Everyone Needs an Alice (Part II)

This is a follow-up to Part I on the same topic, which you can find here.
Earlier this month I had the opportunity to catch a live presentation by the founder and CEO of Alice.com, Brian Wiegand, at the Consumer Goods conference in Orlando. This was a learning experience on many fronts, as my earlier views were based on partial information.
In a word, the best way to summarize Alice.com is PLATFORM. What Wiegand and team have done is to offer CPG brands the tools and forum with which to sell direct to consumers. Alice takes no ownership of the product, the data or the consumer. They have built a nifty e-commerce platform that allows a brand, and really a community of brands, to easily merchandise themselves to a set of engaged shoppers. Alice does take the burden of financial transaction processing, fulfillment, customer service and data management off the hands of the brands — a welcome proposition for most CPG companies so they can focus on building and marketing their goods. Their fees are based on the services they provide, not how much volume they move.
This business model puts Alice in a unique position. Unlike the first generation of selling consumer packaged goods direct to consumers (Webvan, Netgrocer, etc.), Alice can put their focus on three things: building the platform, ensuring excellent service, and working closely with the brands to mine the data.
So while my earlier analysis concluded that this channel may not move tonnage for many brands, it does offer a quick, easy and value-added way to reach a set of high value consumers…efficiently. And since Alice isn’t directly taking a piece of each transaction, the full retail margin is passed directly to the brand helping to support Alice’s promise of free shipping. But the real potential boon here for CPG brands are the valuable insights that can be gleaned by interacting with and marketing directly to consumers. Alice intends to drive a lot of value with this part of the proposition, and rightfully so.
What’s Next in Trade Effectiveness?
Trade promotion best practices are fairly well established across the fast moving consumer goods industry. But looking forward over the next 1 to 3 year horizon, two “next generation” themes stand out:
1. Aligning “top-down” strategic trade planning with “bottom-up” account planning processes on a single technology platform
2. Weaving in the shopper insights dimension to what has traditionally been a brand/category focused planning framework
We are already seeing signs of both development themes taking hold among some of the larger CPG manufacturers. Better technology made more broadly available through SaaS frameworks are fast-tracking theme #1. And many retailers who have come to recognize the importance of more localized, shopper-centric trade planning are helping to drive theme #2 among the vendor community through richer data-sharing policies.
Note: I recently completed this thought-leadership eBook for DemandTec, my employer, to help articulate what’s on the horizon in the trade promotion space. Hope you enjoy thumbing through it, and I look forward to any thoughts you care to share on the concepts. Since the document has some small text, it is best viewed in full-screen mode.
October 8 Webinar Featuring Booz & Co. + DemandTec
I will be presenting with Jon Van Duyne from Booz & Co. on a webcast next Thursday, October 8 at 11 AM Pacific. The sesssion is titled Innovation through Predictive Analytics: Preparing Your Organization for Market Success and will be facilitated by Consumer Goods Technology.
You can register here for the event. Hope you can join us!
TPMA San Francisco Event Update
Day 1 of the TPMA San Francisco event just wrapped up at the Stanford Court hotel. Lots of focused, practical dialog around trade promotion optimization, collaborative analytics, funds optimization and the role of shopper insights. While attendance is on the lighter side, this conferences offers a set of rich discussions among industry peers.
Day 2 kicks off tomorrow at 8:30 AM, when Todd Bortel from Cannondale Associates and I will deliver our presentation titled “Trade Promotion Planning & Analysis: A Game that Needs Changing”. We hope to see you there.
As an associate brand manager at ConAgra foods in late 1998, I remember pondering how digital media would eventually impact our overall consumer marketing mix. With that thought, I did a quick landscape analysis taking note of media opportunities (Yahoo! and Excite at the time), plus the proliferation of direct-to-consumer grocers, including NetGrocer and Webvan.