Sales and Marketing Strategies That Begin and End With the Consumer
Now in its 17th year, CGT’s annual Consumer Goods Sales & Marketing Summit aimed to help CGs navigate the most disrupted landscape in modern history. Perhaps more relevant today than ever before, the most successful brands are putting one thing at the center of everything they do: the consumer.
The two-day virtual experience Dec. 8-9 was packed full of inspiring keynotes, educational content and info about valuable solutions from our partners.
Insight was delivered from a unique collection of some of today’s most influential figures in the consumer goods and retail industries worldwide. Content centered around consumer-obsessed innovation was featured to help businesses plot their roadmap for today’s unprecedented sales and marketing landscape.
The following are some highlights to the content presented. If you weren’t able to attend — or you just want to re-watch some of the great content — you can still register to watch and explore the virtual summit as much as you’d like until Jan. 6.
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2020
Opening Keynote: Strength in Numbers; Tapping into Innovative Partnerships
To explore how the CG and retail industries can collaborate and do their part to help make sustainability a reality, CGT brought together thought leaders from across CG, retail and the solution provider sector to kick off CGSM 2020.
Tom Szaky, founder and CEO, TerraCycle; Maxence de Royer, VP strategy, business development and sustainability, Nestlé; and Giles Bolton, responsible sourcing director, Tesco [pictured above] joined CGT/RIS editor-in-chief Tim Denman for a panel discussion entitled “Strength in Numbers; Tapping into Innovative Partnerships.”
The panelists discussed how they are collaborating to offer innovative sustainability solutions to consumers to greatly reduce CG and retail packaging.
Click here to read expanded coverage of this presentation.
Georgia-Pacific Pushes Their Digital Transformation Strategy Through Co-Innovation
Georgia-Pacific business process lead Chad Watson talked to Pete Charette, SAP global solution owner, consumer products, about how creating a virtuous cycle of mutual benefits occurring through preferred partnerships can result in long-term growth.
The consumer goods company, which includes such brands as Angel Soft, Brawny and Quilted Northern in its portfolio, has embarked on a digital transformation that includes integrating the SAP TPM trade management tool. Through this, it’s generated long-term profitable growth via experimental discovery, in which the two companies work collectively to find the best solutions by sharing broad-based cross knowledge.
It also allows Georgia-Pacific to have a risk-taking mentality in which it can try something nine times that might fail, but remain confident that 10th time will succeed, Watson said. Teaming with the solutions provider minimizes the likelihood it will fail upfront while increase the likelihood it will have a successful venture much sooner.
Georgia-Pacific has had to manage wild demand shifts during the beginning of the health crisis, and Watson explained some of the ways the company was able to successfully navigate them. For one thing, it partially came down to focusing “on the blocking and tackling.”
“We’ve dedicated a lot for resources to supply chain management and trade promotion management to make sure we’re optimizing value wherever we can, and get as much products to retailers and consumers as possible,” he noted.
Charette also shared insight about the different levels of maturity of investment in trade claims management across the consumer goods industry, noting that it varies based on region.
“Some are pen and paper, and there are some really mature markets,” he said. “You can get more value quicker in those larger markets — but it really depends — and some markets have different characteristics that provide more data.”
Less Is More: How Tech Accelerates and Monetizes Brand Intelligence
Traditional approaches for gathering consumer insights are often complex, time consuming and expensive, and rarely yield actionable data. They can also be inaccurate, with the gap between reality and research findings growing. With the COVID crisis, the need to challenge the status quo and think about new ways of doing things more efficiently is accelerating. In this session, Franck Sarrazit, senior XM (experience management) scientist for Qualtrics, talked about how to accelerate tech to monetize brand intelligence.
First, Sarrazit had his eyes on 2021, which is right around the corner. He dove into how there is a unique opportunity for brands to explore ideas after the onset of COVID-19 changing consumer behavior (which has been changed forever).
Next, he focused on the five stages of the global COVID-19 response [see image below]. There was some denial at first, but tools were developed to keep an eye on the pulse of employees and consumers. Then they evolved to survival, and CG brands pivoted to e-commerce and DTC to meet shoppers where there was consumption.
Next, Sarrazit shifted to getting the people and the experiences right, and why brand matters even more. “Without people, there’s no market,” he said. The circumstances have forced consumers to really look into what they’re buying. They are sensitive to what is happening in the environment right now.
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2020
Opening Keynote: CG Brands Leading From the Front With E-Commerce
If there can be a universally accepted truth in today’s consumer goods industry, it’s that the pandemic has served as e-commerce rocket fuel. And while the panel of e-com experts who convened at the Summit all brought varying perspectives, it was agreed that the brands able to seize this digital moment will be the ones that maintain a competitive advantage moving forward — and that it requires a true team effort to get there.
Moderated by Innovationedge CEO Cheryl Perkins, the panel included Lee Bogner, Mars global e-commerce architecture leader and strategist; Surabhi Pokhriyal, global director e-commerce acceleration, Johnson & Johnson; and Claudia Fenske, WD-40 Company sales director.
Click here to read expanded coverage of this presentation.
How Whirlpool Achieves Its Perfect Store Ambitions
Consumer products companies can no longer rely on the strength of their brand alone. In order to connect with modern consumers and build customer loyalty, they need to deliver the right products at the right place and time.
Whirlpool, one of the world’s largest household appliance manufacturers, shared how it creates the perfect store with intelligent sales tools that turn its sales reps into trusted advisors.
Mauro Gaeta, go-to-market solution architect, Whirlpool EMEA, was joined by Simon Dechent, global center of excellence lead, sales cloud retail execution, SAP SE, to explore the challenges Whirlpool faces in today’s retail environment and how through the innovative use of technology it has increased sales rep productivity as well as store performance.
Dechent kicked off the session with a discussion on market trends in the CG industry with a focus on advances in go-to-market strategies and technologies, and why now is the time to take a long-hard look at your retail execution capabilities.
“There are big changing happening right now in the market,” Dechent said. “We have the COVID-19 situation as well as a big shift in technology. But it is not so much about a perfect store application as it is about the mindset of the perfect store.”
After Deschent set the landscape and reviewed some of the biggest challenges and opportunities in the current marketplace, he turned the virtual mic over to Gaeta. He explored how Whirlpool is leveraging new technologies to improve store execution and streamline its sales process and back-end data management.
“We come from a fragmented situation,” he said. “We had more than 30 different approaches to crucial processes like trade and promotions. We decided to invest in these areas because sales intelligence is quite important. We implemented a new system to standardize and improve the system in the sales area. Now sales reps can see everything they need to manage the customer relationship in one place.”
The new solution allows Whirlpool to more efficiently manage its relationship with its retail customers, which in turn improves the in-store experience for consumers, leading to greater engagement and increased sales.
Consumer Product Brands Are Moving Closer to Consumers
Getting closer to the consumer has never been more important. That’s why Paul Smith, SAP CX global industry principal, brought trends, insights and a handy DTC playbook to this session, in order to share how DTC digital natives behave differently.
Closing Keynote: Consumer-Obsessed SMBs
Chief digital officer for e.l.f. Beauty Ekta Chopra, president of Catalina Snacks Joel Warady, and CEO and co-founder of Tiesta Tea Dan Klein, talked about building meaningful, long-term, and mutually beneficial relationships with consumers, which is the heart and soul of this industry. These brands have consumer-obsessed innovation embedded throughout their sales and marketing strategies, as well as their organizations as a whole.
These mid-market powerhouses revealed their biggest challenges, how technology can help, direct-to-consumer strategies and best practices for sales and marketing success that enables them to compete with their largest competitors. Warady, Chopra and Klein also revealed how they are able to stay nimble and pivot during a time like now. Flexing with what’s going on in the world, being willing to experiment and change your mindset, and removing the red tape, was among some of the advice.
Click here to read expanded coverage of this presentation.