How to successfully take an FMCG brand to market

The business usually starts with an FMCG product idea to meet a likely need in the market. Researching its target audiences and understanding their buying behaviour helps figure out whether or not this idea is worth actualising

As with any business through its quest, an FMCG food brand must make a series of good decisions to increase its likelihood of success in the marketplace.

During my work with consumer foods, from premium milk to imported beers, from luxury chocolates to powdered pre-mixes for vending machines, here’s what I found worked favourably, often enough.

The business usually starts with an idea of a certain product or category likely to meet a need in the market. Researching its target audiences well and understanding their buying behaviour helps figure out whether or not the idea is worth actualising.

Market research should ideally cover:

  • Which product will serve the interest of potential consumers
  • At what price and portion-size it will do so
  • What the positioning will be
  • What packaging and shelf-life would be suitable and
  • Which place(s) would make it easily available for repeated purchase by consumers

From the Market Research stage, two simultaneous paths must be pursued: One which involves manufacturing and sales, so as to bring the actual product to the consumer as a tangible experience; the other which involves marketing so as to bring the intangible aspect of the brand to the consumer and influence her perception.

FMCG_sm

Consumer Experience
Whether you’ve developed the first version of your recipe in a garage or a professional lab, you must decide whether to outsource the manufacturing with your proprietary recipe, or to build your own production facility so as to “control” your quality.

Outsourcing the manufacturing helps save capital on the factory and allows you to focus your time and money on brand-building. Most large FMCG food businesses typically choose this model.

If, however, you’re production inclined and opt to build your own facility, remember that you’ll then need to ensure that your factory’s capacity is utilised well enough to cover its costs, or you’ll be chasing other brands to do job-work rather than building your own brand… unless of course that is your agenda.

After the sensory approval (taste, colour, aroma, texture/consistency), a lab-sized batch must be prepared for analysis of its acidity, rancidity, bacterial count, solid-liquid ratio and other parameters as outlined by the food safety authorities.

However astute your palate, or that of your chef’s, eventually, it’s what your customer thinks about your product that really matters. One of the best ways to de-risk the product aspect of your business from failure is to include your target audiences in your sensory evaluation.

For a product with a shelf-life of, say, 12 months, an accelerated shelf-life study (SLS) is done over 12 weeks, following which a market batch must be readied.

A strong Go-to-Market plan considers which distribution channels and points of sale would best facilitate your consumer experience. You may distribute your product via: General Trade (GT) and Modern Trade (MT) retailers, your own branded counters or kiosks, through Institutions, HORECA (Hotels, Restaurants, Catering Companies), Online, and even via a direct-to-consumer channel like a subscription model for instance.

Consumer Perception
Perception, as the saying goes, is almost always greater than reality. So it’s fair that many consider the marketing and branding aspect of a business to be even more important than the actual product experience. The brand’s birth purpose, name, logo etc. are carefully packaged into a narrative that is conveyed dynamically and repeatedly to its consumers through various engaging stories and marketing activities. Nestlé, for instance, crafted many interesting localised communications, based on very relatable occasions at which Maggi noodles could be consumed in India. This is what led to Maggi becoming a household name, seen as “our own”; and is now the food that many of our generation “have grown up on”.

It is when the two paths of consumer experience and consumer perception meet, that the brand is actually born in the hearts and minds of your consumers.

Consumer Experience + Consumer Perception = Brand Birth.

It is at this stage that your consumer forms an opinion of value that the brand offers, based on the extent to which it fulfils her needs, and how it compares to options available in the market. It puts her in a position to accept or reject your product, either entirely or partially.

Consumer acceptance, backed by easy availability of product, usually leads to its repeated purchase—and thus the possible growth of the brand. When a consumer pays money for what she has experienced or perceived to be good value, she becomes a customer.

If consumers reject your brand or do not purchase it, you need to understand why, and try and do whatever it takes to make it work for them, or else the brand may die. In such a situation, the company will either close down completely or just close that vertical, and identify a new product or category that could resonate in the market.

The author is Founder & CEO Phoenix Consulting, a business consulting firm offering start-up, developmental & turnaround assistance to entrepreneurs in the food trade.

Source: https://www.forbesindia.com/blog/food-for-thought/how-to-successfully-take-an-fmcg-brand-to-market/

63 thoughts on “How to successfully take an FMCG brand to market”

  1. Pingback: buy trental 2023

  2. Pingback: ventolin inhaler where to buy online

  3. Pingback: what are clonidine pills

  4. Pingback: where can i buy allegra online

  5. Pingback: nitro casino real money casino

  6. Pingback: casino online slots real money

  7. Pingback: online casino canada real money reviews

  8. Pingback: anyone try 40 mg of cialis

  9. Pingback: walgreens cialis 10 mg

  10. Pingback: 60 mg generic cialis

  11. Pingback: drug store price comparison for 20 mg cialis

  12. Pingback: prix cialis 20 mg comprimé pelliculé boîte de 8

  13. Pingback: sildenafil 100mg coupon

  14. Pingback: promethazine 25mg

  15. Pingback: lisinopril 5mg

  16. Pingback: hydrochlorothiazide price

  17. Pingback: generic metformin

  18. Pingback: buy benadryl my dog

  19. Pingback: buy wellbutrin sr 200mg

  20. Pingback: prednisone online

  21. Pingback: fluoxetine 2023

  22. Pingback: tizanidine hcl 4 mg tablet

  23. Pingback: diclofenac genericon 100 mg filmtabletten

  24. Pingback: no deposit casino online real money

  25. Pingback: online casino real money iphone

  26. Pingback: cialis tadalafil 20 mg bula

  27. Pingback: real money casino app download

  28. Pingback: duelz online casino real money

  29. Pingback: when will i be able to buy generic lipitor

  30. Pingback: ketorolac generic

  31. Pingback: meclizine online

  32. Pingback: cheap naltrexone

  33. Pingback: zofran generic

  34. Pingback: rosuvastatin 10mg

  35. Pingback: generic cetirizine

  36. Pingback: cheap pantoprazole

  37. Pingback: can cialis 20mg be split

  38. Pingback: cialis 20 mg precio

  39. Pingback: best place to buy cialis online

  40. Pingback: prilosec buy one

  41. Pingback: tadalafil 20mg generic cost

  42. Pingback: prednisolone online

  43. Pingback: buy diltiazem

  44. Pingback: allegra units sale hervey bay

  45. Pingback: diclofenac ratiopharm 50 mg magensaftresistente tabletten

  46. Pingback: order norvasc online

  47. Pingback: buy sitagliptin 2023

  48. Pingback: what is cheaper than nexium

  49. Pingback: how to buy synthroid

  50. Pingback: can you split crestor pills

  51. Pingback: divalproex online

  52. Pingback: lab tests ordered lasix

  53. Pingback: tadalafil invictus 20 mg

  54. Pingback: precio de cialis 20 mg

  55. Pingback: flomax prices

  56. Pingback: cheap gabapentin

  57. Pingback: singulair online

  58. Pingback: mail order viagra canada

  59. Pingback: brand levitra cheap

  60. Pingback: tadalafil 20 mg preis

  61. Pingback: cialis generic 20 mg in us or canada

  62. Pingback: sildenafil 100mg price at walmart

  63. Pingback: use of tadalafil tablets 20 mg

Comments are closed.