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Retail Sales Opportunities:
Retail is part of the Business Plan
Tom Weldin LLC
Tom Weldin
(201)-314-7115
tom.weldin@gmail.com
Lost Retail Sales approach 1-2% of Annual Volume
 Execution of the Business Plan is seen by Senior Managers as Priority #1
 Corporate Functions spend Millions of Funds:
 R&D: Product Innovation and Development.
 Marketing: Advertising and Shopper/Consumer Initiatives.
 Supply Chain: Distribution/Logistics and Customer Service.
 Sales: Account Teams deployed to focus on and serve Key Customers.
 Corporate KPI’s monitored constantly, to track “Performance vs. Plan”
 Volume Sales
 Market Share
 Profit
 Very few CPGs have the same focus on Retail
 No KPI’s on Retail Activities. It is part of the Business Plan.
 Objectives and Expectations not clearly articulated, communicated.
 Little or no real Accountability for detailed reporting on Performance in store.
 Out of Stocks – Missing SKU’s: Not available on shelf 8-10% of the time
 Probably twice as bad when on Promotion
Fundamentals of Success for Retail
 Clear set of Performance Expectations and Tolerances:
 What are the Brand Standards and what should the shelf look like?
 What is considered acceptable? Is the Account Authorized distribution and the
retail in-store distribution the same?
 What are the minimum expectations for Speed to Shelf for New Items/Innovations?
 What stores should be included on regular day to day coverage?
 What Banners, how often, where, when and why.
 What specific activities should the Retail Sales Team engage in, that
create the most value for your Brands?
 Different Brands need different attention.
 Not all Categories in the store should be approached the same way.
 “Retail is not a Democracy”.
 Who is Accountable for Performance and on what facts and reporting
is Performance measured?
 What is acceptable performance – unacceptable performance?
Retail is a Business – Manage it like one!
 What is your current financial investment in Retail?
 Store Coverage (day to day continuity).
 ISE (in-store execution/resets).
 Surge (special projects, “one offs”).
 What is the cost of a retail call?
 What and How is “Value Created” in-store by a Retail Representative?
 What activities creates real incremental sales?
 What Brands respond best to “retail activities”?
 How are the actions measured, quantified, analyzed and reviewed for future
steps?
 If you were given $1.0M to invest in Retail –
 What would you do, and why
 There must be a legitimate reason for being.
 There must be a minimum ROI requirement.
 There must be identified areas where best to do what.
Inspect What You Expect
 Brokerage monies are focused on:
 50% on Business Building (AE, Administration, Analysis, Supply Chain).
 25% on Category Management (ISE Process).
 25% on Retail Coverage.
 Is the coverage focus based on where the commission is originated (account
shipment) or where the consumption action is (the retail market)?
 At store level, are we getting compliance on our programs paid at
Headquarters?
 Is our pricing on target/plan?
 Are our shelf standards being executed?
 Are the POG being executed and compliant?
Account: Date:
Category Non Pro. Range Strategy / Suggested Feature Price POG STD POG COM Comments / Competitive Activity
Lipton Tea 100ct Cup 2.89 - 3.79 Margin parity with key competition - Luzianne and Tetley
Lipton Tea 24ct Family 1.89 - 2.49 Margin parity with key competition - Luzianne and Tetley
Lipton Specialty 20ct 2.49 - 2.89 Margin parity with Celestial and Bigelow
Lipton 20ct Green 2.29 - 2.69 Margin parity with Celestial and Bigelow
Lipton 40ct Green 3.09 - 3.49 Margin parity with Celestial and Bigelow
Lipton 10qt Powder 2.99 - 3.59 Margin parity with key competition - Nestea
Lipton 20qt Powder 4.99 - 5.59 Margin parity with key competition - Nestea
Lipton 28qt Powder 5.79 - 6.59 Margin parity with key competition - Nestea
Ragu 26oz 2.09 - 2.19 Maintain .10 advantage versus Prego
Ragu Organic 2.49 - 2.59 Line priced with Bertolli
Ragu 32oz 3.59 - 3.89 Maintain .10 advantage versus Prego
Ragu 45oz 2.69 - 2.99 Maintain .10 advantage versus Prego
Ragu 66oz 3.49 - 3.69 Maintain .10 advantage versus Prego
Bertolli Sauce 26oz 2.89 - 3.09 .10 to.15 ABOVE Classico
Inspect What You Expect
 At retail, a syndicated representative handles up to 4,500 products in a store.
Maybe more. Questions that must be addressed:
 How much attention time do we get from that rep? Most likely, only seconds.
 In the stores that we are getting coverage, do they best fit our consumer
profile?
 What is the call frequency and service time per call? Are we getting our just
share? Are we in the right stores?
 What are getting in value creation:
 Fixed Voids.
 Filled out of stocks on the store call. (is there time?)
 Are they addressing the NAs? (store POG restriction) This must be addressed by the Business
Manager and the Category Management Manager.
National Confirmed Call Summary Score Card for 2005
Date:-9/6/2005
National Target% Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YTD
Target To
%
Total 92% 92% 88% 86% 94% 94% 95% 96% 92% 0% 0% 0% 0% 92% 100%
West
938110-Portland-Seattle 92% 86% 84% 89% 99% 98% 98% 96% 95% 0% 0% 0% 0% 93% 101%
938120-Northern California 92% 60% 62% 64% 74% 76% 77% 86% 92% 0% 0% 0% 0% 74% 80%
938130-Southern California 92% 96% 91% 98% 97% 99% 98% 100% 91% 0% 0% 0% 0% 96% 105%
938140-Phoenix-Southwest 92% 90% 95% 95% 99% 94% 98% 99% 94% 0% 0% 0% 0% 95% 104%
938150-Southern Cal Unified 92% 93% 90% 91% 100% 100% 100% 100% 98% 0% 0% 0% 0% 96% 105%
Total 92% 84% 84% 87% 93% 93% 94% 96% 93% 0% 0% 0% 0% 91% 98%
West Central
938210-Central 92% 97% 97% 96% 99% 97% 92% 86% 90% 0% 0% 0% 0% 94% 102%
938220-Milwaukee-Chicago 92% 99% 98% 99% 99% 94% 94% 98% 95% 0% 0% 0% 0% 97% 105%
938230-Texas 92% 98% 99% 95% 98% 94% 97% 100% 100% 0% 0% 0% 0% 98% 106%
938240-Kansas City 92% 98% 94% 71% 91% 98% 91% 99% 98% 0% 0% 0% 0% 92% 100%
Total 92% 98% 97% 91% 97% 95% 94% 97% 97% 0% 0% 0% 0% 96% 104%
Are We in the Right Stores
 There is a profile for our products.
 Not all stores are the same.
 In the case of a wholesaler that services various chains, is the syndicated model
a blanket one or one that adjusts to the needs/profile of the client’s product?
 Do we have all the correct resources available?
 Do the sections meet Corporate Shelf Standards?
 In the Category Management Process, do we meet Customer POG Standards?
 Is the Customer POG updated and executed at retail quickly – or at all?
 Some customers have well defined reset processes (i.e. Giant Carlisle)
 Others are not perfect.
Master Chain Chain Name Store Count
% of
Coverage by
Store Count
Store Count
for Service
Time
Call
Frequency
Total Planned
Calls
Average of
Routed Hours
Per Store Rec
Plan Hours
TotalMonthly
Plan Hours
TotalAnnual
Plan Hours
AnnualService
Call Time AnnualCost
Affil Food Coop Amarillo Affil Food Amarillo TX 34 0.18% 34 1.00 34 2.75 4.00 136.00 1,632.00 0.18% $46,343.88
Affil Food Coop L R Affil Food-LR Indep 22 0.12% 22 1.00 22 2.70 4.00 88.00 1,056.00 0.12% $29,987.22
AG Alabama AG Alabama Independents 9 0.05% 9 1.00 9 1.75 3.00 27.00 324.00 0.04% $9,200.62
AG Baton Rouge AG Baton Rouge Indep 54 0.29% 54 1.00 54 2.45 4.00 216.00 2,592.00 0.29% $73,604.99
Rouse LA 7 0.04% 7 1.00 7 1.75 3.00 21.00 252.00 0.03% $7,156.04
AG Baton Rouge Total 61 0.32% 0 1.00 61 2.37
0.00 0.00 0.00% $80,761.03
AG Miami AG Miami FL-Indep 16 0.08% 16 1.00 16 1.75 3.00 48.00 576.00 0.06% $16,356.67
Food Show-AG Miami No 20 0.11% 0 0.00 0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00% $0.00
Food Show-AG Miami So 20 0.11% 0 0.00 0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00% $0.00
Sedanos Markets FL 26 0.14% 26 2.00 52 2.75 4.00 208.00 2,496.00 0.28% $70,878.88
Sell Inner Ct-AG Miami No 81 0.43% 0 0.00 0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00% $0.00
Sell Inner Ct-AG Miami So 118 0.63% 0 0.00 0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00% $0.00
AG Miami Total 281 1.49% 0 0.24 68 0.35
0.00 0.00 0.00% $87,235.55
AG Ocala AG Ocala FL Indep 2 0.01% 2 1.00 2 1.75 3.00 6.00 72.00 0.01% $2,044.58
Ahold Giant Food-Carlisle PA 122 0.65% 122 1.00 122 1.75 3.00 366.00 4,392.00 0.49% $124,719.57
Giant Food-Landover 162 0.86% 162 1.00 162 1.75 3.00 486.00 5,832.00 0.65% $165,611.23
Stop n Shop Metro NY 94 0.50% 94 1.00 94 1.75 3.00 282.00 3,384.00 0.38% $96,095.41
Stop n Shop New England 245 1.30% 245 1.00 245 1.75 3.00 735.00 8,820.00 0.98% $250,461.43
Tops Friendly Markets NY 65 0.34% 65 1.00 65 1.75 3.00 195.00 2,340.00 0.26% $66,448.95
Ahold Total 688 3.65% 0 1.00 688 1.75
0.00 0.00 0.00% $703,336.60
On Shelf Availability
 There is a Core set of products that has a disproportionate
contribution to the business.
 These “workhorse” products are the cornerstone of our portfolio.
 These products rarely show up on a No Scan report. Yet when you
visit the stores, they are out of stock.
 Need to address the share of market/share of shelf.
 The lost volume affects our portfolio performance.
 Addressing the issue adds to our profits. There are no costs.
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION BRAND DESCRIPTION
UNIVERSAL PROD
CODE $ Volume (000's) $ % Chg vs. YAG % ACV Selling
% ACV Selling
Chg vs Yago U Volume (000's) U % Chg vs. YAG
BEVERAGES:
LP I-M RG LM/S CS 53 OZ LIPTON 004100000864 $9,188.4 1.4 63.6 (0.5) 1,947.6 (3.2)
LP BG OPB 100 CT LIPTON 004100000287 $39,390.6 (0.4) 99.0 0.0 12,326.2 (3.0)
LP BG OPPCB FM 24 CT LIPTON 004100020437 $19,901.0 (3.6) 70.7 (1.2) 9,296.4 (8.0)
LP BG OPPCB COLD BREW PTCH 22 CT LIPTON 004100000293 $13,443.8 (3.7) 81.0 1.1 4,357.9 (6.9)
LP BG D OPB 48 CT LIPTON 004100000271 $9,449.6 (2.6) 90.3 (0.1) 3,039.2 (4.0)
LP BG GR 40 CT LIPTON 004100000848 $5,320.1 (7.2) 71.9 1.2 1,466.9 (11.6)
$96,693.6
SPOONABLES AND POURABLES:
WSB PL IT 16 OZ WISH-BONE 004100000610 $20,163.8 (4.8) 96.2 (0.2) 8,537.8 (8.6)
WSB PL RCH SQ 16 OZ WISH-BONE 004100000572 $11,721.3 (8.3) 91.4 1.5 5,281.9 (10.3)
HLMNS MAYO 30 OZ HELLMANN'S 004800121348 $133,830.0 11.3 78.2 0.6 40,387.4 (0.3)
BST-F PJ MAYO 30 OZ BEST FOODS 004800121351 $68,850.3 12.9 23.0 0.0 21,113.1 3.5
HLM-L PJ HTC LT MAYO HTF 30 OZ HELLMANN'S LIGHT 004800121358 $34,869.9 7.2 74.2 0.5 10,181.9 (3.6)
BST-F-L PJ HTC LT MAYO HTF 30 OZ BEST FOODS LIGHT 004800121372 $9,304.7 14.3 22.0 0.1 2,713.1 4.2
HLMNS PJ MAYO 15 OZ HELLMANN'S 004800121338 $31,058.1 23.3 74.5 0.9 11,239.6 7.5
BST-F PJ MAYO 15 OZ BEST FOODS 004800121336 $9,368.1 14.5 23.0 1.4 2,934.3 (4.9)
$319,166.0
Cost To Serve
 Objective is to analyze and identify the customers that we need to
focus for growth and development.
 Not all customers are alike.
 Can we address any proposal for incremental spend?
 Need to identify these costs in order to determine an effective rate
of return. Costs include:
 Retail Service time and frequency.
 Reset costs.
 Trade Spend and Co Marketing Costs.
Number of stores
Coverage
Hours
Retail
Hours per
Store
Cost per
Store
H1 Reset Budget
H1 # stores on
Reset
Coverage
Reset cost
per store
Total Retail +
Reset Investment
per Store
H1 Investment per
Chain
H1 NSV
% Retail Cost to
Serve
Reduction in
cost due to
RCTS Ceiling of
.89%
Continuity Cost Continuity C2S Reset Cost Reset CsS
Military** #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0!
Winn Dixie 460 1,265.0 2.8 $ 792 $ 216,500 522 $ 415 $ 1,207 $ 580,820 $ 30,168,552 1.93% $ 312,320 $ 364,320 1.21% 216,500 0.718%
Ahold (direct & C&S) 708 1,239.0 1.8 $ 504 $ 1,002,604 101 $ 9,927 $ 10,431 $ 1,359,436 $ 268,313,696 0.51% $ (1,028,556) $ 356,832 0.13% 1,002,604 0.374%
Safeway 1,207 2,112.5 1.8 $ 504 $ 636,836 1554 $ 410 $ 914 $ 1,245,236 $ 133,863,984 0.93% $ 53,847 $ 608,400 0.45% 636,836 0.476%
Harris Teeter 129 225.8 1.8 $ 504 $ 105,000 144 $ 729 $ 1,233 $ 170,016 $ 12,982,246 1.31% $ 54,474 $ 65,016 0.50% 105,000 0.809%
Delhaize 1,113 1,947.8 1.8 $ 504 $ 752,756 1487 $ 506 $ 1,010 $ 1,313,708 $ 102,375,277 1.28% $ 402,568 $ 560,952 0.55% 752,756 0.735%
Publix 888 2,442.0 2.8 $ 792 $ 360,000 904 $ 398 $ 1,190 $ 1,063,296 $ 118,673,829 0.90% $ 7,099 $ 703,296 0.59% 360,000 0.303%
Wegmans Food Markets 25 43.8 1.8 $ 504 $ - 0 #DIV/0! #DIV/0! $ 12,600 $ 13,206,043 0.10% $ (104,934) $ 12,600 0.10% #DIV/0! #DIV/0!
Kroger 1,970 3,447.5 1.8 $ 504 $ 1,270,075 2430 $ 523 $ 1,027 $ 2,262,955 $ 259,947,879 0.87% $ (50,581) $ 992,880 0.38% 1,270,075 0.489%
Giant Eagle 269 1,144.0 4.3 $ 1,225 $ 116,588 330 $ 353 $ 1,578 $ 446,060 $ 35,750,477 1.25% $ 127,881 $ 329,472 0.92% 116,588 0.326%
Albertsons (LLC ONLY) 286 500.5 1.8 $ 504 $ 186,262 330 $ 564 $ 1,068 $ 330,406 $ 17,809,076 1.86% $ 171,905 $ 144,144 0.81% 186,262 1.046%
Tengelman 328 645.0 2.0 $ 566 $ 157,250 65 $ 2,419 $ 2,986 $ 343,010 $ 32,914,000 1.04% $ 50,075 $ 185,760 0.56% 157,250 0.478%
Average per store $ 9,127,543 $ 1,026,005,059 12.0% #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0!
Hy Vee 151 619.0 4.1 $ 1,181 $ 54,844 200 $ 274 $ 1,455 $ 233,116 $ 19,949,920 1.17% $ 55,562 $ 178,272 0.89% 54,844 0.275%
Regional Accounts
Inner City/Ethnic/Independent Sales Objectives
 To cover stores, in an ethnic Neighborhoods, that are not on coverage by
our Retail Sales Team.
 Stores that are supplied by a local (ethnic specific where possible) Market
Wholesaler. No direct shipments – no credit checks, minimum ships, or
customer service support.
 Primary Ethnic Audience is Hispanic (Caribbean, Mexican and South
American) and African American. These groups are highly Brand Loyal.
□ Selling Objectives
□ Get current deal sheets from the local Wholesaler(s) account manager(s)
□ Drive whatever product is the “work horse” for the area
□ Build on the workhorse volume and sell additional SKU’s
□ Shelf stock and display stock can be sold (a loaded shelf is a happy shelf )
□ Merchandising should be limited
□ Ensure that product is on shelf.
□ Consider a “display” allowance if display quantities are sold AND if the
merchant will put a sign in the window.
□ Any allowances offered “on the street” need Rep verification for whatever
performance ( display/sign. Etc ) was agreed to.
Inaugural Year Annual Ethnic/Inner City Results
As of December 31, 2007
NSV % CASES % ASP
TOTAL $6,485,440.50 100% 158,810 100% $40.84
Bronx, NYC *** $1,200,404.51 19% 46,154 29% $26.01
Detroit, MI *** $1,044,533.82 16% 9,484 6% $110.14
Brooklyn, NYC *** $1,014,242.88 16% 30,190 19% $33.60
Queens, NYC *** $546,113.26 8% 18,343 12% $29.77
New Jersey (01/07) $541,690.32 8% 17,430 11% $31.08
Valley, No Cal. (06/07) $514,907.32 8% 997 1% $516.46
Freemont, No. Cal (04/07) $387,178.91 6% 811 1% $477.41
Miami North, FL (03/07) $315,339.00 5% 8,374 5% $37.66
Bronx-Manhattan, NYC (03/07) $302,274.25 5% 11,993 8% $25.20
Miami South, FL (03/07) $221,857.77 3% 8,170 5% $27.16
San Diego, CA (05/07) $192,156.48 3% 5,917 4% $32.48
Los Angeles #2 (05/07-09/07) $148,532.19 2% 582 .5% $255.21
Los Angeles #3 (05/07) $56,209.79 1% 365 .5% $154.00
Extraordinary ROI
Breakeven Model Actual Unilever
Cost of a Rep 30,000$ 30,000$
Gross Margin Dollars per Ethnic Sale 7.20$
Number of Cases needed to sell to break even 4,167
If stores are monthly - # case sales per month 347
# of case sales per week 87
# of case sales per day 17
Anticipated calls per day for a Rep, for a given week 8
# of calls in a month 18 working days a month 144
# calls in a year 1728
# of sales calls where a sales is made 50% close rate 864
average # cases sold per average sale 5
annual cases sold by the average Rep 4320
Total Gross Margin Dollars generated - annual average Rep Sales 31,104$ 850,000$
ROI 104% 2833%
Breakeven Sales level easily within reach
Peer company performance, per Average Rep yields xx% ROI
Work with Finance – Agree the model – Agree ‘How to Measure” up front!
Costings for Opportunities
SCENARIO #6 = Crock Chilled/Bertolli Frozen Incremental Coverage only - Frequency is once per month. Use the DRT for the other call.
Assume 30 minutes per Brand - 60 minutes total
ASSUMPTIONS:
Number of Stores to Cover 9,000
Works Crock Chilled and Bertolli Frozen
Estimate 60 minutes per store call 60
Estimate 38 minutes drive time from store to store 38
Call Frequency per Month 1
A STORE CALL DAY FOR A REP: COSTS:
Number of hours per day 8 Sales Reps Salaries:
Number of minutes per hour 60 Fully Loaded Sales Rep Annual Salary $52,000.00
Number of Minutes per Work Day 480 Number of Sales Reps 95
less Personal Time per store call day 30 Annual Sales Rep Salaries $4,940,000.00
Store Call Minutes per day 450
Number of Store Call Minutes (call plus drive time) 98 Management Costs:
Number of Store Calls per Day 4.591837 Number of Reps per Supervisor 12
5 Number of Supervisors Needed 7.916666667
8
WORK DAYS PER SALES REP PER MONTH:
Number pf Days in the Year 365 Fully Loaded Supervision Annual Salary $85,000.00
Number of Weekend Days Per Year 104 Annual Supervisory Salaries $680,000.00
Number of Maximum Workdays per Year 261
Less Paid Vacations 10 Number of Supervisors Needed 8
251 Number of Supervisors per Area Manager 7
Less Monday Holidays and Personal Days 10 Number of Area Managers Needed 1.142857143
241 1
Less Administrative/Meetings Days Per Year 12
Equals Possible Max Number of Work Days Per Year 229 Fully Loaded Area Manager Salary $160,000.00
Number of Months per Year 12 Annual Area Manager Salaries $160,000.00
Number of Work Days Per Month 19.08333
19 Team Lead 0
Fully Loaded Team Lead Salary $0.00
NUMBER OF REPS:
Number of Stores Called Per Rep per Day 5 Annual Management Salaries $840,000.00
Number of Days per Week 5
Number of Stores Called per Week 25 TOTAL PAYROLL $5,780,000.00
Frequency per Month 1
Number of Weeks per Month 4
Number of Stores Called per Month per Rep 100 Note:
Number of Store Calls Made Per Month 100 Assumes no administrative and analytical functions.
Meetings/Admin Days per Month 1 Assumes no training charges
Final Number of Stores Called Per Month 95 Assumes no additional setup charges (routings)
Final Number of Store Calls Made Per Month 95 Assumes reps are full time
Assumes store locations selected are the same as the DRT Model
Number of Stores Targeted 9,000 Assumes the 9,000 stores are on the DRT coverage Model
Final Number of Stores Called Per Month 95 The incremental supervisors and Area Managers are needed.
Number of Reps Needed 94.7368 The Team Lead could be eliminated.
95 NOTE THE DRT COST WOULD ALSO HAVE TO BE INCREASED.
Recommendation: 120 day Fast Trak Program
 Communication of Retail Standards -
 Category, Brand and Channel specific.
 Implementation of a strategic Retail Coverage Strategy -
 The “right stores” with the “right coverage” doing the “right things”.
 In-Store Procedures Training and Execution -
 What do to and why.
 Integrated Real-Time reporting and visibility -
 Performance against Corporate defined standards.
 Performance against identified KPI’s.
 Retail investment strategy linked to performance -
 Revised Broker Retail Commissions platform.
The Results
 Immediate sense of “discomfort” by all those who really know that “nothing
is really being done”
 You will know who was not “contributing” to the solution.
 Increased focus/attention will produce results.
 Immediate respect by the Retail Sales Reps – because they know what they
should be doing, and they are not driven or expected to do those things
 People want to do a good job – and want to be recognized for doing a
good job.
 Immediate improvement of On Shelf Availability – and the clarity of
understanding
 Reduced Out of Stocks and Voids.
 Improved turns of your most valuable SKUs.
 Increased profits since there is no incremental spend to drive volume. It is
already budgeted.
 Tracking and Recovery of up to 2% of annual sales – in recovered lost sales,
and the ability to understand “where” the sales came from, and the
“commercial value” of the sales.

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Tom weldin llc_retail_opportunities

  • 1. Retail Sales Opportunities: Retail is part of the Business Plan Tom Weldin LLC Tom Weldin (201)-314-7115 tom.weldin@gmail.com
  • 2. Lost Retail Sales approach 1-2% of Annual Volume  Execution of the Business Plan is seen by Senior Managers as Priority #1  Corporate Functions spend Millions of Funds:  R&D: Product Innovation and Development.  Marketing: Advertising and Shopper/Consumer Initiatives.  Supply Chain: Distribution/Logistics and Customer Service.  Sales: Account Teams deployed to focus on and serve Key Customers.  Corporate KPI’s monitored constantly, to track “Performance vs. Plan”  Volume Sales  Market Share  Profit  Very few CPGs have the same focus on Retail  No KPI’s on Retail Activities. It is part of the Business Plan.  Objectives and Expectations not clearly articulated, communicated.  Little or no real Accountability for detailed reporting on Performance in store.  Out of Stocks – Missing SKU’s: Not available on shelf 8-10% of the time  Probably twice as bad when on Promotion
  • 3. Fundamentals of Success for Retail  Clear set of Performance Expectations and Tolerances:  What are the Brand Standards and what should the shelf look like?  What is considered acceptable? Is the Account Authorized distribution and the retail in-store distribution the same?  What are the minimum expectations for Speed to Shelf for New Items/Innovations?  What stores should be included on regular day to day coverage?  What Banners, how often, where, when and why.  What specific activities should the Retail Sales Team engage in, that create the most value for your Brands?  Different Brands need different attention.  Not all Categories in the store should be approached the same way.  “Retail is not a Democracy”.  Who is Accountable for Performance and on what facts and reporting is Performance measured?  What is acceptable performance – unacceptable performance?
  • 4. Retail is a Business – Manage it like one!  What is your current financial investment in Retail?  Store Coverage (day to day continuity).  ISE (in-store execution/resets).  Surge (special projects, “one offs”).  What is the cost of a retail call?  What and How is “Value Created” in-store by a Retail Representative?  What activities creates real incremental sales?  What Brands respond best to “retail activities”?  How are the actions measured, quantified, analyzed and reviewed for future steps?  If you were given $1.0M to invest in Retail –  What would you do, and why  There must be a legitimate reason for being.  There must be a minimum ROI requirement.  There must be identified areas where best to do what.
  • 5. Inspect What You Expect  Brokerage monies are focused on:  50% on Business Building (AE, Administration, Analysis, Supply Chain).  25% on Category Management (ISE Process).  25% on Retail Coverage.  Is the coverage focus based on where the commission is originated (account shipment) or where the consumption action is (the retail market)?  At store level, are we getting compliance on our programs paid at Headquarters?  Is our pricing on target/plan?  Are our shelf standards being executed?  Are the POG being executed and compliant? Account: Date: Category Non Pro. Range Strategy / Suggested Feature Price POG STD POG COM Comments / Competitive Activity Lipton Tea 100ct Cup 2.89 - 3.79 Margin parity with key competition - Luzianne and Tetley Lipton Tea 24ct Family 1.89 - 2.49 Margin parity with key competition - Luzianne and Tetley Lipton Specialty 20ct 2.49 - 2.89 Margin parity with Celestial and Bigelow Lipton 20ct Green 2.29 - 2.69 Margin parity with Celestial and Bigelow Lipton 40ct Green 3.09 - 3.49 Margin parity with Celestial and Bigelow Lipton 10qt Powder 2.99 - 3.59 Margin parity with key competition - Nestea Lipton 20qt Powder 4.99 - 5.59 Margin parity with key competition - Nestea Lipton 28qt Powder 5.79 - 6.59 Margin parity with key competition - Nestea Ragu 26oz 2.09 - 2.19 Maintain .10 advantage versus Prego Ragu Organic 2.49 - 2.59 Line priced with Bertolli Ragu 32oz 3.59 - 3.89 Maintain .10 advantage versus Prego Ragu 45oz 2.69 - 2.99 Maintain .10 advantage versus Prego Ragu 66oz 3.49 - 3.69 Maintain .10 advantage versus Prego Bertolli Sauce 26oz 2.89 - 3.09 .10 to.15 ABOVE Classico
  • 6. Inspect What You Expect  At retail, a syndicated representative handles up to 4,500 products in a store. Maybe more. Questions that must be addressed:  How much attention time do we get from that rep? Most likely, only seconds.  In the stores that we are getting coverage, do they best fit our consumer profile?  What is the call frequency and service time per call? Are we getting our just share? Are we in the right stores?  What are getting in value creation:  Fixed Voids.  Filled out of stocks on the store call. (is there time?)  Are they addressing the NAs? (store POG restriction) This must be addressed by the Business Manager and the Category Management Manager. National Confirmed Call Summary Score Card for 2005 Date:-9/6/2005 National Target% Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YTD Target To % Total 92% 92% 88% 86% 94% 94% 95% 96% 92% 0% 0% 0% 0% 92% 100% West 938110-Portland-Seattle 92% 86% 84% 89% 99% 98% 98% 96% 95% 0% 0% 0% 0% 93% 101% 938120-Northern California 92% 60% 62% 64% 74% 76% 77% 86% 92% 0% 0% 0% 0% 74% 80% 938130-Southern California 92% 96% 91% 98% 97% 99% 98% 100% 91% 0% 0% 0% 0% 96% 105% 938140-Phoenix-Southwest 92% 90% 95% 95% 99% 94% 98% 99% 94% 0% 0% 0% 0% 95% 104% 938150-Southern Cal Unified 92% 93% 90% 91% 100% 100% 100% 100% 98% 0% 0% 0% 0% 96% 105% Total 92% 84% 84% 87% 93% 93% 94% 96% 93% 0% 0% 0% 0% 91% 98% West Central 938210-Central 92% 97% 97% 96% 99% 97% 92% 86% 90% 0% 0% 0% 0% 94% 102% 938220-Milwaukee-Chicago 92% 99% 98% 99% 99% 94% 94% 98% 95% 0% 0% 0% 0% 97% 105% 938230-Texas 92% 98% 99% 95% 98% 94% 97% 100% 100% 0% 0% 0% 0% 98% 106% 938240-Kansas City 92% 98% 94% 71% 91% 98% 91% 99% 98% 0% 0% 0% 0% 92% 100% Total 92% 98% 97% 91% 97% 95% 94% 97% 97% 0% 0% 0% 0% 96% 104%
  • 7. Are We in the Right Stores  There is a profile for our products.  Not all stores are the same.  In the case of a wholesaler that services various chains, is the syndicated model a blanket one or one that adjusts to the needs/profile of the client’s product?  Do we have all the correct resources available?  Do the sections meet Corporate Shelf Standards?  In the Category Management Process, do we meet Customer POG Standards?  Is the Customer POG updated and executed at retail quickly – or at all?  Some customers have well defined reset processes (i.e. Giant Carlisle)  Others are not perfect. Master Chain Chain Name Store Count % of Coverage by Store Count Store Count for Service Time Call Frequency Total Planned Calls Average of Routed Hours Per Store Rec Plan Hours TotalMonthly Plan Hours TotalAnnual Plan Hours AnnualService Call Time AnnualCost Affil Food Coop Amarillo Affil Food Amarillo TX 34 0.18% 34 1.00 34 2.75 4.00 136.00 1,632.00 0.18% $46,343.88 Affil Food Coop L R Affil Food-LR Indep 22 0.12% 22 1.00 22 2.70 4.00 88.00 1,056.00 0.12% $29,987.22 AG Alabama AG Alabama Independents 9 0.05% 9 1.00 9 1.75 3.00 27.00 324.00 0.04% $9,200.62 AG Baton Rouge AG Baton Rouge Indep 54 0.29% 54 1.00 54 2.45 4.00 216.00 2,592.00 0.29% $73,604.99 Rouse LA 7 0.04% 7 1.00 7 1.75 3.00 21.00 252.00 0.03% $7,156.04 AG Baton Rouge Total 61 0.32% 0 1.00 61 2.37 0.00 0.00 0.00% $80,761.03 AG Miami AG Miami FL-Indep 16 0.08% 16 1.00 16 1.75 3.00 48.00 576.00 0.06% $16,356.67 Food Show-AG Miami No 20 0.11% 0 0.00 0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00% $0.00 Food Show-AG Miami So 20 0.11% 0 0.00 0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00% $0.00 Sedanos Markets FL 26 0.14% 26 2.00 52 2.75 4.00 208.00 2,496.00 0.28% $70,878.88 Sell Inner Ct-AG Miami No 81 0.43% 0 0.00 0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00% $0.00 Sell Inner Ct-AG Miami So 118 0.63% 0 0.00 0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00% $0.00 AG Miami Total 281 1.49% 0 0.24 68 0.35 0.00 0.00 0.00% $87,235.55 AG Ocala AG Ocala FL Indep 2 0.01% 2 1.00 2 1.75 3.00 6.00 72.00 0.01% $2,044.58 Ahold Giant Food-Carlisle PA 122 0.65% 122 1.00 122 1.75 3.00 366.00 4,392.00 0.49% $124,719.57 Giant Food-Landover 162 0.86% 162 1.00 162 1.75 3.00 486.00 5,832.00 0.65% $165,611.23 Stop n Shop Metro NY 94 0.50% 94 1.00 94 1.75 3.00 282.00 3,384.00 0.38% $96,095.41 Stop n Shop New England 245 1.30% 245 1.00 245 1.75 3.00 735.00 8,820.00 0.98% $250,461.43 Tops Friendly Markets NY 65 0.34% 65 1.00 65 1.75 3.00 195.00 2,340.00 0.26% $66,448.95 Ahold Total 688 3.65% 0 1.00 688 1.75 0.00 0.00 0.00% $703,336.60
  • 8. On Shelf Availability  There is a Core set of products that has a disproportionate contribution to the business.  These “workhorse” products are the cornerstone of our portfolio.  These products rarely show up on a No Scan report. Yet when you visit the stores, they are out of stock.  Need to address the share of market/share of shelf.  The lost volume affects our portfolio performance.  Addressing the issue adds to our profits. There are no costs. PRODUCT DESCRIPTION BRAND DESCRIPTION UNIVERSAL PROD CODE $ Volume (000's) $ % Chg vs. YAG % ACV Selling % ACV Selling Chg vs Yago U Volume (000's) U % Chg vs. YAG BEVERAGES: LP I-M RG LM/S CS 53 OZ LIPTON 004100000864 $9,188.4 1.4 63.6 (0.5) 1,947.6 (3.2) LP BG OPB 100 CT LIPTON 004100000287 $39,390.6 (0.4) 99.0 0.0 12,326.2 (3.0) LP BG OPPCB FM 24 CT LIPTON 004100020437 $19,901.0 (3.6) 70.7 (1.2) 9,296.4 (8.0) LP BG OPPCB COLD BREW PTCH 22 CT LIPTON 004100000293 $13,443.8 (3.7) 81.0 1.1 4,357.9 (6.9) LP BG D OPB 48 CT LIPTON 004100000271 $9,449.6 (2.6) 90.3 (0.1) 3,039.2 (4.0) LP BG GR 40 CT LIPTON 004100000848 $5,320.1 (7.2) 71.9 1.2 1,466.9 (11.6) $96,693.6 SPOONABLES AND POURABLES: WSB PL IT 16 OZ WISH-BONE 004100000610 $20,163.8 (4.8) 96.2 (0.2) 8,537.8 (8.6) WSB PL RCH SQ 16 OZ WISH-BONE 004100000572 $11,721.3 (8.3) 91.4 1.5 5,281.9 (10.3) HLMNS MAYO 30 OZ HELLMANN'S 004800121348 $133,830.0 11.3 78.2 0.6 40,387.4 (0.3) BST-F PJ MAYO 30 OZ BEST FOODS 004800121351 $68,850.3 12.9 23.0 0.0 21,113.1 3.5 HLM-L PJ HTC LT MAYO HTF 30 OZ HELLMANN'S LIGHT 004800121358 $34,869.9 7.2 74.2 0.5 10,181.9 (3.6) BST-F-L PJ HTC LT MAYO HTF 30 OZ BEST FOODS LIGHT 004800121372 $9,304.7 14.3 22.0 0.1 2,713.1 4.2 HLMNS PJ MAYO 15 OZ HELLMANN'S 004800121338 $31,058.1 23.3 74.5 0.9 11,239.6 7.5 BST-F PJ MAYO 15 OZ BEST FOODS 004800121336 $9,368.1 14.5 23.0 1.4 2,934.3 (4.9) $319,166.0
  • 9. Cost To Serve  Objective is to analyze and identify the customers that we need to focus for growth and development.  Not all customers are alike.  Can we address any proposal for incremental spend?  Need to identify these costs in order to determine an effective rate of return. Costs include:  Retail Service time and frequency.  Reset costs.  Trade Spend and Co Marketing Costs. Number of stores Coverage Hours Retail Hours per Store Cost per Store H1 Reset Budget H1 # stores on Reset Coverage Reset cost per store Total Retail + Reset Investment per Store H1 Investment per Chain H1 NSV % Retail Cost to Serve Reduction in cost due to RCTS Ceiling of .89% Continuity Cost Continuity C2S Reset Cost Reset CsS Military** #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! Winn Dixie 460 1,265.0 2.8 $ 792 $ 216,500 522 $ 415 $ 1,207 $ 580,820 $ 30,168,552 1.93% $ 312,320 $ 364,320 1.21% 216,500 0.718% Ahold (direct & C&S) 708 1,239.0 1.8 $ 504 $ 1,002,604 101 $ 9,927 $ 10,431 $ 1,359,436 $ 268,313,696 0.51% $ (1,028,556) $ 356,832 0.13% 1,002,604 0.374% Safeway 1,207 2,112.5 1.8 $ 504 $ 636,836 1554 $ 410 $ 914 $ 1,245,236 $ 133,863,984 0.93% $ 53,847 $ 608,400 0.45% 636,836 0.476% Harris Teeter 129 225.8 1.8 $ 504 $ 105,000 144 $ 729 $ 1,233 $ 170,016 $ 12,982,246 1.31% $ 54,474 $ 65,016 0.50% 105,000 0.809% Delhaize 1,113 1,947.8 1.8 $ 504 $ 752,756 1487 $ 506 $ 1,010 $ 1,313,708 $ 102,375,277 1.28% $ 402,568 $ 560,952 0.55% 752,756 0.735% Publix 888 2,442.0 2.8 $ 792 $ 360,000 904 $ 398 $ 1,190 $ 1,063,296 $ 118,673,829 0.90% $ 7,099 $ 703,296 0.59% 360,000 0.303% Wegmans Food Markets 25 43.8 1.8 $ 504 $ - 0 #DIV/0! #DIV/0! $ 12,600 $ 13,206,043 0.10% $ (104,934) $ 12,600 0.10% #DIV/0! #DIV/0! Kroger 1,970 3,447.5 1.8 $ 504 $ 1,270,075 2430 $ 523 $ 1,027 $ 2,262,955 $ 259,947,879 0.87% $ (50,581) $ 992,880 0.38% 1,270,075 0.489% Giant Eagle 269 1,144.0 4.3 $ 1,225 $ 116,588 330 $ 353 $ 1,578 $ 446,060 $ 35,750,477 1.25% $ 127,881 $ 329,472 0.92% 116,588 0.326% Albertsons (LLC ONLY) 286 500.5 1.8 $ 504 $ 186,262 330 $ 564 $ 1,068 $ 330,406 $ 17,809,076 1.86% $ 171,905 $ 144,144 0.81% 186,262 1.046% Tengelman 328 645.0 2.0 $ 566 $ 157,250 65 $ 2,419 $ 2,986 $ 343,010 $ 32,914,000 1.04% $ 50,075 $ 185,760 0.56% 157,250 0.478% Average per store $ 9,127,543 $ 1,026,005,059 12.0% #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! #DIV/0! Hy Vee 151 619.0 4.1 $ 1,181 $ 54,844 200 $ 274 $ 1,455 $ 233,116 $ 19,949,920 1.17% $ 55,562 $ 178,272 0.89% 54,844 0.275% Regional Accounts
  • 10. Inner City/Ethnic/Independent Sales Objectives  To cover stores, in an ethnic Neighborhoods, that are not on coverage by our Retail Sales Team.  Stores that are supplied by a local (ethnic specific where possible) Market Wholesaler. No direct shipments – no credit checks, minimum ships, or customer service support.  Primary Ethnic Audience is Hispanic (Caribbean, Mexican and South American) and African American. These groups are highly Brand Loyal. □ Selling Objectives □ Get current deal sheets from the local Wholesaler(s) account manager(s) □ Drive whatever product is the “work horse” for the area □ Build on the workhorse volume and sell additional SKU’s □ Shelf stock and display stock can be sold (a loaded shelf is a happy shelf ) □ Merchandising should be limited □ Ensure that product is on shelf. □ Consider a “display” allowance if display quantities are sold AND if the merchant will put a sign in the window. □ Any allowances offered “on the street” need Rep verification for whatever performance ( display/sign. Etc ) was agreed to.
  • 11. Inaugural Year Annual Ethnic/Inner City Results As of December 31, 2007 NSV % CASES % ASP TOTAL $6,485,440.50 100% 158,810 100% $40.84 Bronx, NYC *** $1,200,404.51 19% 46,154 29% $26.01 Detroit, MI *** $1,044,533.82 16% 9,484 6% $110.14 Brooklyn, NYC *** $1,014,242.88 16% 30,190 19% $33.60 Queens, NYC *** $546,113.26 8% 18,343 12% $29.77 New Jersey (01/07) $541,690.32 8% 17,430 11% $31.08 Valley, No Cal. (06/07) $514,907.32 8% 997 1% $516.46 Freemont, No. Cal (04/07) $387,178.91 6% 811 1% $477.41 Miami North, FL (03/07) $315,339.00 5% 8,374 5% $37.66 Bronx-Manhattan, NYC (03/07) $302,274.25 5% 11,993 8% $25.20 Miami South, FL (03/07) $221,857.77 3% 8,170 5% $27.16 San Diego, CA (05/07) $192,156.48 3% 5,917 4% $32.48 Los Angeles #2 (05/07-09/07) $148,532.19 2% 582 .5% $255.21 Los Angeles #3 (05/07) $56,209.79 1% 365 .5% $154.00
  • 12. Extraordinary ROI Breakeven Model Actual Unilever Cost of a Rep 30,000$ 30,000$ Gross Margin Dollars per Ethnic Sale 7.20$ Number of Cases needed to sell to break even 4,167 If stores are monthly - # case sales per month 347 # of case sales per week 87 # of case sales per day 17 Anticipated calls per day for a Rep, for a given week 8 # of calls in a month 18 working days a month 144 # calls in a year 1728 # of sales calls where a sales is made 50% close rate 864 average # cases sold per average sale 5 annual cases sold by the average Rep 4320 Total Gross Margin Dollars generated - annual average Rep Sales 31,104$ 850,000$ ROI 104% 2833% Breakeven Sales level easily within reach Peer company performance, per Average Rep yields xx% ROI Work with Finance – Agree the model – Agree ‘How to Measure” up front!
  • 13. Costings for Opportunities SCENARIO #6 = Crock Chilled/Bertolli Frozen Incremental Coverage only - Frequency is once per month. Use the DRT for the other call. Assume 30 minutes per Brand - 60 minutes total ASSUMPTIONS: Number of Stores to Cover 9,000 Works Crock Chilled and Bertolli Frozen Estimate 60 minutes per store call 60 Estimate 38 minutes drive time from store to store 38 Call Frequency per Month 1 A STORE CALL DAY FOR A REP: COSTS: Number of hours per day 8 Sales Reps Salaries: Number of minutes per hour 60 Fully Loaded Sales Rep Annual Salary $52,000.00 Number of Minutes per Work Day 480 Number of Sales Reps 95 less Personal Time per store call day 30 Annual Sales Rep Salaries $4,940,000.00 Store Call Minutes per day 450 Number of Store Call Minutes (call plus drive time) 98 Management Costs: Number of Store Calls per Day 4.591837 Number of Reps per Supervisor 12 5 Number of Supervisors Needed 7.916666667 8 WORK DAYS PER SALES REP PER MONTH: Number pf Days in the Year 365 Fully Loaded Supervision Annual Salary $85,000.00 Number of Weekend Days Per Year 104 Annual Supervisory Salaries $680,000.00 Number of Maximum Workdays per Year 261 Less Paid Vacations 10 Number of Supervisors Needed 8 251 Number of Supervisors per Area Manager 7 Less Monday Holidays and Personal Days 10 Number of Area Managers Needed 1.142857143 241 1 Less Administrative/Meetings Days Per Year 12 Equals Possible Max Number of Work Days Per Year 229 Fully Loaded Area Manager Salary $160,000.00 Number of Months per Year 12 Annual Area Manager Salaries $160,000.00 Number of Work Days Per Month 19.08333 19 Team Lead 0 Fully Loaded Team Lead Salary $0.00 NUMBER OF REPS: Number of Stores Called Per Rep per Day 5 Annual Management Salaries $840,000.00 Number of Days per Week 5 Number of Stores Called per Week 25 TOTAL PAYROLL $5,780,000.00 Frequency per Month 1 Number of Weeks per Month 4 Number of Stores Called per Month per Rep 100 Note: Number of Store Calls Made Per Month 100 Assumes no administrative and analytical functions. Meetings/Admin Days per Month 1 Assumes no training charges Final Number of Stores Called Per Month 95 Assumes no additional setup charges (routings) Final Number of Store Calls Made Per Month 95 Assumes reps are full time Assumes store locations selected are the same as the DRT Model Number of Stores Targeted 9,000 Assumes the 9,000 stores are on the DRT coverage Model Final Number of Stores Called Per Month 95 The incremental supervisors and Area Managers are needed. Number of Reps Needed 94.7368 The Team Lead could be eliminated. 95 NOTE THE DRT COST WOULD ALSO HAVE TO BE INCREASED.
  • 14. Recommendation: 120 day Fast Trak Program  Communication of Retail Standards -  Category, Brand and Channel specific.  Implementation of a strategic Retail Coverage Strategy -  The “right stores” with the “right coverage” doing the “right things”.  In-Store Procedures Training and Execution -  What do to and why.  Integrated Real-Time reporting and visibility -  Performance against Corporate defined standards.  Performance against identified KPI’s.  Retail investment strategy linked to performance -  Revised Broker Retail Commissions platform.
  • 15. The Results  Immediate sense of “discomfort” by all those who really know that “nothing is really being done”  You will know who was not “contributing” to the solution.  Increased focus/attention will produce results.  Immediate respect by the Retail Sales Reps – because they know what they should be doing, and they are not driven or expected to do those things  People want to do a good job – and want to be recognized for doing a good job.  Immediate improvement of On Shelf Availability – and the clarity of understanding  Reduced Out of Stocks and Voids.  Improved turns of your most valuable SKUs.  Increased profits since there is no incremental spend to drive volume. It is already budgeted.  Tracking and Recovery of up to 2% of annual sales – in recovered lost sales, and the ability to understand “where” the sales came from, and the “commercial value” of the sales.