Category — Retail
The Demand Cycle
Technology re-defines the traditional path-to-purchase. By Mitch Blum and Jeff Williams. The current era of consumer empowerment is a wonderful thing — if you’re a consumer. From a marketer’s standpoint, things have gotten exponentially more complex and challenging. Time-shifting, customization, social integration, personalization and real-time customer service are all examples of how consumers are demanding more from brands while simultaneously expecting to pay less.
Underneath this consumer empowerment is one consistent catalyst: technology. Digital innovations have trained consumers to expect exactly what they want, when they want it, how they want it, and all at the best value. Woe betide the brand that fails to deliver on the consumer’s heightened expectations. They’ll be punished with a scathing blog post, a negative review, a mocking hashtag and perhaps even a YouTube video about a broken guitar that receives more than 11 million views … read >>
January 1, 2012 Comments
The Hub Prize
Procter & Gamble’s Tide Dry Cleaners tops the inaugural Hub Prize competition. First, our congratulations to Procter & Gamble’s FutureWorks Division and its partners, DeVries Public Relations and Summit Marketing, winners of the 2011 Ultimate Hub Prize — the "best of the best" in retail excellence and recipient of the Hub Cup — for Tide Dry Cleaners.
It was a close call, with two other candidates — The Disney Store and U by Kotex — rounding out the top three. The Disney Store certainly deserves accolades for its hi-tech re-imagining of itself as “the best 30 minutes of a child’s day.” Kimberly-Clark and its agency, JWT/OgilvyAction, are equally praise-worthy for a daring initiative that turned keen insights into a remarkable point-of-difference at retail …
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November 1, 2011 Comments
Growing Like Kroger
Customer loyalty is the centerpiece of Kroger’s simple path to growth. By Don Henry. Years ago, when Joseph Pichler announced he was leaving the University of Kansas Business School to join Kroger, Dave Dillon — a University of Kansas graduate himself–wrote him a welcoming letter. “Dear Joe,” he recalls writing, “I am so pleased you are going to be here, and we will hopefully learn this business together.”
When Dillon shared this story in a recent Supermarket News article, it revealed a man who valued loyalty in friendship and in work as a hallmark of his career. It’s that kind of loyalty that has led Kroger to impressive growth … read >>
November 1, 2011 Comments
Small-Boy Stories
Does your brand speak for itself? Building loyalty requires it. By Jayne Eastman. A “small-boy story” is a marketing positioning that is so complicated you need to send a small boy along to explain it. It’s lazy marketing — filling up the consumer’s time with so much information and so many product signals that you are essentially asking them to do the hard work of understanding what really is important about your brand and why they should care about it.
Small-boy stories are often the result of a lack of clarity about what is truly important to your target consumers, what will firmly attract and then attach them to your brand, versus what is irrelevant. We have become victims of too much information. We have learned so much about a market, a consumer, a need or a brand’s equity that it all ends up getting jammed into the positioning … read >>
November 1, 2011 Comments
Pivot Point: At Your Service
Tide invites loyalty with a better retail experience. Granted, providing good service is not necessarily mandatory for some brands. Does anyone really need a help line for toothpaste or paper towel? Probably not.
But to the extent that every product — no matter how commoditized it may be — ultimately is sold in some kind of store suggests that some version of customer service could make a difference, especially where brand loyalty is concerned …
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November 1, 2011 Comments
Cool News
Nickel Treats, Pret A Manger and Showroom Showtime. A British fast-food restaurant with a French name hopes to build loyalty across the United States with a special focus on customer service.
Pret A Manger, which translates into “ready to eat,” starts by giving prospective hires a six-hour trial run, followed by a Survivor-style vote by co-workers. The 90 percent who make the cut are given “a thick binder of instructions” that tells them, among other things, to always be busy, sometimes give out free goodies to regulars and always share their “true character” with customers … read >>
November 1, 2011 Comments
Cool Books

The Great A&P, Brandwashed and LL Bean. Well before Walmart, A&P epitomized "the long-running conflict between corporate retailers and mom-and-pop stores," writes Patrick Cooke in a Wall Street Journal review of The Great A&P, by Marc Levinson (8/29/11).
A&P’s story actually dates back to "the teeming precincts of lower Manhattan in the early 1800s" when George Francis Gilman opened several tea shops called the Great American Tea Company. He later joined forces and expanded the brand with the Hartford brothers — John and George — and, with the arrival of the transcontinental railroad, re-named the enterprise the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company … read >>
November 1, 2011 Comments
Hub Prize Winners: 2011
Announcing the 2011 Hub Prize competition winners! From more than 80 entries, our distinguished panel of judges selected the 36 boldest and brightest ideas in retail and shopping excellence, which earned either Gold, Silver or Bronze medals. For a complete list of winners, in alphabetical order by prize level, click here.
September 1, 2011 Comments
Maslow’s Shoppers
Digital-media strategies must satisfy a hierarchy of needs and values. By Jason Rogers. Much has been said and written about the distinction between consumers and shoppers. We’re consumers every moment of our lives. We’re bombarded with marketing from the moment we awake and hear a deejay promoting a concert until late at night when we see a commercial for a new hybrid car. As a result, most consumers shut out all but the most engaging messages.
Shoppers, on the other hand, simply want and need something. New car, laptop or home? No question, shoppers are invested. Toilet paper, canned vegetables or after-school snacks for the kids? Hmm, maybe not as invested. Despite operating at very different ends of the consideration spectrum, there is a common denominator: Shoppers have a goal. The level of effort, enthusiasm and time they will invest is based on what that something is … read >>
September 1, 2011 Comments
Simulated Sets
Assortment optimization technologies create a better shopping experience. By Tom Young and Greg Orth. Successful retailers are rethinking the notion of carrying massive numbers of items on their shelves and realizing that their stores have unique consumer dynamics. Many owe much of their success to a shopper-centric approach that is easy to implement via assortment optimization technologies.
Walmart struggled to redefine the role of individual categories in its stores and the depth and breadth of product assortment choices. As a result, its (now-ended) item reduction initiative alienated many shoppers because Walmart did not clearly understand the degree of loyalty to particular products. Just because a product is a slower-moving item does not mean that it does not have a loyal following. Take organic soup, for example: It does not have high velocities relative to the category, but if it is not available, the shopper will leave the store without making a soup purchase … read >>
September 1, 2011 Comments
The Hub 44
The Hub Magazine, Vol. 7, Issue 44. The entire issue of Sep/Oct 2011 edition of The Hub Magazine, centered on emerging media, featuring a cover story interview with Barry Judge of Best Buy.
Also featuring a roundtable on social media and shopping, with Dennis Maloney of Domino’s Pizza, David Sommer of Facebook, Kevin Biondi of Staples and Tim Austin of TPN and 13 other articles. download pdf >>
September 1, 2011 Comments
Emotional Rescue
Break through the rational barriers with value beyond price. By John Meyer. Can you believe that the day has finally come when Walmart actually wants its shoppers to use coupons and match prices? Strategically, this is probably the right thing for them to do, but if you are a brand trying to break the hi/lo price game, it’s like the dealer feeding the addict.
The price addiction is a hard habit to break, especially for a brand trying to recover from the Great Recession. Top-line sales increases are a quick remedy, but at what expense? How do you build your brand and make your sales goals in this volatile environment? … read >>
July 1, 2011 Comments
The Avatar Effect
Brand-building experiences should be created in three dimensions. By Mitch Blum. At first blush, it would appear that brand-building and filmmaking have little in common. Brand-building is rooted in reality, providing consumers with emotional and rational benefits for using a product or service. Hollywood blockbusters are rooted in fantasy, providing people with an avenue for escape from the doldrums of everyday life.
Yet, at their core, both brand-building and movie-making are about crafting powerful images that strongly engage consumers. Perhaps we can learn something useful from Hollywood after all, especially where the medium meets the message. … read >>
July 1, 2011 Comments
Ready At Retail
Shopper marketing has jelled as a brand-building discipline. By Chris Hoyt. What are the current trends in shopper marketing? What elements can be isolated to define best practice? As many readers know, The Hub Magazine has regularly surveyed the industry with the objective of answering these questions since 2006 and just completed the latest survey on shopper marketing at the end of April, creatively entitled “Shopper Marketing 2011.”
This year’s survey generated 243 responses — over 50 percent more than The Hub’s first survey on this subject in March, 2006. Respondents include representatives from 131 companies, 20 countries and six continents. While the majority is from packaged goods (65 percent), other verticals are retail, automotive, apparel, computers/software, healthcare/pharmaceutical and media and entertainment. … read >>
July 1, 2011 Comments
Whole Goals
Michael Besancon of Whole Foods makes shopping good for you — and the planet. By Tim Manners. Coming out of the ‘60s, Michael Besancon was looking for something to do that would contribute to the betterment of the world. His search found its mark in June 1970, when he opened a vegetarian lunch counter at Follow Your Heart, an 800 square-foot natural-foods store.
Michael eventually bought the store with some partners and opened a second location before selling his interest some 16 years later. Being a serial entrepreneur, he went on to launch some restaurants, and then, in the early ‘90s, became a food broker.
One of his customers was a 27-store chain called Whole Foods Market, and Michael was smitten. “What attracted me to Whole Foods was the culture, because I was really not cut out for the corporate world,” says Michael. “I don’t like to be told what to do, and at Whole Foods you really determine your own destiny.”… read >>
March 1, 2011 Comments
Open Doors
The future of retail is whatever and whenever shoppers want. A discussion featuring Karl Haller of Brooks Brothers, Shawn Dennis of American Girl, Dan Flint of University of Tennessee and Paul Price of Acosta Sales & Marketing.
Where is the magic in retail today? A lot of the magic is happening at non-traditional retailers. Probably the biggest thing that’s happening — at least in fashion retailing over the last three years — is the growth of the flash-sale sites such as Gilt, RueLaLa, HauteLook, and Ideeli.
It’s almost like a blue-light special, where the retailer makes a good product from a good brand available for a limited time. It’s a great opportunity that no one was tapping into previously, and I’ve been amazed with how quickly these flash-sale retailers have scaled up … read >>
March 1, 2011 Comments
What Shoppers Want
Shoppers may be satisfied but still see plenty of room for improvement. By Randi Moore. Satisfaction is defined as the fulfillment of a need or a want. So what satisfies shoppers? To find out, Reveries.com reached out to its readers to understand how satisfying the shopping experience is across 14 categories spanning almost all imaginable retail channels.
In reviewing their responses, similar themes emerged across categories and channels. Shopping is most satisfying when the shopping experience delivers against what MVI calls the new ROI, or return on the shopper’s involvement. To maximize this ROI, shoppers are looking for … read >>
March 1, 2011 Comments
Symbiotic Branding
Retailer and national brands need each other to succeed. By Samar Birwadker. Although there is no dearth of opinions on how the battle between national consumer packaged-goods and retailers’ store brands will pan out in the United States, most analysts agree that it’s shaping up to be quite a contest.
Long seen as beacons of trust and credibility, national brands watched their market shares erode as retailers became more sophisticated at developing and selling their own store brands.
To be fair, without the right retail partners, national brands couldn’t have created the differentiation that has allowed them to command a premium over their store-brand counterparts. Retailers have played along for the most part by relying heavily on leading national brands to lure customers through their doors … read >>
March 1, 2011 Comments








