| JANUARY
2005 :: COVER STORY :: MARKETING
How
Can We Help You?
The
Costly Challenge of Discovering Consumers' Unmet Needs--and Meeting
Them
By Deborah
Ball, Sarah Ellison and Janet Adamy
Staff Reporters of The Wall Street Journal
Three
years ago, Procter & Gamble set out to build a better air freshener.
P&G researchers
learned some useful things when they asked people in focus groups
to describe their "desired scent experience." Many people,
after about half an hour, seem to adjust to a scent and can't smell
it anymore. Most air-freshener scents don't spread evenly across
a room. People complained that many scents smell artificial.
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THIS
MONTH'S COVER STORY:
ALL ABOUT
THE CUSTOMER
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How
Can We Help You?
Ingenuity has taken an extreme turn in the high-stakes world
of product development. Desperate to increase sales and market
share, companies are digging deeper into shoppers' homes and
habits to discover "unmet needs" and then design new
products to meet them.
THE
SUPERMARKET BATTLE FOR YOUR ATTENTION
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Check
This Out
Some e-commerce Web sites are rolling out new software that
streamlines and speeds up the checkout process as they try to
persuade more people to finish their online purchases.
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Get
the Party Started
Direct sales, an old-school marketing strategy long associated
with Avon ladies and Tupperware parties, is making a comeback
among small-business people. Instead of waiting for customers
to come to them, these entrepreneurs take their products to
the customer.
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The
Customer Isn't Always Right
Each day, about 1.5 million customers come into a Best Buy store.
Best Buy wishes some of them wouldn't. CEO Brad Anderson says
he wants to separate "angel" customers from the "devils"
The angels are customers who boost profits by snapping up HDTVs,
portable electronics and newly released DVDs without waiting
for markdowns or rebates. The devils are its worst customers.
They buy products, apply for rebates, return the purchases,
then buy them back at returned-goods discounts.
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P&G took
it all in and came back with a solution: a scent "player,"
that looks like a CD player and plays one of five alternating scents
every 30 minutes. The gadget, named Febreze Scentstories and priced
at $34.99, has a tiny fan inside that circulates the scent throughout
the room. With it, P&G sells five different discs, each $5.99
and holding a variety of scents with trademarked names such as "Relaxing
in the Hammock" and "Wandering Barefoot on the Shore."
"Nobody
could have articulated Scentstories," says Steve McGowan, a
product-development manager for Febreze, "but if you really
watch the consumer, they'll tell you what they wish."
Expensive
Strategy
Ingenuity has
taken an extreme turn in the high-stakes world of product development.
Desperate to increase sales and market share, companies are digging
deeper into shoppers' homes and habits to discover "unmet needs"
and then design new products to meet them. Last year, marketers
launched a dizzying 34,000 new foods, drinks and beauty products-representing
more unmet needs than most people ever guessed they had.
The strategy
is turning out to be expensive, with the costs of marketing and
promoting a new product often topping $50 million. In September,
a sharp rise in marketing spending led Colgate-Palmolive and Unilever
to slash their 2004 earnings forecasts-but also to resolve to continue
spending heavily on marketing to help spur sales.
Even Procter
& Gamble, which has led the charge into new products, is feeling
the weight of additional costs. P&G recently reported that its
operating margins were being squeezed by increased spending on marketing.
Marketers of
everything from pet food to soft drinks feel pressure to innovate,
for a variety of reasons. Powerful retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores
are quicker than ever to pull a lagging product off their shelves,
sometimes substituting their own private-label version.
Stores also
are apt to cut prices of branded items unless shoppers find something
new or exciting in them. Marketers must work harder than ever to
stand out in superstores that in many cases stock as many as 100,000
different items.
General Mills
rolled out 92 new products this past summer-including Betty Crocker
pourable cake-frosting and square-bottomed Old El Paso taco shells-for
an increase of more than 30% from the 70 new products launched the
previous summer. "Limited edition" products match shoppers'
short attention spans: PepsiCo launched a grape-flavored Mountain
Dew, called Mountain Dew Pitch Black, last month just for Halloween
and plans to follow with a spicy version of Pepsi for Christmas.
When P&G
last month launched a version of Tide laundry detergent with Downy
fabric softener, the company said it had "identified an unmet
need among a subset of women who want clean and soft laundry, but
for various reasons are either unwilling to add liquid fabric softener
or are inconsistently adding it because they simply forget."
Tough Odds
New products
face tough odds. The average American family turns to the same 150
items for as much as 85% of its household needs, says Jack Trout,
president of marketing firm Trout & Partners. Only about 2%
of new brands and brand extensions hit $100 million in first-year
sales, considered the threshold for success, according to Information
Resources Inc.
Sales of C2,
Coca-Cola's reduced-calorie, reduced-carbohydrate cola and the company's
biggest product introduction since Diet Coke, already have started
to fall, just months after the product's introduction. About 25%
of so-called line extensions produce no incremental sales, says
Valerie Skala Walker, an analyst at Information Resources.
"Consumers
are more elusive and harder to reach," says Jim Stengel, head
of marketing for P&G. "We are trying to bring true category-building
innovations ... not just another flavor of ice cream." Such
an effort requires what salespeople call a "missionary sale,"
in which the seller first must teach customers what their unmet
need is before offering to fill it.
There is no
need too small for new products to address. Among the new products
P&G has successfully sent out to market are Swiffer Sweep+Vac,
the latest iteration in its successful Swiffer line of dust mops
and disposable cloths. P&G introduced the Sweep+Vac, a small,
battery-operated vacuum-cleaner with a Swiffer mop head attached,
during the summer, after focus-group participants said they get
on their hands and knees to wipe up the small pile of dirt left
on the floor after mopping with a dry Swiffer cloth.
"We knew
that was a compensating behavior that consumers wouldn't want to
do," says Joe Miramonte, a product-development manager for
the Swiffer line.
P&G appears
to have hit the jackpot with an unmet need it discovered among those
consumers who wash their own cars. They told P&G that half of
the time they devoted to washing the car was actually spent drying
the car, so that water spots won't form. For these consumers, P&G
designed Mr. Clean AutoDry Carwash, a sponge along with a nozzle
and a liquid-soap cartridge that attaches to a garden hose. A filter
in the nozzle removes the minerals in water that cause the spots.
Retailers liked
the kit's $24.99 price tag. And the price of refills-$6.99-beats
the pennies that consumers might spend on soap to give their car
an old-fashioned wash. The AutoDry product is on track to generate
more than $100 million in first-year sales, P&G says.
All Kinds
of Strips
Imitators nip
at the heels of successful new products. Pfizer blazed a new trail
in packaged products in 2001 with Listerine PocketPaks. The thin,
edible, plastic-like mouthwash strips quickly caught on with teens
and raked in $175 million in first-year sales. Today, supermarket
checkout aisles are brimming with all kinds of strips, from Novartis's
Theraflu Thin Strips, to Momentus Solutions' Healthy Moments Arthur
watermelon-flavored vitamin strips for kids-and even Hartz mint-flavored
breath strips for dogs. In the first nine months of this year, 128
different strip products were launched, up fivefold from 2002, according
to Productscan Online.
Such innovations
rarely stay hot for long, though, Last fall, Wm. Wrigley Jr. said
it would close the Phoenix plant where its strips are made because
of waning U.S. demand.
"You might
be able to hold on to an innovation for six months now, maybe 12
if you're really strong," says Bart Becht, chief executive
of Reckitt Benckiser, the maker of Woolite and Lysol. Among its
recent innovations is Finish Glass Protector, a dishwasher detergent
that protects glassware from mineral corrosion. "We aren't
big believers in coming out with just the lemon variant," Mr.
Becht says. "We tend to work more towards breakthrough innovations."
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