How To Leverage Walgreens’ Strategic Position To Work For Them

At The Intersection Of Several Types Of Retailers
From a strategic perspective, Walgreens has a unique position in the marketplace, sitting at the intersection of Wal-Mart, small discounters, Target, and grocery store chains. The medium size and neighborhood-centric locations of typical Walgreens make them akin to small discounters. Walgreens’ scale allows it to offer low prices à la Wal-Mart. The uniqueness of some of Walgreens’ merchandise is similar in ways to Target’s offerings. And Walgreens’ offering of some staple groceries put it in line with grocery stores. The “trick” for Walgreens is to leverage some of these aspects of its offerings into targeting buyer groups which value a significant combination of many or all of them. If they can locate large pockets of these profiled consumers within given geographic locations, they will be hugely successful in this recession and in any economic climate, no matter how terrible.
How To Use Its Position To Gain Buyers
In sitting at this strategic intersection, Walgreens can gain buyers by:
1. Keeping Low Prices For Many Merchandised Items
2. Maintain and Develop Relevant Signature Brands (Non-Staples)
3. Stock Need-To-Have Grocery Items (Staples & Certain Non-Staples)

Prescription Savings Card Is A Winner
A bright spot for Walgreens is its prescription savings card which is increasing in usage and members. This offers people savings on the purchase of prescription drugs, which can be a substantial expense especially for people on a fixed income. Walgreens has a recession-proof winner here and should put more resources behind increased marketing to targeted groups. Here, they can utilize the advantage of their scale to move returns beyond other investment of resources.
Match Position With Informed Strategy And Right Tactics
Walgreens’ positioning and strategy must be “in-synch” especially during this economic downturn. They need to build solid links to key buyer groups through understanding their demographics and lifestyle preferences. This needs to be turned into pinpointing geographical locations where groups with desired demographics and lifestyles are located. Bets need to be placed in these areas – whether with a new store or upgrading an existing store. Simple line extensions of “stripped-out” non- or less value-added features will yield ultra-value private label product lines – which can counter-intuitively be branded boldly by wrapping these items into a special designated section or store-within-a-store. This is a marketer’s dream: being able to brand generic low cost items! At the intersection where Walgreens sits, what would you do?
Mike Bolden is dedicated to helping organizations win, dominate
and monopolize markets. We provide insight into cutting edge marketing
strategies and best practice initiatives with a strong emphasis on
Blue Ocean Strategy. Read more about
Leave a comment