The consumer product goods (CPG) category still has a lot of gains to make in ecommerce. Dr Pepper Snapple Group adopted an agile content creation strategy across its large portfolio of brands to take advantage of digital opportunities and are reaping the rewards. Jordan St. Marie, senior manager of ecommerce marketing at Dr Pepper, shares three things every CPG brand can do based on his successful experience enhancing product content on Walmart.com.
According to Forrester Research, U.S. online sales are expected to reach $523 billion in the next few years, up 56% from $335 billion in 2015. For any CPG brand, today’s shopping experience means focusing on the digitally empowered consumer and ensuring products can be found no matter how he or she decides to shop.
Dr Pepper Snapple Group addressed this new level of demand for product content, including consistent product descriptions and images everywhere consumers shop online — including when they search; are on a mobile device; are on a retailer’s website; and are on social media.
Dr Pepper implemented the Salsify product experience management (PXM) platform to take advantage of digital opportunities in the CPG space. According to Jordan Ste. Marie, senior manager of ecommerce marketing at Dr Pepper Snapple Group, while ecommerce is still a small piece of Dr Pepper’s business today, it holds some of the highest growth potential.
“On one retailer alone, we’ve seen triple-digit growth over the last two years in part due to the significant effort we’ve made to optimize our digital shelf,” Ste. Marie said in a recent case study, "Digital Content Partnerships."
Traditional ecommerce winners like apparel and technology are no longer the only ones reaping the benefits — CPG companies are also seeing big results. According to data analytics firm 1010data, CPG ecommerce sales increased a whopping 42% in 2015, well ahead of overall growth in ecommerce and driven heavily by Amazon subscription sales.
This is a big shift from just a few years ago, according to Euromonitor, which found that in 2013, online accounted for less than 1 percent of total sales in packaged food and about 3 percent in non-food areas. Acceleration has occurred rapidly since then, says McKinsey & Company, thanks to mobile device owners, who research products heavily online, particularly in CPG product categories such as cereal, soap and cosmetics.
Today, laundry detergent is a perfect example of a category doing big numbers in ecommerce, with sales up 85% last year, 1010 data found — Procter & Gamble Co.'s Tide leads with a 48% share. Pet food is booming as well: According to the American Pet Products Industry, the $23-billion pet food business has the highest ecommerce penetration relative to other home care categories, with ecommerce sales growing 55% in 2015 to $760 million.
Still, CPG companies need to ready themselves for continued ecommerce demand in order to meet holiday sales goals. For example, a recent Morgan Stanley report found that ecommerce still only accounts for only around 2% of grocery sales, so there is plenty of room to grow.
Before using Salsify, Dr Pepper struggled to manage digital content across a large organization and multiple IT systems and stakeholders. Ste. Marie shared three tips for other brands struggling with the same challenge:
“The best source of that content is the brands we work with — they know the products better than anyone else. With this initiative, we’re not only meeting the demands of today’s shopper; we’re empowering our suppliers to have a more direct role in merchandising their products to the end consumer,” says Steve Breen, chief merchandising officer for Walmart.com, in our "Digital Content Partnerships" case study.