Brief
The Future of Marketing in Consumer Products
The Future of Marketing in Consumer Products
Here’s how companies can build a winning brand growth model.
- 읽기 소요시간
- Summarize with Generative AI
Brief
Here’s how companies can build a winning brand growth model.
Not so long ago, marketing consumer products felt like a genteel game of lawn tennis: Established competitors invested in creative with long lead times, using proven models of TV and big-box retail, alongside trusted agency partners. Today, it’s more like a sprawling contest of mixed martial arts, with new competitors playing by different rules; an unprecedented complexity of channels, content and partners; and a step change in speed and ways of working that has punches flying at incumbent consumer products companies.
Fueling the blur of combat is a radical shift in brand growth models. Within the span of most executives’ careers, advances in technology have reshaped how consumers engage with brands. In the US and UK, more than 60% of consumers now discover products online, and 85% of millennials trust reviews from a faceless stranger more than traditional advertising. The same technology advances have dramatically altered the competitive landscape. Reduced barriers to entry in selling and marketing new brands have shortened the shelf life of traditional brands, with 25% of growth going to insurgent competitors, who are redefining consumer expectations of brand purpose, service and engagement. And technology has transformed the tools of the trade: Global spending on digital continues to grow at more than three times the rate of total ad spending, while programmatic spending has grown from 10% to more than 60% of ad spending in the last five years, according to data from eMarketer. The 150 established martech and adtech solutions in 2011 have turned into 7,000 in 2018. We expect more than half of all spending on creative concepting and media planning to shift to content generation and technology by 2025 (see Figure 1).
Companies have reacted, of course. Unilever is reshaping its marketing model, and as content moves in-house, established partnerships are breaking. Kraft Heinz has made data-driven marketing and ownership of first-party data a key growth pillar, with the cost per higher-quality impression declining by 40% to date. Adidas has established new learning capabilities globally to refine content, channel and spending choices.
However, the transformation still required across the industry is significant, involving far-reaching changes to consumer products companies’ growth models and the largest buckets of their discretionary spending. And it’s urgent, as consumers and new competitors are moving faster than incumbents can react. Without top-line growth, newfound capabilities for measuring return on investment can quickly turn into a justification for wholesale cost-cutting, which can backfire when it damages critical capabilities and the growth potential of brands.
Bain Partner Clare Gordon explains how companies can respond to the disruptions created by technology in the consumer products market.
None of this comes as a surprise to CMOs. Our recent survey underscores that they are living these challenges day in and day out:
What’s the right path forward? Reinventing the brand growth model requires more than a reallocation of marketing budget to digital. CMOs need a reassessment of growth platforms and future brand portfolios, a new understanding of the consumer journey, a supporting strategy on data and technology, and a reorganization of their internal operating model and partnerships (see Figure 2). By taking the lead on this transformation, CMOs have an opportunity to become stewards of the new consumer journey, leading the function with the highest ROI of the company and orchestrating a new brand-building ecosystem.
What will it take? CMOs can start with five critical questions:
This is a pivotal moment for CMOs. Their ability to find the right combination of strategy and execution will not only redefine their roles, but also determine the growth and success of the brands under their stewardship.
Clare Gordon is a partner in Bain & Company’s London office and a leader in the firm’s Consumer Products practice. Nicolas Willemot is a partner in Bain’s Brussels office and a leader in the Consumer Products and Customer Strategy & Marketing practices. Eileen Shy is a partner in Bain’s New York office and a leader in the firm’s Consumer Products and Social & Public Sector practices. John Grudnowski is the founder of FRWD and an expert vice president with Bain, based in Minneapolis. He is a leader in the firm’s Digital and Customer Strategy & Marketing practices, with deep digital marketing expertise.