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Balancing Revenue, Responsibility, and Relationships In the Consumer Goods Industry
By CGT Staff
As manufacturers of essential products, operating with a strong sense of purpose has long been a core component of the consumer goods industry. Being successful in CPG means taking seriously the fact that what you make, market, and sell has a daily impact on someone’s life. It’s a tall order to be sure, but one that received renewed urgency during the pandemic and carried into the post-pandemic retail landscape.
CGT’s Top 100 Consumer Goods Companies feature ranks companies based on their 2022 fiscal year revenue to provide an annual look at the state of this industry. We draw information from the financial results of publicly owned consumer goods companies (more on the methodology below), and provide it as a resource to our audience to help them stay abreast of the leaders and laggards. As part of this, we break out the top 10 companies for a window into the technology and operational investments they’re making to help remain — or sometimes leapfrog or even steamroll — into their leading positions.
What we found this year is that as companies moved into their 2022 fiscal years, honing that same urgency for consumer well-being into their own employees’ futures took greater shape. A successful business hinges upon an engaged and productive workforce, and maintaining a competitive edge requires providing employees with training, upskilling, and clearer paths to growth. (This was, after all, the year that “quiet quitting” slipped into the public lexicon.) Many of the companies in the top 10 cited not only the improvements to their products, operations, and technologies, but also their talent strategies. For some, this meant reaping the rewards of foundations put into place during COVID; for others, it meant launching or refining new programs and initiatives.
It also meant navigating a retail landscape fraught with inflation and price-sensitive consumers. Multitudes of manufacturers raised prices to offset increasing commodity and transportation costs, and the dance between growing revenue and maintaining harmonious retail and consumer relationship has been a difficult dance — one that’s extended into today.
Several years ago, we began visualizing the Top 100 data into something a little more colorful and impactful than a simple table, and you can see this year’s design once again organizes companies by category and revenue. However, we realize that simplicity is typically the best way to relay information, and so we once again offer the Top 100 data as a downloadable table below.
CGT has provided the Top 100 to its audience for two decades, and we’re always looking to improve upon its value. If you have any feedback on how we can do that, please reach out.
Methodology
Inclusion: Since the annual revenue of most privately held consumer goods manufacturers is not available, the annual Top 100 list only includes publicly traded companies. Therefore, well-known manufacturers such as Mars Inc. and Ferrero Group are absent from the rankings. It should also be noted that only revenues from the sale of consumer goods are considered when ranking companies that also have extensive operations in other businesses. (For example, San Miguel revenue is based on its food/beverage business unit only and does not include fuel/oil, infrastructure, packaging, and energy units.)
Rankings: Because fiscal 2023 has yet to close for many companies, CGT used fiscal 2022 revenue totals to determine placement on the Top 100 list. All financial information was sourced from publicly available information. Revenue for each company is reported in billions of U.S. dollars. If a company’s revenue was reported in a different currency, the amount was calculated using a predetermined neutral exchange rate (Sept. 27, 2023), with an asterisk next to the company’s name to indicate as such. One-year gains are based on information from one of the aforementioned sources and methods.
M&As: In some cases, mergers, acquisitions, or spin-offs that took place in the second half of 2022 or later are not reflected in these sales totals. Deals that occurred in the first half of 2022 or earlier are reflected in the numbers.
Design: Categories were identified based on the company's GICS industry classification. Developed by MSCI and Dow Jones, the GICS classification framework seeks to provide investors with consistent industry definitions. There are two exceptions to this: The Miscellaneous category visualized here consists of the combined GICS Agricultural Products, Building Products, Industrials Conglomerates, and Machinery industry classification, each of which included just one company. Similarly, EA was the only company within the Entertainment GICS classification, and CGT placed it within Interactive Media & Services. It’s also worth noting that this is the first time CGT has classified Top 100 companies using this method, which is why some companies may be in a different category than in the past.
The visualization above is meant to be an artful and impactful design, and so the boxes are not sized true to scale. They are sized based on the following revenue range, from largest to smallest: $80-$100 billion, $60-$80 billion, $40-$60 billion, $20-$40 billion, $0-$20 billion.