DBM ISMS CASE STUDY PAPERS - How is Shoppers’ Stop benefiting from FCC programme Do you think the store is practicing CRM Explain
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Sales and Distribution Management
Case 3 :- First Citizen Club
When customers in an outlet of
Shoppers’ Stop pick up a pair of Florsheim shoes, they leave behind a distinct
trail. The purchases made up a First Citizen Club (FFC) member are under the
store’s microscope. Shoppers’s Stop wants to know what brand of shoes you like
to wear. This process aims at building bridges to both its customers and
suppliers, or perhaps even other manufacturers.
Shoppers’
Stop uses customer preferences to gather valuable market reach data. Ajay
Kelkar, senior manager marketing services says, “We are looking at the various
ways in which we can work with our brands and customers.”
In
India, Shoppers’ Stop is one of the first major chains that is working on ways
to manage its customer related information to gain competitive advantage.
Arvind Singhal, managing director of retail consultant KSA Technopak says, “Customer
information capture, and an intelligent and rigorous warehousing and mining of
transaction behavior, is increasingly becoming one of the major success factors
for successful retailers.” Singhal cites the example of Wal-Mart, whose success
has hinged on the way in which it uses its famously advanced customer shopping
information.
Shoppers’
Stop opened its first store in Mumbai in 1991. It launched its First Citizen
Club Programme only in April 1994, drawing from the base of people that had
been encouraged to drop their visiting cards in the previous years.
Any
customer can become a FCC member by either paying an enrollment fee of Rs. 150
or making purchases worth Rs. 2,500 in a single day. The benefits to customers
include reward points and updates on store events and merchandising, and
information on the latest fashion trends through a monthly newsletter named
First Update.
In
the first year of this programme, the store enrolled some 4,000 FCC members. By
2000, FCC had 100,000 members and created members categories who could have a
gold, silver, and a classic card. These cards bear different eligibility levels
for different categories.
Pradeep
Katya, senior manager, direct marketing say, “Beginners used to be targeted in
a different manner, while high-frequency FCC member were already familiar with
the experience. So the objective there is to grow in share of wallet.”
About
2 per cent of the FCC members are gold cardholders, 25 per cent silver, and the
rest have basic card. Around 15 per cent of the walk-ins on any day in any
store are FCC members, and they account for nearly 40 per cent of the store’s
sales. According to Katyal, globally, large retailers sell as much as 60 per
cent of their products in each category to loyalty customers. In India, the retail
market is still fragmented, but Katyal expects the global trend will soon reach
here as large and organized retailing grows in the country. Shoppers’ Stop is
clearly recognising that its FCC members area a precious database. For the
chain is sitting on a cache of data on consumer buying habits. In fact, the
quality of database isn’t really derived from the information customers give
upfront at the time of enrollment. That just covers the usual details like
name, address, date of birth, spouse’s name and date of birth, and their
marriage anniversary. Katyal says, “Few people give out family details. But as
long as we can communicate with them, it is sufficient. “The real business
starts when the FCC member starts making purchases.
Since
the FCC programme is integrated in Shoppers’ Shop enterprise resource package,
every customer transaction at any checkout counter gets recorded. Over a period
of time, then, the chain could ascertain whether a customer prefers Louis
Philippe, Allen Solly, or whether he goes in for that Calvin Klein, or Armani
after-shave.
“We
can track consumers’ psychographics by seeing when they buy and what kind of
products or brands they buy. Now we are talking to other companies about this
and they see value in it,“ says Kelkar. Singhal believes the store can, with a
very significant investment in technology and management, use the loyalty
programme-based transaction data to offer a more focused product mix in its
stores, customise brand and product choices from one location to another, and
delete slow-moving SKUs and substitute them with fast moving ones.
Singhal
says, “It can also use this information to generate a more direct Customer
Relationship Management (CRM) effort, and give loyal shoppers enhanced service,
and tangible and non-tangible benefits so as to generate higher sales per
customer.” The store is certainly open to the possibilities. Kelkar says that
if they can understand their customers’ psychographics and demographics, they
can target products exclusively to them or even do limited launches for them,
something they are currently discussing.
Some
of the direct marketing thrust will be through the other link that the store
has with its FFC base – the newsletter. Katyal claims that experience has shown
the best advertisers in First Update tend to grab the best market share in that
category.
So,
now the chain is using the medium to promote its in-store label Shop, which
accounts for 20 per cent of sales currently, but which Katyal and Kelkar would
like to take to 50 per cent.
Consider
the promo that Shoppers’ Stop did for Espirit watches last year. FCC members
were informed through a mailer that they could get a free Espirit watch if they
bought goods worth rupees 15,000 within three months. Katyal says that against
an estimated 1,500 watches, the store ended up giving 3,700 watches.
While
each watch was worth Rs. 2,700, the promo brought in sales in excess of Rs. 5
crores for Shoppers’ Stop. Katyal adds, “Generally, direct marketing has a 1-2
per cent success rate. We consider anything less than 12 per cent as a failure.
The
store is also looking at going beyond such efforts. They back and front office
teams are currently working on identifying the top-selling SKUs in every
category. Shoppers’ Stop will then use its database to profile buyers of that
SKU, not on age or address, but by seeing what other products they are buying,
and then targeting other buyers who have similar buying habits.
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| DBM ISMS CASE STUDY PAPERS - How is Shoppers’ Stop benefiting from FCC programme Do you think the store is practicing CRM Explain |
For
example, in a simplistic scenario, if a large number of customers who buy
Florsheim shoes also tend to buy Arrow shirts, the store could target other
buyers of Arrow shirts and do a promo for Florsheim shoes with them.
The
store has recently done market research. In another case, channels like
Hallmark and National Geographic are considering using the store’s database for
promotions. When Lakme sponsored a beauty week at the store earlier this year,
it could interact with customers and gauge their responses to its products.
Once the data warehousing tools are in place, Katyal and Kelkar plan to analyse
the FFC data to give feedback to brands that are already selling at Shoppers’
Stop. This could be done at a category level or with a specific brand.
Brand
could even use the information to clear inventory. For instance, if a producer
has stagnant stocks of, say, 42-size shirts, the firm could use the database to
target only those customers who wear that size.
On
the other hand, the store could come up with a base of, say, bargain hunters
and target events for them. Besides, if the suppliers have such information,
they could quicken their response time for developing new products apart from
improving their production planning for a more efficient replenishment cycle.
The
store’s customer base is essentially within the socio-economic classes A and B,
and aged between 25 – 45 years. There’s also the fact that the audience may be
limited to a certain geographical area within the city – after all, Shoppers’s
Stop expansions are based on this catchment area premise. But Katyal says,
“Most brands at the end of the day are targeting people who are in this age
group and within a good disposable income.
Today,
it is a buyer’s market and marketers have to continuously add value for
customers and convert first-time buyers into second-and-third timers.
Questions
1.
How
is Shoppers’ Stop benefiting from FCC programme? Do you think the store is
practicing CRM? Explain.
2.
Why
has it become necessary to develop cordial relations with customers? How can
this help in enhancing customer satisfaction?
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