded from a
schematic is not just a simple step that involves hard line sales figures . AC Nielsen provides
sales data as discussed in previous sections of this paper, but where AC Nielsen cannot help a
category manager is in deciding on items that should be carried and that do not have sufficient
levels of data based on a lack of sales history. This could be a new line of products, innovation,
or items that are not carried by the traditional retailer. The reason that this can become a concern
is because the same information will be provided by data research companies to product
managers from all companies. Suppliers and vendors will also provide the same information to
all stores, as their main priority is to sell the product lines that they are responsible for. Through
SKU rationalization a Customer Product Manager needs to evaluate the products on an entirely
different level. There needs to be consideration about items that are not based exclusively on
sales or profitability. In many categories there are items that need to be stocked due to special
needs of consumers in the marketplace. A good example would be gluten-free items. When
reviewing the sales data for many gluten-free items, many Customer Product Managers would
immediately surmise that many products should be removed from the schematic. However; when
taking into consideration the total overall basket size that these shoppers spend on an average trip
to the store it would prove to be a poor decision to remove the products that these consumers
depend on. Many shoppers want to have a one-stop-shop and those customers that have
particular dietary needs cannot simply substitute alternatitive products because a store decides
not to carry the products that their diet demands.
Research has shown that customers only used 340 unique products each year even
though there are millions available; retailers need to implement processes to assist with decision
making as to what those key items are to reduce stagnant allocations. As indicated in a study by
55
Tata Consultancy Services, 35%--40% of all inventories are slow moving goods that account for
less than 5% of overall revenue. One KPI that most retailers use as a measurement is inventory
turns and through proper SKU rationalization companies can dramatically reduce inventory
levels, which in tum will increase the inventory turns and free up working capital. (Servies,
Unknown) Further to reductions of inventory levels, retailers can then utilize available space for
faster moving goods or new innovations that will either bring in new customers or possibly add
additional units to the existing customer's baskets. Some key reasons for SKU rationalization
include: reduction of carrying costs involved with holding the excess inventory, greater
warehouse efficiencies, decreased freight charges, increased sales due to listing the best items,
which will also result in an increase in margin. (Ridge, 2011)
A 2009 study by Kate Vitasek of Supply Chain Visions suggests that retailers need to not
only focus on the aforementioned back end approach to SKU rationalization of simply reducing
inventory, but need to look at a front end approach of reducing the quantity of new listings.
While retailers fully understand the need to list new innovations to ensure the customers remain
interested in the product mix, one key factor that receives little credence is the fact that nearly
95% of innovative products fail to achieve forecasted numbers while only 10% of new lines
generally remain on the shelf following the first three years of the product life cycle. (Banker,
2009)
There are software applications such as FortnaDCModeler used by Fortna that assist with
the rationalization process. Measurements that FortnaDCModeler and similar software systems
measure include: the inventory turns of each individual SKU, the financial impact of each SKU
on the business, and the impact on the stock levels at the distribution centers. (Fortna) Again,
there is no evidence of this program measuring the significance of the reduction of SKU s that
56
will cause consumers to choose an alternate location to shop. Studies show that many items are
purchased in conjunction with an additional item. By eliminating the complementary product a
customer can be swayed to shop at a competitor where they can make one complete purchase.
Analyzing the way items are linked together is the market basket effect. (Fisher, 201 0) In a
classic case of SKU rationalization failures, Walmart reduced the levels of SKUs in 2009 only to
reconsider many products because they had originally failed to utilize a market basket approach.
As observed, SKU rationalization is imperative for the survival of business but there is not an
easy answer. Customer Product Managers must utilize all available tools when deciding on the
addition or deletion ofSKUs. Any decision made will affect consumers and the best approach is
to establish a product line that will serve the needs of the majority of consumers while ensuring
that the SKU s listed are of a profitable nature.
Recommendation 3
Key recommendations for the Overwaitea Food Group would include placing a greater
focus on communication of roles and responsibilities between Langley office employees and the
retail operators. At store level, employees, including management, are not aware of what really
goes on in the background. OFG has developed a plan to convert retail employees into CPM's
and if there is follow through with this strategy, there should be posted job descriptions that not
only clarify the role of Customer Product Managers but should also include how said positions
affect store level operations. Store managers are often unaware of many functions that are
completed by CPMs. Store managers are not trained on how VBis are earned. 52 Most store
managers are aware that VBis are earned from volume buying but they are not educated to
understand that these VBis are calculated based on the volume ofunits sold at each location.
52 VBI~s Volume Buying Incentives as defined in previous sections.
57
Often store managers are under the assumption that feature items that sell below cost are going to
create a negative scan or loss of profit. Though this is occasionally true there are many times
when there is going to be scan backs received on the back end and store managers should be
made aware of this to ensure that they are all promoting the products to the best of their ability.
Langley office employees are na!ve to think that managers should implement a plan because they
are instructed to do so. Most managers will ensure that the plan is implemented but if they
believe that they are losing profitability by doing so the support will not be there which will
cause a reduction of units sold. Store level managers are critiqued on their financial performance
and the more knowledge that they receive the better job they will do.
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Retail, Q . (2012, April 24) . Hardlines Optimization-Part 2: SKU Rationalization. Retrieved December 18, 2013, from http :/ /quantumretail.com/tag/sku -rationalization/.
Singh, J. (2000, march). Analytics for Category Management. Retrieved November 11, 2013, from www.categorymanagement.com .
TdechFiash1, B. M . (n .d.). How to create a manual. Retrieved November 17, 2013, from http :/ /www .wikihow.com/Create-a-User-Manual .
The Jim Pattison Group Investments and Partnerships . (2013). Retrieved December 23, 2013, from http:/ /jimpattison.com/.
unknown . (2012, June 15). Our Company\ofg teamsite. Retrieved December 23, 2013, from http:/ /www .ofg4me.com/our-company.
iv
Banker, S. (2009, August 29) . A Front-End Approach to SKU Rationalization. Retrieved February 16, 2014, from http:/ /logisticsviewpoints .com/2009/08/26/a-front-end-approach-to-sku-rationalization/.
Fisher, J. (2010, March 19). SKU Rationalization Demands Market Basket Analysis (aka Customer Buying Patterns). Retrieved February 16, 2014, from http :/ /it.toolbox .com/blogs/forecasting- configurable-products/sku-rationalization-demands-market-basket-analysis-aka-customer- buying-patterns-37559 .
Fortna . (n .d.) . A Case for SKU Management: The Implications of SKU Proliferation . Retrieved February 16, 2014, from http://www. fortna .com/whitepapers/ Article_ Case%20for%20SKU%20Management_Fina I_E N .p df.
research, A. (2007, July 4). SKU Rationalization, a New Metric for Retailers . Retrieved February 16, 2014, from http:/ /www .supplychainbrain.com/content/technology-solutions/event- management/single-article-page/article/sku-rationalization-a -new-metric-for-retailers/.
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Appendix l)Training Programs
Program Objective
Stage 1:
Stage 2:
Stage 3:
Stage 4:
Day01
Business Summary
Key Stakeholders
CPM Training Program- Framework
- Develop a program which will allow new CPMs to develop core competencies.
Introduction
Skill Development (what/how) >»Delegation List
Strategy (why)
On-going Excellence
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Desk & Phone I Business cards I Computer Profile (AMP-A Series-Aztec-AVC Nielson- QlickVIEW)
STAGE 1: Introduction/Business Overview
Merchandising Department Role {Grocery/Fresh/Drug Store)
Corporate Business Strategy
Banner Strategy
Merchandising Strategy
Grocery industry- Overview, trends, competitive market (discount/hi-Lo)
SCPM's
Store connection- Distro and Communication
Merchandising Clerk
Merchandising Services
Supply Chain (Buyers)
Pricing Department
Analysis team
Aztec (Schematic's)
Marketing (Flyer)
Product Integrity (Recalls)
Customer
Vendors
How the customer shops ...
Across channels (competition)
Trip Types- convenience I fresh/ stock up/full basket
Customer decision tree
Grocery- in the store (20 minutes)»> schematic (30 seconds)
Business Systems AMP
Business Analysis
Financial Analysis
Cat- Management
A-Series (New listings)
Portal (VBI scans)
OFG Display APP
AC Nielson Reporting
Aztec System
Qlickview Reporting
Qlickview
Crystal Reporting (932/911)
OFG Merch/AC Nielson Planning Model
Targets- (Customer)- sales, margin & share
Category definition and Role
Category Assessment
Category Scorecard (shopper/financial/market/productivity)
Category Strategies/Tactics
Vendor Relationships Broad based to detail/Meetings/Sales and Spend
Negotiations
New CPM Assessment Financial/Accounting knowledge
vii
MS Office Suite (Word/Excel) knowledge
Consumer/Marketing (Trends) knowledge
Supplier Relationships
STAGE 2: Skill Development (What/How)
Skill Development
AMP Training- AMP Applications+ Business Rules:
Build offers
Break Offers
WF Shielding
Establish regu lar retails/Pricing zones
Merchandising zones
Points and Smart Offers
(Three Weeks- build and load offers)
Promotion Planning Vendor Relationships (meetings/sales & spend I category)
Product/Schematic
Weekly flyer planning (AMP Reservations+ Pl-P12 Grocery Merchandising)
Display Planning Pl-P12 - Week and Period Planning
Buyer Meetings
VBI -Scan Back Management
Forecasting
lnstore Promotion Planning (Lift Calculator)
Role of Product Mix+ Schematics
New listing Process
Discontinued Process
Change Impact (cost I size changes)- pricing, schematics & supply
Chain
viii
Sales Reporting
Analysis
(Basic Reporting)
Partner Portal
Customer
Category Management
Vendor Relationships
Category review
Promotional Planning
Pricing Strategies
Product/Schematics
Reporting (Flyer reports)
QlickView
Crystal (931/911)
AC Nielson Reports (supplier, category & %promo)
Aztec reports
Inventory reports- short+ period end
VBI reports
Category review
Portal -Overview
Supplier Package Review
A-Series- CPM Approval (New listings, cost/pack changes)
Scan Backs- CPM Approval (flyer/instore)
STAGE 3: Strategy Development (Why)
Sales Reporting Analysis
STAGE 4: On-going Excellence
ix
X
2} Category role flow chart
(Author, 2014}
xi
3) Ten Fundamental Rules for Choosing Product Assortment
1.Make sure you Ktualty hilw ill deaf uiOftmlnt ~- Thls s,houfd be an intte.ral pan. of yoorovet4ttl s ~ V
l.stidl to l'O'K stratecy once you haw dKidecf on it. - M•ko your '""<IV r<flt<t souocf plaMI,.. 3.5od<. -.---lbfl--- prior .,.,c:haiNiit.lot..........,. .... tions, JIHOonllno---- People >Mim thtie ~ Jnd ~ ~ are: b'.!lit, bKomi,. an exttemety vahabW commodhy in thl! onltne worid. acaKdin& to
K.ommerre COf'JJUIWrt. Sanv MciCenlie, 20-ytJr veteran of the tetall .-M online fodustties..
~ c: t2 Q) • • Allolyte ....... ntly. E - ~ depend on your S.JitipeoJ:R Of ~ ~ tot s~ V) ~ Q) '--- 0 :::s V)
0::: V) - <t - S.bperimont wtdlyOut- ond ....... fron\111< .-. DM't Je.tw.U5.ottrnent dKisk>t1s to WI aod errot. rtl ~ ~ u c: :::s -Q) -o E 0 ~ .... -..-ol,....._to.......,.., - Thl<y m.v tJe. smart, and wry cap;11bie at data itwlySis, btJt at tM rtl '-
end of thl! dayj their ~ is not vou.rs.
-o a.. c: tlO :::s c: u.. ·-V) 0 0 - 7.Use ~~ tool to know yout competitors.' ~ 0
usortmeftb at •• times.
...c: u
- 6.Piace """"lmj>ott>n<o on buylnc dodslons that auto tho -10<\', thonon ....,...,._,_,to<y,
t-- 9.MMe ...... tM rfllttpr<>duct ••1M ~custom« .. priority.
10. -•boflP'octlce._-to_...,.
'--- .lnw.riably there are infinit1 stratet;'tes of assottrnent mit in ret. if
and choosing t:he corrKt smtqy C'OIT)H down to effectlw: fesearth of the d«l"t''Ifl'"Jpt.ic.s tor each loation and ~ ~ pl.lce to ensurl! tNt the ci..I:Stomers ~~ Jiwn what the s ~ OHd.
{Miller, 2012)
xii
4) 8 steps of Category Management flow chart
(Author, 2014)
xiii
5) Proposed alternative to 8 steps of Category Management
(Author, 2014)