Loose Change: What’s New in the Dollar Channel? Presented by: Mike Paglia- Director, Retail Insights Subscription Webinar Series 14-March-2014 Value Discounter Workshop | April 22 – 23, 2014 | Nashville, TN Key Questions This Workshop Will Answer: • Where are Family Dollar and Dollar General growing? And how long can they maintain their pace? • How should suppliers approach smaller “opportunity accounts” like 99 Cents Only and Dollar Tree? • What are the best practices suppliers need to win in this channel? • How are tech-savvy Millennials shopping this space? For more info on this event visit http://www.kriq.com/Events/EventDetails.aspx?id=599125 Or contact events@kantarretail.com © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail Copyright © 2014 Kantar Retail. All Rights Reserved. 501 Boylston Street, Suite 6101, Boston, MA 02116 (617) 912- 2828 howard.zimmerman@kantarretail.com No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photography, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without the express written permission of Kantar Retail. The printing of any copies for back up is also strictly prohibited. Disclaimers The analyses and conclusions presented in this seminar represent the opinions of Kantar Retail. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of the management of the retailer(s) under discussion. This seminar is not endorsed or otherwise supported by the management of any of the companies covered during the course of the workshop or within the following slides. © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail Agenda • What Does “Value” Mean Today? • Lidl Coming to the US (?!) • Understanding a Post-Bloom Family Dollar © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 4 “Value” is a Nebulous Term Even in the “value” channel Source: Kantar Retail analysis © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 5 The idea of Value is More Like This VALUE Source: Kantar Retail analysis © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 6 Higher Income Households Gaining Share of Shopper Base Low income remains as core Income Profile of P4Wk Discounter Channel Shoppers 35% 2008 2013 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% 5 year change <$25k $25k-$49.9k $50k-$74.9k -100 bps -200 bps -100 bps Source: Kantar Retail ShopperScape®, Jan-Dec 2008, Jan-Dec 2013 $75k-$99.9k +100 bps $100k+ +200 bps © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 7 New Shoppers Coming from Surprising Places Grocers among the biggest donors Percent of FDM Retailers' Past 4 Week Shoppers Who Also Shop DG or FD 2008-2013 PPD Dollar General Family Dollar 5.7 3.6 4.5 4.3 4.5 3.4 4.3 3.0 3.3 2.7 3.0 2.9 0.5 2.6 Source: Kantar Retail ShopperScape®, Jan-Dec 2008, Jan-Dec 2013 © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 8 Clubs Seeing Their Cross Shopping Growing Club Channel Cross Shopping Trend Costco Cross Shopping Trend 40% 40% 30% 30% 20% 20% 10% 10% 0% 0% Dollar Tree Dollar General Family Dollar Aldi Dollar Tree BJ's Cross Shopping Trend 50% 40% 40% 30% 30% 20% 20% 10% 10% 0% 0% Family Dollar Dollar General Source: Kantar Retail ShopperScape®, December 2013 Dollar General Aldi Sam's Cross Shopping Trend 50% Dollar Tree Family Dollar Aldi Dollar Tree Family Dollar Dollar General Aldi © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 9 Discounter Shoppers Becoming More Value Focused What Matters to Past Four-Week Discounter Channel Shoppers (% ranking factor among top four most important when shopping) Source: Kantar Retail ShopperScape®, January 2013 © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 10 Relevance to Shopper is Key Revisit the definition of value Core Shopper Trade In Shopper This is my world. I’m…. List driven More flexible Cash strained “Investable” cash Mission: spend less Mission: get a “good deal” When I’m in the store, I’m thinking…. Make this trip (or the next one) cheaper Make this trip more productive Focus on need based items Open to discretionary categories Don’t tempt me Make it worth the extra money Source: Kantar Retail analysis © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 11 As Discounters Gain Mainstream Appeal, Balancing act between functional & emotional value prop Absolute price value Comparability to brands Source: Kantar Retail analysis, store visits Low to premium brands © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail Assortment Aligning to Value Statements Unequivocal price points Source: Kantar Retail analysis; store visits; company website Value packs © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 13 Promotions Require Nuanced Approach “Value” manifests in different ways Absolute value promotions Source: Kantar Retail analysis; company materials; store visits Relative value promotions © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 14 Essential to Get the Message Right Across media and platforms Source: Kantar Retail analysis; company website and materials © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 15 How Do I Get It Right? • NOW –Understanding the core shopper is the first step • Build the foundation –Incorporate insights on emerging groups • The story is in the differences • LONGER TERM –Responsibility extends beyond the sales team • Brand marketing • Supply chain • Manufacturing Source: Kantar Retail analysis © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 16 Agenda • What Does “Value” Mean Today? • Lidl Coming to the US (?!): Who, What, When, Where, Why, How • Understanding a Post-Bloom Family Dollar © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 17 What and Why: Lidl Confirms US Entry Source: Kantar Retail analysis; german-retail-blog.com © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 18 Who is Lidl? Growing at a CAGR of 4.4% (2012-17) Sales Stores 60.0 $57.1 12,500 $54.8 $52.6 12,241 $50.4 Sales EUR Billion 50.0 $48.2 $46.2 12,000 11,876 11,500 40.0 11,497 SALES CAGR 2012-17 1-4% 4-7% 11,000 11,107 7-12% 30.0 10,710 20.0 10,500 12%+ 10,287 10,000 10.0 9,500 0.0 9,000 2012 2013 2014 Source: Kantar Retail analysis 2015 2016 2017 © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 19 Who is Lidl? Tapping into convenience shopper missions Convenience layout of Lidl 7 Tills – no conveyor belts Shopping carts £1) & baskets that roll (free) Pick N Mix fruit/nu ts and candy Chilled single units Intl food specials (ES, Greek, American) F r o z e n V e g D a i r y Nonfood Bakery Chilled drinks/snacks/sandwich branded coffee stations es Source: Kantar Retail analysis Impulse: single units candy & snacks a mix of brands and PL Fresh meats – beef and chicken B r e a d s Lidl has also rolled-out contactless payment in several markets to speed up queuing times. This is helping Lidl become more convenient in terms of in store shopping © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 20 Who is Lidl? Driving value via multiple promotional efforts • Lidl is clearly relying more heavily on brands and promotions to drive traffic and basket • 20-30% of Lidl promotions are now on branded items (average) • Main promotional mechanics being implemented by Lidl: Source: Kantar Retail; Lidl promo © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 21 How Does Lidl Work? Brands are a key part of the value proposition THE ROLE OF BRANDS 1. Acceptance • Drive shopper/household penetration through helping to develop the discounters’ image as an acceptable place to shop. Lidl has historically showcased PL as its key USP 2. Conversion and Penetration (and margin) • Leading brands help to convert discounter shoppers to purchase in the category. Drive penetration in existing categories or help launch new categories. 3. Comparison • Provide a basis for comparison to private label brands Source: Kantar Retail analysis Lidl is now drawing more attention to its branded offer © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 22 How Does Lidl Work? Efficiency demanded throughout the whole demand chain Distribution Center • Pallets throughout the channel • Desired inventory levels are balanced with cost Store Shopper • Pallets or Case Packs • Desired look and category determine merchandising format • Driving, walking, biking or using public transport Your role Pallet Optimisation Source: Kantar Retail analysis Packaging appearance, restocking and checkout efficiency Analysis and identification of high demand products © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 23 How Does Lidl Work? Comfortable with localization and differentiation Lidl’s marketing efforts (1 now – 1 later promotion and “better life” for livestock) build value beyond price Rounded price point promotions help Lidl enhance ,differentiate in markets where it competes with Aldi Lidl’s promo strategy is significantly deeper than its discounter rivals in Germany, constantly switching between themes such as XXL week, Brand Week, and Fresh Mondays. Source: Kantar Retail analysis © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 24 How Does Lidl Work? Market specific strategy to assortment UK Category Share of total SKUs Share of total SKUs Category 3.5% Dairy 17.1% Dry grocery 2.8% Dairy 8.5% Dry grocery 2.8% HBC 5.9% Frozen food 4.5% HBC 4.5% Frozen food 5.2% n/a Canned food* 5.5% Confectionary 3.8% Refrigerated packaged food 9.0% Fruit and vegetables 5.5% Bakery 2.1% 6.1% Dry grocery 2.1% 3.1% Canned food* 4.2% Refrigerated food 8.1% Fruit and vegetables 5.9% Bakery 2.1% Meat 2.3% Tea/coffee 3.6% Beverages 5.0% Impulse (till) 2.4% Snacks 4.5% Cereals 2.1% Biscuits 2.7% Spreads 1.7% NON FOOD Pet food Household TOTAL SKUs Eggs, sugar, 8.4% cake mix 1.7% Tissues 5.1% newspapers 1658 Source: Kantar Retail analysis 1.9% 0.6% 0.5% Share of total SKUs Condiments Dairy OTC drugs Share of total SKUs 9.9% Alcohol 5.9% Category Alcohol 2.9% 5.9% Frozen food Share of total SKUs 3.5% 6.7% Condiments HBC Share of total SKUs 7.1% Condiments Alcohol Confectionary 4.6% POLAND FRANCE OTC drugs Confectionary Fruit and vegetables Meat n/a Canned food* 4.2% Refrigerated 4.1% 10.1% packaged food OTC drugs 4.7% Bakery 2.3% 1.5% Tea/coffee 1.7% Meat 2.4% Tea/coffee 3.8% Beverages 3.5% Impulse (till) 1.4% Beverages 5.2% Impulse (till) 1.4% Snacks 2.9% Cereals 1.2% Snacks 2.4% Cereals 2.1% Biscuits 0.4% Biscuits 2.8% Spreads 0.3% NON FOOD 7.6% Eggs, sugar, cake mix 2.9% Pet food 3.4% Spreads Eggs, sugar, 8.9% cake mix 1.1% Tissues Pet food 1.7% Tissues 0.1% Household 5.5% newspapers 0.3% Household 6.9% newspapers 0.3% NON FOOD TOTAL SKUs 1431 1.5% 0.2% TOTAL SKUs 1444 © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 25 When and Where Will Lidl Enter? Convenience Discount (40.2% of sales) Discounters 17 retailers 22 banners 30,000+ stores $74 billion Closeout (8.0% of sales) Limited Assortment Grocery Hard Discount (33.9% of sales) Soft Discount (5.1% of sales) Single Price Point (12.8% of sales) Updated 5/24/13 Source: Kantar Retail analysis © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 26 When and Where Will Lidl Enter? State OH NC PA FL CT GA NJ Source: Kantar Retail analysis; 2013 Grocery Industry Market Share Report Aldi Store Count 116 57 57 56 42 40 29 State DE TN MD SC MA VA WV Aldi Store Count 24 22 17 17 12 4 3 © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 27 What Now? • Absorb • Get on a plane • Learn the fundamentals • Internalize • Assess them against current customers • Identify the opportunities • Connect • Talk to your peers in Europe • Establish your Lidl relationship NOW Source: Kantar Retail analysis © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 28 Agenda • What Does “Value” Mean Today? • Lidl Coming to the US (?!) • Understanding a Post-Bloom Family Dollar © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 29 Family Dollar’s Q1 2014 Dashboard Operating profit takes a hit 34.1% 28.9% 5.2% 3.3% ∆ (bp) 14 57 -43 New Store Sales 14.8% -19 6.1% % Change 3.5% 4.1% Source: Kantar Retail analysis, company reports 4.1% 4.5% 5.0% 4.5% 6.1% 6.6% 4.7% 2.9% Q4 2012 3.4% 475 4.6% Q3 2012 $ 1,592,068 7,566 Q2 2012 $ 1,645,676 8,041 Q1 2012 Inventory Store base Comp Store Sales 5.8% 6.0% 0.0% -2.8% Q1 2014 Net Income/Sales 34.3% 29.5% 4.8% 3.1% Positive comps would have offset some of these factors, but declining traffic and basket size at existing stores exposed the impact of these factors and put unsustainable pressure on newer stores to contribute beyond capacity. Q4 2013 Gross Profit/Sales Operating Expenses/Sales Operating Profit/Sales Top line sales and profit showed solid growth, but operating margin and net profit were adversely affected by mix pressure, shrink, inventory productivity, store manager turnover, and a highly promotional strategy. 2.9% Q3 2013 Net Income $ 2,499,691 1,642,850 856,841 736,522 120,319 78,027 11/24/2012 % Change $ 2,421,688 3.2% 1,594,894 3.0% 826,794 3.6% 699,825 5.2% 126,969 -5.2% 80,279 -2.8% Q1 2013 (USD thousands) Net Sales Cost of Goods Sold Gross Profit Operating Expenses Operating Profit 11/30/2013 Q2 2013 Quarter Ended © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 30 Operating Expense and Profit per Square Foot Key measures of store level productivity $12.00 $10.00 $8.00 OpEx/SqFt $6.00 Op Profit/SqFt $4.00 $2.00 $Q1' 12 Q2 '12 Q3 '12 Q4 '12 Q1 '13 Q2 '13 Q3 '13 Q4 '13 Q1 '14 Breaking down Family Dollar’s operating expenses and profitability to the square foot level sheds new light on the retailer’s operational effectiveness. The trend would suggest that store level profitability is decreasing. As the retailer transitions over to EDLP, this decline should continue for the medium term, but will ultimately return to growth as new and more efficient practices are implemented and become standard. Source: Kantar Retail analysis, company reports © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 31 Shopper Incidence Has Lagged Despite promotional efforts to drive traffic Comparing Shopper Penetration at Family Dollar & Dollar General 140 120 30% 100 25% 80 20% 60 15% 40 10% 20 5% 0 0% Family Dollar Dollar General Starting in 2012, Family Dollar aggressively ramped up its promotional efforts in an effort to drive traffic. The retailer saw an immediate but ultimately short lived increase in traffic, demonstrating the ultimate unsustainability of the approach and reduced relevance to shoppers. Source: Kantar Retail ShopperScape®, December 2011 - November 2013; ECRM MarketGate; store visits © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 32 Item volume Hi-Lo is Simply Renting Share TIME Source: Kantar Retail analysis 12-18 mos © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 33 Comp Sales Struggle Under Bloom Mike Bloom joins FD Expect Family Dollar to reevaluate current strategies around: One year anniversary 8% 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.6% 6% 4.1% 4% 2% Promotion Print ads Assortment Value messaging Opex reduction Comp Sales 0% -2% -4% Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 2010 2011 2011 2011 2011 2012 2012 2012 2012 2013 2013 2013 2013 “My priorities are stabilizing the business, reenergizing our focus on providing customers with exciting values and reaccelerating traffic into our stores.” 2 year -2.8% anniversary -Howard Levine, CEO 1.9.14 Note: Quarters represent calendar year, not retailer’s fiscal year Source: Kantar Retail analysis, company reports © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 34 The Path from Hi-Lo to EDLP Hi-Lo • • • • • • Hybrid EDLP • • • • • • $ towards promotional activity High/low price on shelf Weekly circulars / more promotions Sales lift Item velocity varies throughout year Higher operational costs and more complexity $ towards COGS Lower price on shelf Monthly circulars / fewer promotions Steadier sales Increased item velocity Lower operational costs and complexity US Discounter Pricing Model Price Model More Promo Less Promo EDLP Total Source: Kantar Retail analysis 2008 $ $ $ $ 125 268 395 332 2013E $ $ $ $ 153 302 432 367 2018E $ $ $ $ 165 363 503 433 2013E-2018E CAGR 1.5% 3.7% 3.1% 3.4% © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail So How Will Growth be Affected? $17,000 Before (Sales) After (Sales) Before (%) After (%) 12% 10% $15,000 8% $14,000 6% $13,000 4% Percent Growth USD millions $16,000 $12,000 $11,000 2% $10,000 0% 2014E Source: Kantar Retail analysis 2015E 2016E 2017E 2018E © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail Family Dollar’s Core Focus Going Forward Fill in destination Reaccelerate consumables traffic Reassert value proposition Pack Size. Ensure that items and pack sizes align to the trip mission Grow Trips. Design and implement programs that drive shopper attention to relevant items and categories EDLP Transition. Anticipate turbulent comp sales as shoppers reorient to stable pricing Source: Kantar Retail analysis © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 37 Family Dollar’s Core Focus Going Forward Enhance marketing Value message. Fewer circulars and a greater focus on value themes Source: Kantar Retail analysis Drive household categories Create occasions & celebrations Defend the Position. Household categories are a historical strength that FD will leverage; Identify and implement opportunities to partner here Differentiation. Incorporate themes around family, events, party as FD tries to carve out a niche © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail 38 Contact: Mike Paglia Director, Retail Insights mike.paglia@kantarretail.com T:+1 617 912 2855 M:+ www.kantarretailiQ.com © Copyright 2014 Kantar Retail