5 Ways for Market Leading Brands to Drive Profitable Growth
Mike Ferry |
Monday, December 28, 2009 at 1:38PM If you have ever had the opportunity to work on a market-leading brand, you know from experience it is both a privilege and a challenge. On the positive side, market leaders typically have strong brand equity, excellent profitability, and score well on key measures such as awareness, trial, and loyalty.
Bounty - How Do You Grow a Market Leading Brand?On the challenging side, companies expect strong, consistent profitable growth from their market leading brands, and in many categories this can be exceptionally difficult to deliver. Trying to continue growing share when you are already the market leader often results in heavy price competition which has the unintended result of driving profit out of the category for everyone.
In many ways, it can be even harder to stay on top, than it is to get there, as the low-hanging fruit has already been picked. With that in mind, here are five suggestions to help market leaders continue driving profitable growth:
1. Rather than focusing on stealing share from competition, focus on growing the category.
Years ago when I was working on the Bounty paper towel business, the brand was market leader with a share nearly triple its closest competitor. Rather than seeking to simply grow share, our team recognized that the paper towel category had expandable consumption, and as market leader it was our responsibility to drive category growth. Read on for more detail on how this worked for Bounty.
2. Get in bed with your heavy users.
Really understanding what makes your heavy users tick has multiple advantages. First, it helps ensure you don’t do anything which will alienate them, which can have catastrophic consequences. Coca Cola would have avoided the whole New Coke fiasco had they shared their plans to change the formula of Coke with their heavy users.
In addition, studying your heavy users allows you to understand what differentiates them from your typical user, and can lead to strategies to get more users to adopt the heavy user behavior. In the Bounty example, the brand’s heavy users tended to use paper towels for tougher cleaning tasks than typical users, and tended to keep larger quantities of Bounty on hand.
3. Don’t define your competitive set too narrowly.
Step back and see how the consumer views your category, and what alternative products they consider when selecting your product. In the Bounty example, while heavy users were using paper towels for tough cleaning tasks like washing dishes, cleaning large spills, or scrubbing carpets, typical users were using sponges and rags for these tasks. By understanding that Bounty was competing with sponges and rags, we were able to show the benefits of using a disposable paper towel versus a durable product like a sponge, which can be a breeding-ground for germs.
Campbell Soup - Building the Business by Broadening the Category DefinitionA second example here would be Campbell Red & White condensed soup. If you define the category as condensed soup, Campbell has an 85 share, with little room to take additional share. Defining the category as all shelf stable soups and broths helps some, but doesn’t reflect how the consumer really views the category. By studying consumer behavior, the Campbell team was able to understand that the consumer is considering condensed soup along with other quick “minimeals” like a sandwich, frozen microwave entrees, etc. This insight led to sharper consumer communication on when and why to choose Campbell condensed rather than some of the other alternative foods.
4. Stretch your brand equity by launching innovative line extensions…
...but be sure not to launch new products which are inconsistent with your current brand equity. Continuing with the Bounty example, we launched Bounty Quilted Napkins, bringing Bounty’s strong and absorbent equity to the napkin category. A second positive example would be Crest, which figured out they could extend their brand equity beyond simply cavity protection to total mouth care. This led to a stream of new products including tooth brushes, oral rinses, and of course, Crest White Strip
Crest WhiteStrips - Extending the Brand's Equity with Successful Line ExtensionsOn the other end of the spectrum, Jif Peanut Butter, whose equity has consistently focused on “more peanutty taste”, attempted to launch a line of flavored spreads called Jif Smooth Sensations which came in flavors like Chocolate Silk, Apple Cinnamon, and Berry Blend. Jif’s brand equity could not be logically extended to nonpeanut flavors, and the line failed.
5. Optimize your product lineup to maximize productivity from every sku.
Finally, in the current world where retailers are closely watching sku count, it is critically important to take a hard look at your product lineup to make sure the every sku plays a meaningful role, and the whole maximizes productivity. On Bounty, for example, we found that productivity went up when we concentrated our lineup on larger sizes. Driving consumers to large count packs resulted in consumers’ increasing their in home consumption, and resulted in higher loyalty as measured by share of requirements.
A second example here would be Ensure nutritional shakes, which typically retail for $7.99 or higher per six pack. Consumers were often hesitant to spend eight bucks to try a product they might not like. By launching single bottle trial size, that barrier was overcome and overall brand volume went up.
In Summary
Certainly there are many more ways to drive leading brands to profitable growth than those we briefly reviewed here, but I have been fortunate enough to have a positive personal experience with each of these five. By the way, I hope you’re enjoying these posts and, as always, I welcome your comments. One last thing, don’t forget to read Randall’s Beard’s guest post on the surprising increase in television viewership.










