Mike Bolden » Posts for tag 'Small Retailers'
Increase Profitability Despite Troubled Economy -- FREE WHITE PAPER

Blue Ocean Strategy Translated To Actual Tactics For Small Retailers To Succeed

Database To Track Strategic Buyer Groups
An advanced marketing strategy for small retailers is to focus on key strategic buyer groups within their industry. This can be done readily by leveraging a small retailer’s localness to stay close to key buyer groups. Concretely, a data base of buyer preferences must be maintained and updated regularly. In this database, a retailer should record the following information about each customer:
1. All Merchandise Purchased
2. Any Special Treatment Given or Requested
3. Family and Friends Mentioned or Who Are Current or Potential Buyers
4. Relevant Changes In Living Situation
These pieces of information will help retailers identify and target groups of buyers willing to trade up, or more importantly for this economy, maintain the price for performance balance. For most small retailers, it is important for them to stay away from trying to entice Wal-Mart preferring buyer groups. They usually can not compete on price – and should not waste resources targeting buyers who trade down on price for lower quality, service, or performance.

How To Effectively Lower Prices For Maximum Profitability
There is a case where lowering prices for small retailers is effective and desirable – but without trading down price for performance. A retailer can maintain the price performance proportionality by offering small samplings of items or services for proportionately lowered price points. This accomplishes several objectives:
1. Increases Opportunistic and Incremental Sales
2. Allows Sampling of Higher-Priced Product Offerings
3. Obtains Price-Conscious Buyers W/O Competing Directly With “Big Box” Retailers

Small Retailer Example Of Lowering Price Points
Surfin’ Seafood, a Seattle-based seller of freshly caught seafood, is a great example of a small retailer offering a sampler type package to price-conscious customers. They expect to lose about 50% of their sales this holiday season as a direct result of corporations in the area cutting back on their discretionary expenditures of packaged seafood as holiday gifts for employees and customers. To regain some of this projected loss, they introduced a $50 gift package with fewer pieces versus their typical packages which sell for between $85 and $195. Surfin’ Seafood’s offering is a classic example of moving down price points to capture substantial incremental sales without disproportionately sacrificing performance, perceived quality, and the reputation that a small retailer has achieved. This kind of move can be highly beneficial and profitable – but it is tricky and must be done strategically and with care!

Three Characteristics Of Good Blue Ocean Strategy For Small Retailers
In the final analysis, for a small retailer there are three Blue Ocean characteristics of a good strategy. First, diverge from targeting price-elastic buyer groups, and understand the key dimensions of high utility for your customers – record key information about them and all customers. Second, focus on buyers willing to maintain and continue buying in a given price range even in this economic downturn – leverage your localization advantages such as closeness to key customer groups and understanding many aspects of the local market. Lastly, develop a tagline or brand motto which concisely differentiates your offerings in the market – and more importantly, among your key buyer groups. Small retailers can do better than just survive using these strategies – their businesses can prosper as their nimble boats sail the Blue Ocean Seas unfettered.

Small Retailers on the Brink: Slower Sales Even Beyond the Holidays


Current Bad Situation
Although retailers everywhere are expecting bad holiday sales, small, independent businesses are being hit particularly hard. They typically don’t have the cash cushions or price-slashing abilities of the major chains. These independent retailers don’t have the margins to compete on price, as many shoppers gravitate toward large discounters like Wal-Mart to purchase lower-priced goods. This effect is especially devastating given the lack of growth in the market. According to the Wall Street Journal’s December 16th, 2008 issue, holiday sales are expected to rise 1.2% which is the worst year-over-year increase since 2001. Many of these smaller retailers are trying to find an effective competitive model to maintain business for not just the holiday season – but, as importantly, well into the year.


Find New Channels of Potential Business – Blue Ocean Spaces
Small retailers are going to have to look for Blue Ocean Spaces, and find new channels of potential business. While these businesses are too small to own a marketspace, they can certainly carve out profitable niches. There are three areas which small retailers can focus on to develop new business: geographic, demographic, and usage (both occasion and type). They can carry merchandise and services centered around a locale – and have offerings which are highly relevant to a given community. This is a Blue Ocean which large national chains will find very difficult to follow because many are very centralized in structure. As a smaller craft in the Blue Ocean Seas, local businesses can more adeptly cater merchandising, marketing, and operations to uniquely fit communities, towns, cities, and regions.

Look Beyond Current Buyers Demographics
Small businesses can also look outside of the demographic profile of current buyers to target additional customer groups. This can be done effectively by evaluating alternative or complementary industry buyer groups. Small retailers can look for synergic “hooks” to fulfill the needs for either of these groups. A business mentioned in the WSJ article, Charles Mayer & Company, is an up-scale boutique seller of china, crystal, and decorative accessories in Indianapolis. An example of them targeting a complementary buyer group would be to develop an interior design service which shows home- and condo-owning customers the appropriate matches of various pieces to rooms and homes being re-modeled or built. This look across industries would also yield very synergistic opportunities to bundle with partner companies. To further extend our previous example, Charles Mayer & Company could join with an interior design firm outright to provide pieces for a price discount or items which are exclusive to the given designer.

Blue Ocean Spaces Through Alternative Usage For Product Or Services
The third way a small retailer can discover or create a Blue Ocean Space is through alternative usage for their goods or service offerings. This can take the form of different types of usage for their offerings, or different or varied occasion usages for their goods and services. Possible variations on usage fit well with the previously mentioned opportunities to bundle with other goods and services. Alternative uses for a small retailer’s goods or services can be uncovered by looking at a buyer’s experience with related products or services. These retailers should observe and evaluate these buyer’s experiences before, during, and after a given product or service is used. This will yield rich insight into how to extend, alter, or retract their offerings in terms of recommended uses for their given products and the services they offer around them. For example, small auto repair shops have observed the success of “oil change only” shops such as Jiffy Lube, and now include even more discounted oil change services of their own as a front-end bundled offering when repairing other parts of a customer’s car. In this case, the usage occasion was changed from a scheduled maintenance item to an upfront service and opportunistic sale for a small retailer.