The Retail Industry’s leading awards event – Todays Winners and Tomorrow’s Leaders

The Joe Berry Award 2020 is coming around again! Entrants have the opportunity to register and submit an essay before Feb 28th, 2020, of which 6 finalists will be selected to present their ideas to a judging panel compiled of Australia’s top retail industry leaders.

There has been a great deal of discussion between retailers, suppliers and other providers in past months. The efforts by both major retailers in conjunction with key suppliers to rebuild their businesses into growing, sustainable, competitive companies are being watched with great interest. After all, the results that they achieve will have ramifications for everyone in the industry.

Among the discussions is the pressure that is building from discounters and the soon-to-be-ubiquitous online retailers that are steadily acquiring market share – share that can only come from one place!

Among these discussions, we are regularly hearing about perhaps five or six key issues, the ones for which no-one seems to have a clear answer. We are regularly seeing articles and publications on the same key issues, from all around the world, as the industry struggles to understand the present.

Change is the only constant in this dynamic market that is supposedly led by consumer preferences. The only problem is that consumer preferences seem to change every day, not always for the better.

So what are the key issues that the industry faces?

Pricing has become an albatross of their own making for many retailers. The pressure of competition has forced some into price wars that are predicated on everyday low price (EDLP) structures that only work for a while. Eventually, they become so ingrained that the customer will not bend to allow this price format to be removed. In other words, the low prices become the norm.

One option is price discounting, which allows more volatility at the same time as adding to the price war. Can you have believable price discounts when your competition has a better price? Can you keep supplying discounted product when the volumes are unpredictable? Is forcing a ‘no-price-rise’ edict on suppliers helping the pricing issue, or is it just a one-way plug?

So, if pricing isn’t the panacea, where to next? We know that all retailers are seeking innovation. New products are the lifeblood of the industry, adding consumer interest and opportunity for category margin growth. Who is taking the risk? Retailers are not innovators and they rely on suppliers for new concepts. Retailers cannot, under their current paradigms, offer extended shelf life to untested product. Suppliers cannot invest in innovation that has no guarantee of support. The Australian consumer who likes new things is interested today, but may not be tomorrow. It’s a challenge only the brave will accept.

Like innovation, the day-to-day market faces many barriers to market entry, even for those who have traded here for many years. What, then, are the barriers to entry for the mammoth online retailers who are swiftly taking a foothold in Australia. Can we easily dismiss their attempts at market entry and carry on regardless? Are the logistics of this vast country too great a hurdle for newcomers – or are we fooling ourselves? As one presenter said recently: stop worrying about them coming … barriers or not, they are already here.

2019 Joe Berry Award Winner – Alex Renehan

Perhaps we can make a radical change of direction and move the bulk of our business into a different store format. If the population is changing, the building industry is changing and the quality of transport is improving, perhaps we should be moving with them? Store formats will enable us to reduce our inventory, reduce SKUs, modify our pricing to suit the location, and provide a changing menu to suit the ever-changing consumer. Changing format can facilitate an escape from EDLP or constant price discounting, allow for innovation, raise some added barriers to entry, and value-add to the supply chain. Why wouldn’t we do it?

Okay, all interesting issues – but how are we going to manage this raft of industry changes? We will need new people with specific skills who will engineer the change and remain with the business as it is recreated. These people, like innovation, are the new life of the industry, but what will it take to keep them where it counts? Finding and retaining talented people in an era when mobility is king is at the top of the challenge list. This will take some skill.

All these issues are on the lips of the industry leaders, and they are fighting to find the people and researched papers that may provide some answers. In 2020, in front of 20 senior executives from the retail industry, the Joe Berry Award 2020 Finalists will present papers on EDLP and price discounting, product-innovation challenges, finding and keeping new talent, understanding the barriers to market entry, and changing store formats.

To find out more, email enquiries@asmca.com

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