The rise of the endless aisle is changing the seller/buyer relationship in retail. Every major big-box retailer, for instance, has dramatically expanded its assortments by millions of SKUs and want to list every product in every category they carry on the website. On the brand side, dropshipping has enabled brands to increase their assortments across and within retailers, and the competition is now for top search results on the biggest e-commerce sites and Google, rather than a negotiation for limited physical shelf space.
Obviously, this means the relationship between brands and retailers has had to be reimagined. Collaboration has become the key to success: In fact, according to the State of the Retail Supply Chain 2016 report, nearly 44% of retailers believe that better collaboration with suppliers is a top-three issue in the areas of supply chain planning and execution. In addition, Accenture found that 75% of CPG manufacturers expected improved collaboration with retailers through digital transformation.
In addition, retailers are asking far more of brands when it comes to data delivery. This makes sense — in the old days (believe it or not, as recently as just a couple of years ago) when retailers only onboarded the SKUs that fit on their physical shelves and in warehouses, they could afford to do their own content creation for merchandising.
Now, this is clearly impractical — no retailer has enough staff to take photos and write copy for the thousands upon thousands of products on their site, let alone personalize that content for their unique audience.
Instead, retailers want more of that content from their partner brands, who now have to turn around and provide unique content that works for each retailer, because each retailer has different target customers, website strategies, mobile apps and category structures.
The Big Retail Relationship Opportunity
These new retail expectations are a massive opportunity for brands to differentiate themselves from competition that doesn’t step up to the plate. In addition, the brand also has complete control over their content, within retailer guidelines, to make sure it is presented properly on the digital shelf.
Today, the brand serves less of a salesperson and more as a merchandising partner. You can boost your supplier-partner relationship by:
The bottom line is that for retailers and brands, merchandising operations has moved front and center — and sales is no longer just about, well, sales. Instead, it’s about communicating about your entire catalog with retail partners, rather than just a handful of products on a shelf so that the consumer can learn about your product no matter where they shop. With that in mind, your relationship with key retailers will grow, evolve, and, ultimately, thrive in today’s digital retail universe.
To read more about taking your brand-retailer relationships to the next level, click here to download Winning at Distributed Commerce.