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Shelf Health: Why It Matters

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In-Store Data Collection: Are You Doing It Right?

Consumer packaged goods (CPG) companies today are under enormous pressure to optimize their in-store execution to drive sales. This means understanding in-store conditions and applying this knowledge of the shelf to make sound merchandizing and marketing decisions.

Given the vast number of products distributed across a massive store universe and ceaseless promotion cycles, truly knowing what’s happening on the shelf is an incredibly complex endeavor. As a bare minimum, sales teams often need to know:

  • Stock levels (shelf and backstock)
  • Quality of in-store displays and promotional materials execution
  • Competitor adjacencies and activity
  • Planogram compliance (shelf location, number of facings present, number of SKUs present, missing/inaccurate shelf tags)
  • Pricing compliance
  • In-store location of products (ambient vs. coolers, gondola vs. end caps etc.)

Each of these factors affects the success of brands in the retail environment and their overall “shelf health”. So how does the CPG industry monitor shelf health?

How brands collect field data today

Data is only as good as the method of collecting it. In the Trax CPG Shelf Health Survey 2018, we interviewed over 300 senior CPG executives across China, Australia, Brazil, USA and the UK to understand their retail execution practices, including their methods for collecting field data, their challenges with in-store execution and their interest in exploring new solutions to gain better visibility into store conditions. We found that their methods of collecting field data varied widely in terms of their sophistication and the use of technology.

  • Supply chain or sales data:
    43% of respondents said they rely on supply chain data in the form of scanner data, invoices and orders, to understand how their products are performing at shelf. While this method presents a picture of how well products are selling, it doesn’t account for factors in the store influencing sales. For example, how many facings do competing brands have on the shelf? Were your products at the right location on the shelf?

  • Manual observational data:
    The most common method of collecting field data involves a traditional manual process, with 44 percent of respondents claiming they follow this approach.

    In this method, field sales teams or third-party brokers and merchandizers visit the stores in person and take stock of the shelf conditions by moving from aisle to aisle. They could either be doing this using paper-based audits or using Personal Digital Assistants and tablet devices to electronically input the data in pre-decided forms. Sometimes, these sales force automation tools provide the option of capturing images of the shelves. While this helps verify whether the selected stores are audited, without any image recognition and automation software, it still involves a lot of time and effort, both in taking the photos and in documenting and scoring the images.

    A further 31% of respondents also claimed to purchase syndicated market data, which is also quite often generated from manual audits as detailed above.
     
  • Computer Vision-powered retail execution:
    At the top end of the technology adoption curve are computer vision (CV)-powered solutions which automate the collection of in-store data. Images of the shelf captured using smartphones are analyzed and individual SKUs identified to deliver reports in near real time for corrective actions and strategic decisions.

Depending on the level of accuracy, completeness and sophistication of the machine learning engines, such solutions can also digitize the entire shelf to give brands competitive visibility, with valuable metrics like linear share of shelf and fair share of shelf.

Some leading manufacturers are already adopting such advanced technologies. Our survey found that 17% of respondents use image recognition technology to monitor shelf conditions.

And those who do are already reaping the benefits. Henkel, the global beauty care brand used Trax Retail Execution to reduce data collection and merchandizing execution time for their sales reps by 50 percent, allowing them 150 percent more time for active selling. The end result of this was a 2 percent uplift in revenue for the brand in just 3.5 months

One image, many possibilities

For more insights from the survey, along with use cases and perspectives from brands doing retail execution right, download the report, “Perfecting In-store Execution”. Grab your copy today.

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