Want more insights in your inbox?
Subscribe to our monthly newsletter.
Subscribe to our monthly newsletter.
Everyone can name a few consumer packaged goods that stir feelings of fierce loyalty: the chip they serve at every Super Bowl party, the laundry detergent that they swear works better than others, or the brand of soup they’ve been eating since childhood.
In recent years the CPG industry has been met with numerous challenges. Some, like the need to compete with two-hour shipping windows, are due to digital transformation, or the use of digital technology to solve problems. Changing consumer behavior is also presenting challenges to the CPG industry. With a recent study showing that more than half of consumers surveyed in the U.S. and UK had reduced the amount of disposable plastic they used in the previous year, a laundry detergent brand may find itself forced to rethink its packaging. Home products brand Seventh Generation, for instance, uses blends of recycled cardboard and newspaper to produce its laundry detergent bottle.
Beyond sustainable materials, millennials are almost four times more likely than baby boomers to avoid buying products from “the big food companies,” according to McKinsey. Thanks in large part to health concerns, salt-laden soup may no longer be the lunch of choice. Add in the fact that new entrants are disrupting the traditional CPG-customer relationship, and it’s no wonder that 80% of leading CPG brand CEOs are concerned that their business model may be at risk.
In response, many CPG companies are rethinking their portfolios, tailoring new products with wellness and more-sustainable packaging in mind, and creating their own private labels. Others are investing in ways to drive innovation, including venture funds and incubators.
Alongside those other smart moves, they’re also rethinking their marketing strategy. Television, they may come to realize, can provide a solution to many challenges they’re facing.
Out-of-the-Box CPG Strategy
Despite loyalty from some consumers, CPG brands have long been plagued by high market saturation levels and low consumer switching costs. It’s easy to switch from one brand to another, depending on price or availability.
This makes it vital for a brand to prioritize top-of-mind awareness, and data-driven TV advertising can be an instrumental part of that strategy.
Indexed linear television, for instance, can be used to identify those more likely to be in-market for a particular product. And today’s indexed TV applies modern data sets to TV marketing. By matching data such as purchasing habits or household income to viewing habits, a CPG brand can reach their target audiences efficiently with a relevant message.
For a more targeted approach, addressable TV advertising allows brands not only to hone in on a receptive audience at a granular level, it also follows the customer journey, using purchase and behavioral data to target current buyers to increase market penetration, boost customer loyalty, identify purchasers of competing brands or products to promote switching, and tap lapsed purchasers to help bridge gaps in purchase history.
The assumption may be that addressable TV advertising is worth the investment only for industries and brands seeking specific customers for costly products or services – middle-aged women seeking to upgrade the family car, for example, or golfers planning their next resort vacation. Following that line of thinking, makers of mass-market items that almost everyone uses – tissues, soap, or sandwich bread – need only to cast the widest possible net and reach the largest audience to prosper.
Targeting a more specific audience at the household level, however, can minimize waste while retaining an effective level of reach. For instance, a CPG brand used addressable to shift share from a competing brand, resulting in a 21% increase in brand penetration.
Both indexed TV campaigns and addressable TV campaigns offer valuable insights on what worked and what didn’t work with a campaign. For indexed linear, ACR data gives clarity on who watched and what they were exposed to. After an addressable campaign, incremental impact can be measured against a brand’s KPI.
Bottling the Power of TV
Marc Pritchard, the chief brand officer of Procter & Gamble, a company whose products are used by some 5 billion people globally each day – and one that has been widely celebrated for the success of their mass marketing – told attendees at an ANA gathering that there was a pressing need to reinvent traditional modes of advertising. The ideal would be, he explained, “mass reach with one-to-one precision.”
Indexing and addressable TV advertising, two highly potent mediums, offer both precision and the scale CPG marketers require.
Subscribe to our monthly update to get at all the latest from Cadent.