Premium retailers make their point
The fixation with price continues to dominate grocery retailing in many parts of
Europe. Yet there is another way – one that is proving increasingly popular and
successful.
That was the message from Joanne Denney- Finch (IGD) when she opened a session on
premium retailing. She said that while the price squeeze topped retailers’ list
of concerns, premium retailers were succeeding by cultivating exclusivity and serving
customers who were happy to pay for it.
“They focus on style and quality,” she said. “And they represent a threat to the
mainstream retailers. Don’t think of them as a niche. A small niche is what the
discounters were once seen as.” Referring to a McKinsey study of European consumers,
which differentiated between “foodies” and “fuelies” – “fuelies eat to live, foodies
live to eat” – she added: “My belief is that too many supermarkets have focused
on the fuelies rather than the foodies”.
One UK retailer that unashamedly serves the foodies is EH Booth & Co, a supermarket
business with 26 outlets in the north-west of England. Its chairman, Edwin Booth,
explained how he family-run business, now nearly 160 years old, operates.
Relationships
“At Booths, consumers are called customers,” he said.
There were in excess of 20,000 SKUs in a typical Booth store, and more than 80 per
cent of the fruit and vegetables were UK sourced, with many of the growers based
locally.
An “immense amount of effort” went into sustaining relationships with the
suppliers. During the fuel crisis, for instance, the company had paid its tomato
supplier more to help him keep going. Often, too, the suppliers were invited to
in-store promotions to meet the customers.
“We place a high level of trust in our suppliers. Our cauliflower supplier, for
example, tells us when to promote his cauliflowers – that way we optimise sales.”
Customers appreciated the quality of these and other products, such as the hand-raised
pies and the Continental loaves baked by a local master baker, and were prepared
to pay extra for them. Sales of the premium-priced milk from a local dairy herd,
for instance, were growing by more than 20 per cent a year. “We pay a premium for
this milk and pass it on to the customer,” he said.
Store staff too had an important
role to play in selling the products and building a rapport with the customers –
even to the point of writing recipes to coincide with promotions.
“Our stores are smaller and more intimate than others and we make more time for
our staff and customers,” Booth added.
Growing
But premium retailing is not the exclusive preserve of small family-run businesses,
Denney-Finch insisted.
Elsewhere in the UK,Waitrose and Marks & Spencer were
successfully pursuing a policy based on quality rather than price, and in the US,
the Wholefoods operation, with its emphasis on style, fun and informality, was doubling
in size every three years.
IGD analysis showed that premium retailing was growing in other parts of Europe
as well, notably in France, Germany, Sweden, Turkey and Russia “where a new class
of wealthy young people are emerging”.
Denney-Finch suggested major suppliers should
plan for the growth in premium retailing, if necessary by exploring new markets
in other parts of the world, such as Asia. Evidence that they were already moving
into the premium quality sector could be seen, for example, in L’Oréal’s takeover
of the Body Shop and Cadbury’s acquisition of the Green & Black chocolate brand.
Meanwhile, at each end of the retail spectrum, the discounters and premium retailers
could be expected to continue focusing on their respective markets, leaving the
mainstream retailers in the middle to adapt accordingly.
Download the presentation
ECR Europe Conference & Marketplace Stockholm 2006 - Plenary 4
Speaker: Edwin Booth, EH Booth & Co; Joanne Denney-Finch, IGD.