Tuesday, May 20, 2014

MARKETING SPECIAL................................ PREMIUM OFFERINGS NOW IN A BIG WAY


PREMIUM OFFERINGS NOW IN A BIG WAY

Are You Being Served? 

Why are brands from giants like HUL to the more modestly sized Cremica launching premium offerings?
Why some ice creams and finger food now cost an arm and a leg 

    While discussing Nestle's annual results at its Vevey headquarters, chief executive Paul Bulcke shared an important focus area for the Swiss behemoth: "The nice thing about premiumisation is this is not only for the big mega cities in the developed world, but is also working very well in the developing world with an emerging middle-class."
    A few months ago Bollywood actress Kareena Kapoor Khan joined the likes of Eva Longoria and Liv Tyler as a Magnum pleasure ambassador when  Unilever launched it’s ice-cream in India. Globally present in over 35 markets, Magnum  currently sells across five cities: Mumbai, Pune, Hyderabad, Bangalore and its launch market Chennai. Says Geetu Verma, executive director - Foods, HUL, "India is upgrading and we are finding faster growth in the middle and upper middle profile with increasing levels of affluence. If you were to take the top 5% of the consumers in the metros, it's a pretty large base for products that deliver on a promise of indulgence and great taste."
    The overall consumption of snacks in India is amongst the lowest globally, leaving room for all growth levers; premiumisation for the affluent, higher frequency for the middle segment and enlistment into the category for aspirants. Siddharth Mukherjee, director, chocolate category & media, Mondelez India, cites the success of Cadbury Dairy Milk Silk as testimony to the potential of premium. Marketers argue there's space for both a regular and premium offering, often appealing to the same consumer. Says Ashik Hamid, vice president, Hypercity, "Both segments, mass and premium coexist." Hypercity shares some data to elucidate the point from its stores. Pringles, launched recently by Kellogg's has picked a 40% share in potato chips, Sunfeast Dark Fantasy, which caters to the premium cream cookie segment has 11% of the total cream biscuits segment while its competition Golden Arc from Parle has taken 13.5%. Parle's Milano contributes around 10% to cookies while Sunfeast's Delishus accounts for 11%.
    Premiumisation is being driven by a consumer who craves new experiences and is even willing to make compromises elsewhere to pay for them. It's a sign that society is embracing indulgence without guilt and religious or cerebral excuses, says Dheeraj Sinha, chief strategy officer, South & South East Asia, Grey. The quest for indulgence replaces the consumer's obsession with vitamins and minerals; feeling good is now as important as eating healthy. "Marketers and retailers have to fire the consumer's imagination by launching innovative products and tastes," says Devendra Chawla, CEO, Food Bazaar, Future Group.
    A big catalyst has been the coming of age of modern trade, with a larger spread encouraging customers to experiment more. Says Piyush Kumar Sinha, professor in retailing and marketing, IIM - Ahmedabad, "With almost 50% of the primary shoppers being men, unplanned and impulse purchase has increased." A study at different hypermarkets showed that the basket size increased by almost 25% when men were coshoppers, he adds.
    The rise of shelf spaces committed to premium products in existing modern trade along with dedicated retail formats like Future Group’s Foodhall, Godrej Nature's Basket, Trent’s Gourmet West, Le Marche is working well in exposing the consumers to exotic flavours. Their imported gourmet offerings sold in the uber chic retail environment are providing the perfect backdrop for the category’s growth.
    Brands realise there's more to this than a name and a price tag. They have to be extra careful about where they spend and what on. For instance, Magnum eschewed a TV blitz for focused advertising across outdoor. HUL realised that focusing only on TV would mean reaching a segment that was not the target audience. For phase 2 of its outdoor campaign, Magnum threw in an online store locator, confident its consumers would most likely be internet if not smartphone savvy.
    Convincing consumers to fork out cash is another challenge. For instance, consumers in Magnum's test market complained that at 75, it was too expensive. However says Verma, "Over time, as we reiterated the Belgian chocolate credentials, the immaculate crafting from perfect bean to the first bite, and of course when consumers experienced the product, they started saying 'This is truly worth what we are paying!'"
    Pegged as India's first cottage style potato crisps, Opera from Cremica is available in flavours like cheese jalapeno, Italian herbs and salt & black pepper. "There is an increased demand for a differentiated offering and with Opera we want to set a benchmark", informs Akhilesh Bector, chief tasting officer, Cremica Group. The brand is seeing a lot of aggression from smaller towns and metros. It's gunning for annualised sales of 20- 30 crores by the end of its first year (2014).
    A premium product often requires a reworked distribution strategy. Considering Indian weather conditions, Magnum is transported in a cold van with distinct compartments so when a carton is taken out, the others don't lose their temperature and moved from van to store via cold bags. All so that the crunch and the flavour do not get diffused. But what's this hard work adding up to? For several brands premiumisation is not an option but inevitable. With input cost rising and pressure on margins, brands are left with no option but to change the mix or reduce grammage eroding product experience. Says Shekhar Banerjee, senior vice president & head of Madison Pinnacle; "You can break this vicious cycle without impacting volumes via a premium option."
    The key is also placing a premium offering at arm's reach. It needs to be sweet-spotted in terms of pricing, taste, availability and imagery. Rahul Saigal, president, Geometry Global explains: "A convenient location scores as high (and sometimes higher) than product assortment as criteria for store selection. Marketers would do well to select stores basis location and access to affluent shoppers and not necessarily only on the basis of their size."
This may well be the beginning of a new revolution as consumers embrace indulgence. It represents a change in the value equation: a hefty price tag's only benefit can now be experiential and indulgent. Nutrition be damned.
Amit Bapna and Ravi Balakrishnan ETBE 140514

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