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Richard Ivey school of Business- Case study
AGENDA
1. Situation Analysis
2. Key Challenge
3. The Company
4. History
5. UK Hair-care market
6. Marketing Strategy
7. Professional hair-care brands
8. Mass Market Brands
9. Hair-care Product Retailers
10.Consumers
11.Decisions
12.Conclusions
Category & Operations Manager, Boots
The Main Player is
Dave Robinson is planning his
sales promotion strategy for a
line of professional hair-care
products at Boots
Robinson realized that the alternative he
selected would have immediate effects on
both costs and sales as well as long-term
implications for the brands involved.
1. GET 3 FOR THE
PRICE OF 2
2. RECEIVE A GIFT WITH
PURCHASE (“GWP”)
3. On-pack coupon worth 50p
One of the best known retail names
in UK.
Provided health and beauty
products.
Owned global differentiated brands in
the self-medication market.
In 1849 John Boot, an agricultural laborer opened ‘The
British and American Botanic Establishment’ to provide
physical comfort to the needy.
Jesse, his son, took sole control of the shop in
1877, and, in 1883, established it as a private
company ‘Boot and Company Limited’.
The company began to expand with more stores
in Nottingham.
He wanted to be the ‘Largest, Best and
Cheapest’.
Sales in the 560 Boots stores across
the UK amounted to over £2.5 million
a year.
Boots introduced new services
Boots Opticians
Insurance services
‘Boots for Men’ stores
Boots Health and Beauty stores
UNITED
KINGDOM HAIR-
CARE MARKET
In 2000, over 60 major brands were available in the U.K.
None had more than a nine per cent market
share.
The overall market was expected to
grow by between one per cent and
three per cent per year for the next
five years.
Severe price competition meant that
volume would grow more quickly than value
Marketing Strategy
Boots desired to build a new market by using celebrity endorsements
to create awareness and create an emotional attachment between
consumers and the brand.
Celebrity hairdressers had their own branded
products, but distribution was limited to their own
salons.
No celebrity-endorsed products were available in
retail stores.
The relationship with Boots was lucrative for the
hairdressers because it gave them access to a
large percentage of U.K. consumers through
Boots’ 1,300 stores.
Boots worked with the celebrities to design
formulations that were functionally better
than existing brands. Under the agreement,
Boots manufactured the products and paid a
per-unit licensing fee for use of the celebrity’s
brand name.
In the more than five years since the first
celebrity brand was introduced, Boots felt
that it had not been able to sufficiently link
its name with these products and hence
missed on maximizing profitability.
The professional Hair-
care brands
One of the most influential and creative
hairdressers.
Five prestigious London salons tending
to more than 2,000 clients a week
Market Awareness- Medium
Entrepreneurial in spirit, global in
impact
The product range is targeted for
specific hair types.
Three salons in London, two in New York
and one in Los Angeles.
Market Awareness- Strong
A popular hairstylist to
the stars from the film,
television, fashion, and
music industries.
Salons in
London and
Manchester
Market Awareness- Medium
The company’s
philosophy is simple — creating
sexy, contemporary catwalk looks
Eight salons in the United
Kingdom
Market Awareness- Low
Showman of all hairdressers
Two salons in the United Kingdom
Market Awareness- Medium
He is known for hairstyle
and hair care.
Three salons in
the United
Kingdom
Market Awareness- Low
PRODUCT CATEGORIES
BRAND INTRODUCED DISTRIBUTION
Charles Worthington 1996 Only Boots
John Frieda 1996 Widely Available
Nicky Clarke 1998
Widely Available
Umberto Giannini 1999
Widely Available
Toni & Guy January 2001
Only Boots
Trevor Sorbie September 2001
Only Boots
LEE Stafford September 2001
Only Boots
DISTRIBUTION AND INTRODUCTION DATES
* All products are normally available in 250 ml sizes. Their smaller Take-Away versions are normally 75 ml.
** All prices are in British pounds and per 100 ml unless otherwise stated. These prices are only applicable at
Boots stores. Within a product category the prices vary because of their formulations.
PRICE COMPARISON CHART
MASS-MARKET
BRANDS
Hoffman-La Roche developed Pantene in 1947
Richardson-Vicks acquired Pantene in 1983
Procter & Gamble acquired Richardson-Vicks in 1985,
and in 1991, the product was reformulated as the
Pantene Pro-V
By 1995, it became the Best-selling hair-
care brand
In 1955, Leonard Lavin found
Alberto Culver in Illinois
Forced television networks to
abandon their 60-second
commercials with the introduction of
30-second ones.
Globally acquired diverse firms.
French Chemist, Eugene
Schueller, developed an
innovative hair-color formula
“Auréole.”
The company started
exporting its products as
early as 1912.
The group marketed over 500 brands
and more than 2,000 products in all
sectors of the beauty business.
The major competitors in the supermarket
segment were Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Morrisons.
Tesco was the largest supermarket chain in
the United Kingdom with more than 1,800
stores and 45,000 employees.
Sainbury’s was the second largest
with 700 stores.
Both Tesco and Sainsbury’s offered a wide
product assortment that included traditional
supermarket items and online shopping, as
well as CDs, books, DVDs, wine, flowers
and gifts, kitchen appliances, banking
services, and mobile phones.
Morrisons had 400 stores and prided
itself on providing quality products at the
same low price across all of its U.K.
stores.
Morrisons had taken over Safeway in the
United Kingdom in 2004.
A second major hair-care competitor was Superdrug.
Superdrug had grown to become one of the largest
health and beauty retailers, with almost 700 stores
in the United Kingdom.
The company’s value offering was that of a
value retailer with a wide assortment of around
10,000 products
Superdrug identified trends (including catwalk
fashion) and transformed them into an affordable
reality.
More than 25 per cent of the company’s stores
featured a pharmacy.
Consumers were
not Brand Loyal
WHY
There was a general belief by U.K.
consumers that changing shampoo
brands produced better results than
continually using a single brand.
Trends in buying behavior led to
changing preferences.
Consumers had a large number of choices
that varied not only on brand name, but
also packaging, advertising, price,
ingredients, consistency, fragrance and so
forth.
Consumers who purchased professional
brands were largely fashion-conscious
women in the 20-35 age category.
Most Boots consumers bought both
basic and premium brands.
Customers used premium brands as a
“treat” when consumers wanted to
look and feel their best.
The Decision
Current Boots consumers and
existing purchasers of mass-market
brands were the primary target for
the promotion
No variation in product-sizes because of the
added cost and complexity involved.
No media advertising budget was allocated for this
promotion
There would be signage within the store to
promote the offer, and approximately 400
Boots stores would include signage visible
on the exterior of the store.
Average bottle size (shampoo/conditioner)
was 250 milliliters
The average pre-promotional price was £3.99
with average retail margins on premium brands
averaged 40 per cent.
Mass-market brands had an average retail
price of £2, with retailer margins of
approximately 25 per cent.
The manufacturer’s typical margin was
between eight per cent to 12 per cent on
their cost for both types of products.
Alternatives
Buy two hair-care items at regular price and
receive one free.*
Free item- least expensive of the three
items selected by the shopper.
*ALL THREE ITEMS MUST BE OF SAME BRAND
Approximately 60 per cent of these sales
would be to customers who would not
otherwise have purchased a hair care
product from Boots during the
promotional period.
He estimated that 40 per cent of
sales would be to Boots shoppers
that would not have otherwise
purchased a hair-care product
from Boots during the promotional
period.
Robinson expected that
sales during the
promotional period would
be 170 per cent of sales
that would have occurred
without the promotion.
Conservative approach to promote the brands.
Robinson estimated that sales would
increase to 150 per cent of non-promotion
sales
Fifty per cent of sales would come from
Boots customers who would not have
otherwise purchased a hair-care product
within the promotional period.
Best Alternative is “3 for 2” offer
Sales per day and number of
customers is increased more than the
other two alternatives
3 for 2 FWP 50P off
Increase in sales
per day
300% 170% 150%
Increase in
number of
customers
60% 40% 50%
CONCLUSION
Boots’ aim was to secure market leadership
in the United Kingdom in the hair-care
segment.
Competitors could not easily copy their
strategy because Boots had contracts with
some of the most prestigious salon brands
in the United Kingdom.
The celebrity hair-care brands were clearly
an important component of their strategy.
Summary
1. Situation Analysis
2. Key Challenge
3. The Company
4. History
5. UK Hair-care market
6. Marketing Strategy
7. Professional hair-care brands
8. Mass Market Brand
9. Hair-care Product Retailers
10.Consumers
11.Decisions
12.Conclusions
Created by
V. Nivetha,
PSG Tech
during an
internship
under Prof.
Sameer
Mathur,
IIM Luck now
Boots: Hair care sales promotion

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Boots: Hair care sales promotion

  • 1. Richard Ivey school of Business- Case study
  • 2. AGENDA 1. Situation Analysis 2. Key Challenge 3. The Company 4. History 5. UK Hair-care market 6. Marketing Strategy 7. Professional hair-care brands 8. Mass Market Brands 9. Hair-care Product Retailers 10.Consumers 11.Decisions 12.Conclusions
  • 3. Category & Operations Manager, Boots The Main Player is
  • 4. Dave Robinson is planning his sales promotion strategy for a line of professional hair-care products at Boots
  • 5. Robinson realized that the alternative he selected would have immediate effects on both costs and sales as well as long-term implications for the brands involved.
  • 6. 1. GET 3 FOR THE PRICE OF 2
  • 7. 2. RECEIVE A GIFT WITH PURCHASE (“GWP”)
  • 8. 3. On-pack coupon worth 50p
  • 9. One of the best known retail names in UK. Provided health and beauty products.
  • 10. Owned global differentiated brands in the self-medication market.
  • 11.
  • 12. In 1849 John Boot, an agricultural laborer opened ‘The British and American Botanic Establishment’ to provide physical comfort to the needy. Jesse, his son, took sole control of the shop in 1877, and, in 1883, established it as a private company ‘Boot and Company Limited’.
  • 13. The company began to expand with more stores in Nottingham. He wanted to be the ‘Largest, Best and Cheapest’. Sales in the 560 Boots stores across the UK amounted to over £2.5 million a year.
  • 14. Boots introduced new services Boots Opticians Insurance services ‘Boots for Men’ stores Boots Health and Beauty stores
  • 16.
  • 17. In 2000, over 60 major brands were available in the U.K. None had more than a nine per cent market share. The overall market was expected to grow by between one per cent and three per cent per year for the next five years. Severe price competition meant that volume would grow more quickly than value
  • 19. Boots desired to build a new market by using celebrity endorsements to create awareness and create an emotional attachment between consumers and the brand. Celebrity hairdressers had their own branded products, but distribution was limited to their own salons. No celebrity-endorsed products were available in retail stores.
  • 20. The relationship with Boots was lucrative for the hairdressers because it gave them access to a large percentage of U.K. consumers through Boots’ 1,300 stores. Boots worked with the celebrities to design formulations that were functionally better than existing brands. Under the agreement, Boots manufactured the products and paid a per-unit licensing fee for use of the celebrity’s brand name. In the more than five years since the first celebrity brand was introduced, Boots felt that it had not been able to sufficiently link its name with these products and hence missed on maximizing profitability.
  • 22. One of the most influential and creative hairdressers. Five prestigious London salons tending to more than 2,000 clients a week Market Awareness- Medium
  • 23. Entrepreneurial in spirit, global in impact The product range is targeted for specific hair types. Three salons in London, two in New York and one in Los Angeles. Market Awareness- Strong
  • 24. A popular hairstylist to the stars from the film, television, fashion, and music industries. Salons in London and Manchester Market Awareness- Medium
  • 25. The company’s philosophy is simple — creating sexy, contemporary catwalk looks Eight salons in the United Kingdom Market Awareness- Low
  • 26.
  • 27. Showman of all hairdressers Two salons in the United Kingdom Market Awareness- Medium
  • 28. He is known for hairstyle and hair care. Three salons in the United Kingdom Market Awareness- Low
  • 30.
  • 31. BRAND INTRODUCED DISTRIBUTION Charles Worthington 1996 Only Boots John Frieda 1996 Widely Available Nicky Clarke 1998 Widely Available Umberto Giannini 1999 Widely Available Toni & Guy January 2001 Only Boots Trevor Sorbie September 2001 Only Boots LEE Stafford September 2001 Only Boots DISTRIBUTION AND INTRODUCTION DATES
  • 32. * All products are normally available in 250 ml sizes. Their smaller Take-Away versions are normally 75 ml. ** All prices are in British pounds and per 100 ml unless otherwise stated. These prices are only applicable at Boots stores. Within a product category the prices vary because of their formulations. PRICE COMPARISON CHART
  • 34.
  • 35. Hoffman-La Roche developed Pantene in 1947 Richardson-Vicks acquired Pantene in 1983 Procter & Gamble acquired Richardson-Vicks in 1985, and in 1991, the product was reformulated as the Pantene Pro-V By 1995, it became the Best-selling hair- care brand
  • 36.
  • 37. In 1955, Leonard Lavin found Alberto Culver in Illinois Forced television networks to abandon their 60-second commercials with the introduction of 30-second ones. Globally acquired diverse firms.
  • 38.
  • 39. French Chemist, Eugene Schueller, developed an innovative hair-color formula “Auréole.” The company started exporting its products as early as 1912. The group marketed over 500 brands and more than 2,000 products in all sectors of the beauty business.
  • 40.
  • 41. The major competitors in the supermarket segment were Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Morrisons.
  • 42. Tesco was the largest supermarket chain in the United Kingdom with more than 1,800 stores and 45,000 employees.
  • 43. Sainbury’s was the second largest with 700 stores. Both Tesco and Sainsbury’s offered a wide product assortment that included traditional supermarket items and online shopping, as well as CDs, books, DVDs, wine, flowers and gifts, kitchen appliances, banking services, and mobile phones.
  • 44. Morrisons had 400 stores and prided itself on providing quality products at the same low price across all of its U.K. stores. Morrisons had taken over Safeway in the United Kingdom in 2004.
  • 45. A second major hair-care competitor was Superdrug. Superdrug had grown to become one of the largest health and beauty retailers, with almost 700 stores in the United Kingdom. The company’s value offering was that of a value retailer with a wide assortment of around 10,000 products Superdrug identified trends (including catwalk fashion) and transformed them into an affordable reality. More than 25 per cent of the company’s stores featured a pharmacy.
  • 47. WHY
  • 48. There was a general belief by U.K. consumers that changing shampoo brands produced better results than continually using a single brand.
  • 49. Trends in buying behavior led to changing preferences.
  • 50. Consumers had a large number of choices that varied not only on brand name, but also packaging, advertising, price, ingredients, consistency, fragrance and so forth.
  • 51. Consumers who purchased professional brands were largely fashion-conscious women in the 20-35 age category. Most Boots consumers bought both basic and premium brands. Customers used premium brands as a “treat” when consumers wanted to look and feel their best.
  • 52. The Decision Current Boots consumers and existing purchasers of mass-market brands were the primary target for the promotion
  • 53. No variation in product-sizes because of the added cost and complexity involved. No media advertising budget was allocated for this promotion There would be signage within the store to promote the offer, and approximately 400 Boots stores would include signage visible on the exterior of the store.
  • 54. Average bottle size (shampoo/conditioner) was 250 milliliters The average pre-promotional price was £3.99 with average retail margins on premium brands averaged 40 per cent. Mass-market brands had an average retail price of £2, with retailer margins of approximately 25 per cent. The manufacturer’s typical margin was between eight per cent to 12 per cent on their cost for both types of products.
  • 56.
  • 57. Buy two hair-care items at regular price and receive one free.* Free item- least expensive of the three items selected by the shopper. *ALL THREE ITEMS MUST BE OF SAME BRAND
  • 58. Approximately 60 per cent of these sales would be to customers who would not otherwise have purchased a hair care product from Boots during the promotional period.
  • 59.
  • 60.
  • 61. He estimated that 40 per cent of sales would be to Boots shoppers that would not have otherwise purchased a hair-care product from Boots during the promotional period. Robinson expected that sales during the promotional period would be 170 per cent of sales that would have occurred without the promotion.
  • 62.
  • 63. Conservative approach to promote the brands. Robinson estimated that sales would increase to 150 per cent of non-promotion sales Fifty per cent of sales would come from Boots customers who would not have otherwise purchased a hair-care product within the promotional period.
  • 64. Best Alternative is “3 for 2” offer Sales per day and number of customers is increased more than the other two alternatives 3 for 2 FWP 50P off Increase in sales per day 300% 170% 150% Increase in number of customers 60% 40% 50%
  • 65. CONCLUSION Boots’ aim was to secure market leadership in the United Kingdom in the hair-care segment. Competitors could not easily copy their strategy because Boots had contracts with some of the most prestigious salon brands in the United Kingdom. The celebrity hair-care brands were clearly an important component of their strategy.
  • 66. Summary 1. Situation Analysis 2. Key Challenge 3. The Company 4. History 5. UK Hair-care market 6. Marketing Strategy 7. Professional hair-care brands 8. Mass Market Brand 9. Hair-care Product Retailers 10.Consumers 11.Decisions 12.Conclusions
  • 67. Created by V. Nivetha, PSG Tech during an internship under Prof. Sameer Mathur, IIM Luck now