What’s Next in CPG and Retail: Experts Weigh In at Groceryshop 2024
The next investment frontier
Retailers and manufacturers are looking to move from de-risking their operations to demonstrating meaningful growth.
“So many investments over the last 10 to 20 years in the CPG and retail landscape have been focused on [building] and shoring up the foundation, making sure that they're mitigating risk more broadly, and that they have solutions that can take them into the next phase — the next decade or two decades — of growth,” says Amanda Mosseri Oren, VP of industry strategy, grocery at RELEX.
“But those systems really don't have a lot of ROI in them, and so there's been a lot of investment that hasn't paid back [because] it’s very hard to prove. There's a lot of appetite right now to think about ROI. And that's the next frontier for all these companies. Everyone's trying to grab a piece of that mindshare right now.”
Expect to see more automation in planning systems to provide more visibility into operations and customer behavior, says Cohen Roberts, director of collaboration at DemandTec by Acoustic.
Nostalgia as an opportunity
Some brands that deeply understand their target markets are finding success in building merchandising teams dedicated to developing logo-blazoned goods — uncovering an incremental opportunity that taps into a new demographic.
“All of a sudden, you're going to get free marketing, and people are actually going to pay to market for you,” says Doug Adams, general manager of business applications at Microsoft.
“If you really understand your consumers, you're going to be able to create a whole new market for yourself. It’s a fun side gig. It's incremental. It's not a huge uplift in revenue. You’re not going to go from $1 billion to $7 billion by selling T-shirts, but you are going to get more mind share, especially with social.”