Leading the Digital Economy
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July 2007

Volume 2 - Number 3

Breaking Into the Big Box – and Staying There

In the past 10 years, big-box retailers such as Wal-Mart and Home Depot have grown tremendously, dominating the market for many products and establishing themselves as the crucial link between manufacturers and consumers. As such, they are increasingly powerful and important to manufacturers. Now a new study provides manufacturers with a framework for designing new products that will ensure they satisfy their first-line customers — those big-box retailers.

The research was published recently in the journal Marketing Science in a paper co-authored by marketing professor P.K. Kannan of the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business, Lan Luo, of the University of Southern California and Brian Ratchford of the University of Texas at Dallas. An outgrowth of a project for Black & Decker, it is the first such study to tackle the big-box shelf space issue in this manner.

The project began with researchers setting out to develop a decision support system to help manufacturers design products that were robust from both an engineering performance perspective and a marketing performance perspective. Kannan and his colleagues used a small Black & Decker power tool as the subject of their study. They designed a decision model and Black & Decker promptly implemented it.

But in the process of refining and discussing the data with company leadership, Kannan discovered that Black & Decker executives had a secondary—and equally perplexing—problem. It wasn’t enough to design a tool that met the end-user’s needs if big box retailers like Wal-Mart or Home Depot declined to stock the product. Indeed, Home Depot controls 50 percent to 60 percent of the market for the small, hand-held grinder that was the subject of Kannan’s study.

He and his colleagues realized that manufacturers needed to consider the preferences of the retailer as well as the needs of the product’s end user. Using data taken from the original study, Kannan was able to springboard into this new research area which resulted in an approach to positioning and pricing a new product that directly incorporates retailer’s acceptance criteria into the development process.

Kannan’s model incorporates the retailer’s price assortment and potential reactions of competing manufacturers. That turns out to be an important consideration, because competitors are also reaching the market through the same big box retailer, and a competitor’s moves could affect Black & Decker’s product acceptance. Kannan used elements of game theory in the model to help plan the manufacturer’s moves as well as predict the moves of competitors. Kannan says those anticipated responses are taken into account in order to come up with a design that will make maximum profit for the manufacturer and the channel retailer, while still being very useful for the end user.

The model develops marketing forecasts and profits associated with different design alternatives by using individual-level consumer preferences, the retailer’s existing product assortment, and the retailer’s and competitor’s potential price reactions in response to the entry of the new product. Because of the intense competition new products face when coming to market, this framework could have a significant impact on the decisions manufacturers make when designing new products.

Black & Decker isn’t the only company that will be able to benefit from this research. The framework Kannan developed can be adapted to any industry where products have to pass through a dominant retailer to reach the market, such as electronics or consumer packaged goods. Retailers are looking for profits and consumers are looking for the best product for the best price. The solution for manufacturers is to satisfy both at the initial stages of product design.

More from this issue of Leading the Digital Economy, July 2007
►A New Way to Get Inside Consumer Minds to Predict Buying Behavior
►Revealing the Performance of Small Investors
►A Revolution in the Securities Industry
►Starbucks, P&G and China’s Emerging Middle Class

 

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