Source: Path to Purchase Institute
For retailers and suppliers, the competition is stiff. Dollar and value channels are growing. At the same time, Amazon continues to raise consumer expectations and gobble market share. Its online customer base and offerings continue to grow, including in private brands, almost half of which are in packaged goods categories. On a positive note, many retailers are beginning to understand and execute omnichannel strategies.
More so than in other years, the 2018 PoweRanking report found that a good number of established, historically strong players are facing executional dilemmas, particularly on the supply chain side. Some companies, for example, have been cutting demand forecasting too close, making it hard to maintain inventories for popular items. The outage situation is exacerbated by click-and-collect models that leave product gaps for brick-and-mortar shoppers.
Companies that have conquered or avoided these issues have a growth mindset, including Coca-Cola, which earned the No. 2 manufacturer position for the third straight year, followed by Procter & Gamble and Kraft Heinz.
Other big names on this year’s supplier list included Kellogg and Mondelez International. Kellogg moved up three positions into the top five as it shifted strategy from cost-cutting to investing in top-line growth. Nestle, Unilever, Johnson & Johnson and AB InBev rounded out the top 10.
On the retail side, Kroger came in a closely behind Walmart, earning the No. 2 position for the third consecutive year. Amazon moved up to number three, Meijer advanced one position to 6, and CVS entered the top 10 driven by the clarity of its health strategy.
Elsewhere, Target slipped one spot to No. 4. Three highly respected regional supermarket chains — Wegmans, Publix and HEB — also ranked among the top 10, as did Costco.