Every retailer, to some degree, has long had a sense of what the future of retail could look like: consumers shopping from anywhere at any time on their computers or mobile devices, stores morphing into showrooms or fulfillment centers, products being shipped for home delivery at ever-increasing speeds, and digitization everywhere.
Some forward-thinking retailers started making big investments a few years ago to prepare for—and to help shape—such a future. Others took a wait-and-see stance, expecting the trends would take time to play out.
But the future came early. In March 2020, COVID-19 shut down retail locations across the country, forcing US consumers to change their buying behaviors. Trends that had been on a multi-year trajectory saw dramatic acceleration. For example, demand for buy online, pick up in-store (BOPIS) has surged 40 percent since the start of the pandemic. Three out of every four US consumers tried new shopping channels. E-commerce volumes grew as much in the first quarter of 2020 as in the previous ten years.
Amid the unpredictability and the head-spinning pace of change, retailers mobilized—finding novel ways to continue to move products and serve customers. The retail industry has seen more innovation in the past year than it did in the prior decade. When faced with lockdowns, an array of new health and safety regulations, and volatile consumer demand, the best retailers proved resilient and agile.
The K-shaped recovery for the general economy—in which some parts bounced back more quickly while those at the bottom of the ladder struggled—applied to retail as well.
The largest businesses had the resources to adapt and have pulled away from the rest: industry leaders are delivering two to three times the shareholder returns of their less-nimble competitors.
What has set the top performers apart? And how can retailers thrive in 2021 and beyond, even amid continuing uncertainty?
The answers aren’t trivial: as the nation’s largest private-sector employer, the retail industry affects the lives and livelihoods of millions. In this report, we present research findings from the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA), with McKinsey & Company as a knowledge partner. Our analysis identified seven imperatives that can give retailers the ability to adapt to a changing consumer landscape while pursuing new opportunities.
The Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA), with McKinsey & Company as a knowledge partner, researched how retailers are approaching strategy and operations. Executives (such as CFOs, chief marketing officers, chief digital officers, and chief supply chain officers) at more than 30 US companies completed a benchmarking survey that covered more than 100 metrics and explored consumer outlook, digital acceleration, and future supply chain. The survey was augmented by in-depth interviews with top retail CEOs as well as proprietary McKinsey & Company customer research. The analyses and discussions identified the imperatives that will be critical to retail success now and in the future
The changing competitive landscape will require retailers to pursue seven imperatives. The first four will be familiar to retailers, so the challenge will be to accelerate progress. The next three imperatives represent additional strategies and efforts that will be increasingly critical in the coming years. The ideal recipe will vary by retailer, so executives should review these imperatives based on their organization’s starting point, their business strategy, and the approach that fits best with their brand’s DNA.
Become omnipotent on omnichannel Consumers will choose retailers based on ease and richness of end-to-end experience.
This time (and all the time), it’s personal Consumers expect personalized experiences and offers as table stakes; most retailers fall short of these expectations today
Turbocharge delivery - As consumer expectations approach the same day, stress on the supply chain will mount
Recalibrate talent strategies Winning the war for diverse talent, next-gen skills, and embracing a fluid workplace will give retailers a performance advantage
Pursue an eco(system)-friendly strategy Winners will embrace the networked economy to win consumer mindshare and accelerate capabilities
Take productivity from foundational to transformational Analytics and automation will enable the step change in productivity needed to fund the other imperatives
To handle shifting consumer preferences and harness the power of digital technologies, leading retailers have increased their investments and capabilities in four areas. These imperatives aren’t new: omnichannel experiences and personalization have been on retailers’ radar for years. However, the seismic impact of the pandemic—and changing consumer preferences that will endure after it abates—requires retailers to redouble their efforts in these areas.
Two-thirds of survey respondents cited the growth of omnichannel and digital shopping as the most significant trend affecting the industry—and the greatest challenge. The growth of e-commerce and demands by consumers for seamless omnichannel experiences are here to stay.
“For us, some e-commerce priorities that were previously five years out are now more of a three-year horizon. We need to more quickly understand how to satisfy that consumer and accelerate our timelines accordingly.”
Todd Vasos, CEO, Dollar General
According to McKinsey consumer response research, consumers expect to continue making more purchases online after the pandemic than before it began. E-commerce is projected to reach 25 to 40 percent of sales across categories after the pandemic abates, with an increase of two times or more for sports and leisure and home improvement goods (Exhibit 1).
As consumers continue to embrace online channels, retailers need to understand the factors behind this shift in purchasing behavior, the different expectations that accompany it, and the impact on the omnichannel ecosystem.
Today, such decisions are frequently made in a vacuum:
65% percent of retailers base store decisions on brick-and-mortar performance, with just35% percent considering the impact of such moves on omnichannel.
With the line blurring between digital and in-store purchases, a seamless omnichannel experience has evolved from a “nice to have” to a “must-have.” As Craig Menear, Chairman and CEO of The Home Depot noted,
“Our digital platform is the front door of our store. Customers are taking us down that path—purchasing online and using online platforms as the start of the shopping experience, even if it ends in the physical world.”
Craig Menear, Chairman and CEO of The Home Depot
Upgrade e-commerce capabilities to continuously and sustainably manage evolving digital demand and consumer expectations, retailers will need to upgrade their e-commerce capabilities along three dimensions:
Retailers have already begun to respond, especially on fulfillment of e-commerce orders. Nordstrom has now linked its digital and physical product offerings in its top ten markets to offer four times the selection available for next-day delivery while expanding pickup options for BOPIS to include their 249 Nordstrom Rack locations in addition to all 100 Nordstrom stores. Nordstrom CEO Erik Nordstrom expects the unexpected, saying,
“I can’t imagine anybody knowing for sure what will happen in the future—the takeaway is that our businesses have to be agile and flexible.”
Erik Nordstrom, CEO, Nordstrom
Rethink the network as the role of the store blurs
Despite the growing demand for digital experiences, brick-and-mortar stores will not disappear. They will, however, take on new roles to better support an omnichannel retail strategy. When the pandemic limited in-store shopping, for instance, 44 percent of stores served partially or fully as fulfillment centers. By 2022, survey respondents expect that number to jump to 57 percent, with stores focused primarily on providing BOPIS and ship-from-store services.
Accordingly, IKEA has added fulfillment capabilities to all of its US stores to support click-and-collect services (or curbside pickup) and contactless delivery options.
As Javier Quiñones, president and CSO at IKEA US explained,
“We are building a business model that will better meet the needs of consumers today and sets us up for success in the future. Having a strong fulfillment network is essential, which is why we accelerated the transformation of our stores to also support e-commerce with customer fulfillment. We are changing almost everything to ensure a seamless multichannel experience.”
Javier Quiñones, president and CSO at IKEA US
Dollar General has rapidly expanded its contactless shopping capabilities to respond to the spike in demand.
The retailer combined the launch of its BOPIS initiative—in 17,000 stores in just nine months—with the rollout of an app with scan-and-go technology.
How to get started“For us, some e-commerce priorities that were previously five years out are now more on a three-year horizon. We need to more quickly understand how to satisfy the consumer and accelerate our timelines accordingly.”
Todd Vasos, CEO, Dollar General
“Both experiences and fulfillment are important uses for brick-and-mortar stores. We will continue to evolve the role of the store on our continued omnichannel strategy evolution.”Mary Dillon, CEO, Ulta Beauty
Consumers expect personalized experiences and offer as table stakes; most retailers fall short of these expectations today. The pandemic has weakened brand loyalty significantly: in 2020, 76 percent of consumers changed stores, brands, or channels.
Personalization, supported by data and analytics, is a powerful tool to strengthen the connection to the brand, win consumer loyalty, and draw customers into stores. Retailers that excel in personalization have boosted revenues, reduced marketing costs, and increased both customer acquisition and satisfaction (Exhibit 2).
Yet research has revealed that most retailers are early in their personalization journey. While 100 percent of top-quartile1 retailers cited omnichannel personalization as a top-five priority, only 15 percent of retailers have fully implemented personalization across all channels.
To successfully implement omnichannel personalization, retailers will need to focus on several areas. They should coordinate corporate efforts with store teams to ensure store operations and frontline associate teams master new tools and engage with customers in a personalized way.
Cross-channel activities should be integrated by linking the often siloed in-store systems and marketing technology stack.
In addition, retailers will need to work to change customer behavior by integrating personalization into the in-store experience and encouraging customers to “opt-in” by downloading and engaging with an app, interacting with a screen, or sharing information with an associate in a live interaction.
Last, measurement capabilities can be built by developing a methodology to interpret and make decisions on omnichannel tests. Some of these efforts may start small, but retailers should launch them with a long-term vision of omnichannel personalization at scale in mind.
Retailers should look to implement omnichannel personalization at each step of the end-to-end shopping experience—previsit, during the store visit, and positivist. Doing so has the potential to increase traffic, conversion, basket size, and retention.
To capture the potential of omnichannel personalization, leading retailers are making investments in the sophisticated, largely digital capabilities needed to create distinctive customer experiences. A critical element of personalization is building better data and insights on customers, an asset that also generates additional value across the value chain. Targeted ads based on previous purchases highlight products that will help customers continue or complete current projects.
To keep up with the growing preference for online showings, IKEA is experimenting with 3D home design and investing in augmented reality technology that enables customers to test design choices using their phones.
In November 2020, Walgreens launched a reinvented loyalty program with a redesigned mobile app for health and wellness items. Customers can now pick up orders in-store, curbside, or through their local pharmacy’s drive-thru.
Ulta Beauty is using digital tools such as GLAMlab, its virtual try-on feature. In 2020, the company increased the number of SKUs available via the tool by more than 550 percent. Since the COVID19 crisis began, guest engagement with GLAMlab has increased meaningfully, with product views rising 12-fold in 2020.
Our research suggests the ROI for personalization will quickly outpace that of traditional mass marketing. At Modern Retail Collective, McKinsey’s concept store at the Mall of America, collecting an email address linked to a personal profile was worth 2.5 times the average sale.
Of course, personalization efforts must balance potential legal and reputational risks around personalization by, for example, prioritizing data privacy and the prudent use of technologies such as facial recognition. While data privacy requirements continue to evolve, retailers can benefit from a proactive approach that moves beyond compliance to opportunity, reinforcing customer trust.
As consumer expectations approach the same day, stress on the supply chain will mount
The pandemic has elevated the importance of order fulfillment— specifically, the speed at which retailers can deliver goods. Since the definition of warp speed looks quite different by category, retailers must understand customer expectations and then carve out a distinct value proposition.
For example, we have seen a divergence between the strategies of specialty retailers and grocery and hypermarket retailers. Retailers expect dramatic changes in customer expectations for delivery over the next three years.
The vast majority of consumers—over 90 percent—see two to three days as the baseline, and 30 percent expect same-day delivery.
Targets vary by retail category: two or three days for specialty, same day for grocery, and within the hour for prepared foods.
In response, retailers are setting ambitious targets for delivery times that will require significant investments to propel their supply chain fulfillment capabilities.
More than 75 percent of the specialty retail supply chain leaders in our sample have made two-day delivery a priority, and 42 percent hope to offer same-day delivery by 2022. Meeting these goals will require trimming at least two to three days from today’s delivery times.
Grocery and hypermarket retailers are eyeing similar investments in supply chain capabilities to keep up with shifting consumer preferences.
E-commerce penetration in grocery, which increased from 4 percent in 2019 to 10 percent in 2020, is expected to rise to 30 percent by 2024.
Many grocery retailers already have established partnerships with marketplace providers such as DoorDash, Instacart, and Uber to enable delivery within a matter of hours. In addition, grocers are devoting millions of dollars to upgrade their own fulfillment capabilities through the adoption of robotic process automation (RPA) technologies.
Our survey found that 80 percent of retailers plan to concentrate their 2022 supply chain spending on addressing the constant demands on e-commerce fulfillment.
Automating warehouse roles is the top digitization and automation priority for 64 percent of retailers. These expectations add tremendous pressure on already lean supply chains, and these initiatives could add 50 to 200 basis points on a retailer’s profit and loss (P&L). Although such investments could have a detrimental impact on profitability in the near term, they nevertheless set up retailers for success in the longer term.
Delivering at warp speed will require several changes. Most retailers will need to build, buy, or borrow the requisite capabilities to expedite delivery and give customers more visibility into timing, as several leading retailers have done.
For example:
Retailers that fail to upgrade their fulfillment models run the real risk of their supply chain adversely affecting P&L. However, meeting rising consumer expectations for the speedy delivery and achieving ambitious targets will require executives to rethink and invest in the supply chain.
If you’re on the journey, how to accelerate
Consumers are finally voting with their wallets for sustainability and broader purpose
Over the past year, social justice has dominated the national conversation and pervaded the private sector. Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) factors became increasingly important in 2020, bringing other trends into sharp relief. Consumers are holding companies accountable for their actions to a greater degree and now expect businesses to actively support ESG principles. Although our research survey did not include questions about ESG principles, all of the CEOs we interviewed raised unprompted the importance of consumer sentiment and the scrutiny on values and corporate social responsibility. As Javier Quiñones, president and CSO at IKEA US, noted, “Being a purpose-led brand starts with the ‘why’ behind what we are doing. For IKEA, it always comes back to our mission to make life better for people, and that’s not just our customers but society as a whole. People will not only buy from but also buy into brands that stand up for their values.” Consumers, particularly millennials and Gen Zers, are indeed voting with their wallets, rewarding companies that have a clear purpose and adhere to ESG principles (Exhibit 4).
One-third of survey respondents reported they had stopped using a brand based on its social actions, and 71 percent indicated they would lose trust in a brand forever if it placed profits over people.
At the same time, consumers are willing to pay more for products that meet their values.
"“Being a purpose led brand starts with the ‘why’ behind what we are doing. People will not only buy from but also buy into brands that stand up for their values.” Javier Quiñones,
President and CSO at IKEA US
Beyond consumers, a broader set of stakeholders (including employees, investors, and board members) are applying pressure to companies.
For example, Amazon and Google workers walked off the job to draw attention to their demands on climate change. Some retailers have taken steps to provide more support and development opportunities for employees—Bed Bath & Beyond has raised starting wages, and Walmart, which has also boosted its wages, established ambitious reskilling programs to help workers advance in their careers.
During the past five years, products marketed for their sustainability accounted for just 16 percent of the consumer-packaged goods (CPG) market but generated 55 percent of the total growth.
According to McKinsey research, 70 percent of consumers will pay a premium of more than 5 percent for a green product as long as its quality matches that of a nongreen alternative. Retailers understand the link between “doing good” and bottom-line impact. Most (80 percent) believe that company actions matter to consumers, and 64 percent believe those actions affect purchase decisions.
Accordingly, leading brands are setting increasingly aggressive ESG goals. As Alex Gourlay, Co-COO of Walgreens Boots Alliance, observed, “Corporate social responsibility covers a huge range of business activities and has now come of age. Companies now really do walk the walk in their commitment to the communities they serve, the environment, and their people; and take steps to monitor and evaluate their performance and achievements in those areas. This is now a function that is at the heart of every business.”
Regarding the environment, Microsoft pledged in 2020 to go carbon positive by 2050 by removing more greenhouse gases (GHG) from the atmosphere than the company has created since 1975. Walmart reinvented supply chain decarbonization and formed industry groups such as the Rainforest Alliance for coffee.
Similarly, Giant Eagle announced a goal of being free of single-use plastics in its operations by 2025 and eliminating single-use plastic bags from all stores. In February 2021, VF Corporation announced its goal to eliminate all single-use plastic packaging, including poly bags, by 2025. Best Buy signed the Climate Pledge, to be carbon neutral across its business by 2040—a decade earlier than its previous goal of 2050—and offering products to help customers reduce emissions by 20 percent by 2030.
Starbucks signaled its commitment to social causes by extending benefits such as upskilling and improved access to higher education, mental health support, and healthcare to part-time employees.
Take a stand - 80% of retailers believe company actions matter to consumers, and 64% believe those actions affect purchase decisions.
How to get started
The pandemic reinforced that the competitive landscape can change nearly overnight. Therefore, retailers will need to build new capabilities to ensure they can adapt, with a focus on tech-based abilities and strategies.
5. Recalibrate talent strategies - Winning the war for diverse talent, next-gen skills, and embracing a fluid workplace will give retailers a performance advantage.
6. Pursue an eco(system)- friendly strategy Winners will embrace the networked economy to win consumer mindshare and accelerate capabilities.
7. Take productivity from foundational to transformational - Analytics and automation will enable the step change in productivity needed to fund the other imperatives.
Retailers are short of the workforce and capabilities to succeed in the digital-dominated world.
To close the skills gap, companies will need to reimagine their strategies for sourcing and deploying talent.
Retailers recognize the magnitude of the gap in digital talent and are planning to increase their digital full-time equivalents (FTEs) by more than 50 percent. Even that rise will be insufficient, meaning that retailers will need to continue to redouble their efforts as the world becomes more analytics-driven.
As retailers evaluate their hiring, development, and retention efforts for digital talent, they should explore the following actions:
The quick move to remote work during the pandemic has greatly expanded the available talent pool for retailers. If proximity is no longer a prerequisite, they are in a position to upgrade key positions.
When considering remote options, retailers must assess which roles work well in a remote location or office; the importance of human and physical interaction is one important lens. Retailers will need to find ways to access remote talent pools while still maintaining the company culture.
Industry leaders are revisiting their location strategies to help them attract and retain the right talent.
Retailers can significantly expand their talent pools for hourly and frontline associates by tapping into on-demand labor models such as the gig economy.
This independent workforce is large—68 million people, or 27 percent of the US working-age population—and is expected to account for the majority of the workforce by 2027.
During the next three years, 70 percent of survey respondents plan to rely more heavily on flexible labor. Industry leaders are already forging partnerships with new marketplaces:
However, this flexibility comes with risks, including erosion of brand identity and company culture, legal and regulatory issues, and an uneven customer experience. Retailers that go down this road must consider the uncertainty and potential drawbacks and implement the appropriate quality assurance and culture initiatives. Notably, using a flexible workforce doesn’t alleviate the need to invest in reskilling in-store and other workers to adapt to a new omnichannel strategy; in some circumstances, it can further complicate the training picture.
Diversity and inclusion (D&I) loom especially large in the consumer-facing retail industry. Missteps at any of its many customer touchpoints can seriously damage corporate reputation and sales, as demonstrated by the willingness of three-quarters of Generation Z consumers to abandon companies that run ad campaigns seen as misogynistic, racist, or homophobic.
Leading retailers are making commitments to increase workforce diversity and reflect the country’s diversity with the products they sell.
Next-gen talent
But increasing diversity in the retail industry will be challenging. COVID-19 has accelerated the industry’s use of automation and artificial intelligence (AI), and these advanced technologies bring the threat of workforce displacement. In addition, more diverse talent pools can lack access to employer-sponsored upskilling, external certification programs, and the technology needed to ensure their qualifications are in line with job opportunities in an evolving job market.
Retailers committed to strengthening D&I in their talent strategies will need to understand their starting points by analyzing data and the voices of employees and customers to see how their companies perform on role and location metrics and reviewing core processes to locate risks and biases (for example, hiring and selling practices).
They must also balance short-term initiatives and longer-term programs—for example, engaging store managers and associates in developing action plans, holding managers accountable for making store operations more inclusive, and establishing collaborative partnerships with external resources (such as Target with the Hispanic Association on Corporate Responsibility).
Six of the seven global companies with the highest market caps participate in ecosystems—interconnected sets of services that enable users to fulfill a range of needs in one integrated experience.
We expect the development of ecosystems, especially those convened by retailers, to accelerate. Analysts suggest that ecosystems across a dozen sectors will collectively function as a $60 trillion economy by 2025. That makes developing an ecosystem strategy imperative for survival: even if retailers aren’t positioned to establish their own ecosystem, they will have to figure out how to compete, participate, or coexist. Our research identified five platform archetypes, which vary based on where they focus in the value chain (Exhibit 5).
Further, some industries are a more natural fit for certain archetypes. A retailer considering an ecosystem position must define the role it is well suited to play based on its business strategy, ambition, risk appetite, financial resources, and existing capabilities.
Companies that participate in ecosystems shift from operating “pipeline businesses” (creating products and services that meet specific customer needs) to operating “platform businesses” (matching customers with exchanges of goods, services, and social currency).
Ecosystems enable large-scale automation and collect massive amounts of valuable information, ranging from logistics data to behavioral data. By developing an ecosystem, traditional retailers have the potential to transform and leapfrog the competition, counter challenges from digital rivals, and engage with customers in new ways.
The leading Chinese retailer Suning is a case in point. In the late 1990s, Suning achieved offline market leadership in home appliances. From 2010 to 2015, Suning established and scaled an online presence and began building an e-commerce ecosystem with expanded categories (grocery, books, and apparel) and a marketplace model that attracted third-party merchants. By 2019, Suning qualified as a full-category omnichannel retailer.
Among US retailers, Amazon has excelled in using the ecosystem approach to diversify its business by building an ever-expanding, self-reinforcing network of businesses, including retail, cloud computing, devices, advertising, logistics, finance and payments, healthcare, and more.
Amazon famously started as a bookseller, became a market leader in cloud services and advertising (the third largest for digital), and is now attempting to do the same for healthcare and pharmaceuticals. The company continues to see a gap, fill the need, create new products, and expand as an ecosystem. Other retailers are following suit. Mass retailers now all have marketplaces, which will give them a captive audience for the suite of services they are rolling out, as well as the scale to expand. In recent years, Target has been on a path to transform itself from a pipeline to platform business through a stores as-hubs strategy that places stores at the center of its omnichannel platform.
Target has made significant strides in building out its media network (Roundel), investments in delivery capabilities and technologies (Shipt, Deliv), and partnerships with other national brands (for example, store-in-store partnerships including Starbucks, Disney, Apple, and Ulta Beauty; the Ulta Beauty partnership will roll out to more than 100 Target stores starting this year).
Partnerships and ecosystems Retailers considering an ecosystem must define the role they are well suited to play.
• Analyze and learn from successful ecosystem players. Beyond learning from operating practices, retailers must also understand the type of talent needed and the necessary investments in technology and infrastructure. More holistically, it is important to cultivate the culture of innovation and disruption these ecosystem players foster.
• Decide what role the company will play in the ecosystem— orchestrator, service provider, or participant. Some retailers may design their business and operating model so services can be used by other retailers—think Amazon Web Services or Target’s Shipt.
• Choose a business model that will create shareholder value without compromising the brand’s integrity. This exercise involves scenario analysis to understand the full financial rewards of different outcomes and the impact on valuation. When Walmart opened full-service clinics to expand its healthcare reach, the reward was an improved valuation.
Retailers will need to prioritize truly transformational investments. Our research uncovered five areas that hold particular promise. Enable stores with tech Technologies such as self-checkout have become commonplace in the industry. In the past 12 months, we have seen an acceleration to extend similar capabilities across stores. Automated inventory management through real-time image processing improves both productivity and in-stock positions for customers. Digitizing administrative activities, through tools such as AI-enabled labor scheduling, advanced insights platforms (instead of scorecards), or digital compliance tools enable managers to get out of the backroom and onto the sales floor. IoT sensors help preemptively address hardware issues in cooler doors or point-of-sale systems to prevent costly downtime. Together, we believe advanced levers like these can increase profitability by about 300 basis points over time. Automate the supply chain and invest in solutions to increase visibility With an e-commerce forecast to reach more than 20 percent of sales (some segments and retailers have already exceeded this threshold), many retailers are still operating fulfillment networks built for penetration of less than 10 percent. As retailers scale their fulfillment networks, supply-chain automation can help address consumer demand for speedy delivery while reducing cost per order. In particular, we see the adoption of more flexible technologies such as goods-to-person AGVs (automated guided vehicles) and person-to-goods picking robots (and “cobots”) that can be operated in smaller-scale facilities. These technologies can speed the processing of consumer orders by 300 percent and provide a positive ROI for retailers. Automation of the distribution center alone could boost profitability by 300 to 700 basis points. In addition, retailers are investing in delivery experience management technologies to improve the consumer experience and provide visibility across all points in the supply chain, from distribution center processing times to delivery location and returns processing. These investments have helped retailers improve customer satisfaction scores by up to 10 percent while enabling incremental revenue capture. Launch tech-enabled, business-backed indirect spending optimization Leading retailers recognize indirect third-party spending, typically amounting to 10 to 12 percent or more of revenue, is a critical driver of profitability and shareholder value. To distance themselves from competitors, they are launching ambitious efforts to dramatically reduce spending by empowering their procurement organization with two game-changers. First, leaders are introducing tech-enabled, advanced analytics approaches to identify and unlock more sophisticated levers through negotiations. Second, they are partnering more closely with business functions and using granular data, analytics, and design thinking to challenge what and how goods and services are being purchased and identify inefficiencies. Through these efforts, retailers are capturing a bottom-line impact of 100 to 140 basis points or more. Boost private-brand innovation and sourcing excellence Private brands have evolved from lower-cost alternatives to A-level brands to competitive weapons for retailers. They provide an opportunity to strengthen customer loyalty through a differentiated, innovative offering and to increase margins. Leading retailers are using product design and development in collaboration with suppliers to support innovation, penetration, and growth. They are also using next-generation sourcing tools to completely change the way they negotiate with vendors: from a retail-backed target costing to hit a certain initial markup to Productivity Automation of the distribution center alone could boost profitability by 300 to 700 basis points.
“The days of only one function driving any successful initiative are behind us. Everything we do requires strong coordination of cross-functional teams—from digital to store operations to merchants and more, everyone plays an integral role. And it all starts with a clear understanding of consumer expectations and the right prioritization.” —Brian Cornell, Chairman and CEO, Target
a cost-forward approach, by developing deep expertise in costing engineering, competitive sourcing, and advanced fact-based negotiations. In this way, retailers are achieving 10 to 20 percent growth in private-brand sales while improving margins in this category by 500 to 800 basis points. Automate business support functions Automation and analytics have the dual benefit of boosting profitability while also freeing up resources to focus on the tasks that matter (such as new growth opportunities). In our experience, merely automating repetitive tasks can free up 20 to 30 percent of the time across functions such as finance, HR, IT, procurement, and legal. However, few retailers currently have the capabilities or tools required to unlock this productivity. To achieve these results, retailers must consider the true long-term cost of not investing in productivity improvements. Too often, retailers overestimate their business-as-usual performance or the initial investment needed to achieve benefits from automation. The reality is that available technologies, when applied to simplify core business processes, can capture a large proportion of this benefit. For instance, up to 40 percent of tasks in finance functions can be automated based on available technologies in a short period of time.
Few if any retailers will be able to address all of these imperatives at scale and at the same time—the overall cost and complexity will be too high.
Therefore, the first step will be to set priorities. Some imperatives, such as prioritizing ESG principles and attracting next-generation talent, are related and may make sense to tackle in tandem. However, retailers will need to balance a range of trade-offs, such as the tension between speedy delivery (send lots of boxes), sustainability efforts (reduce the number of boxes shipped), and the challenge of offering a broad assortment and personalizing the shopping experience.
The key to striking the right balance is fidelity to the retailer’s brand promise.
“How well you create a value proposition is the cornerstone of the brand’s ability to survive.”
Kevin Holt, CEO of Ahold Delhaize USA,
The post-pandemic environment will require actions on the imperatives tailored to the individual brand promise’s DNA. What does the retailer want the brand to stand for, and how can embracing the imperatives strengthen the retailer’s ability to deliver that brand promise? For example, a retailer committed to fulfilling digital demand might prioritize developing an assortment that enables more efficient logistics to offset the higher operational costs associated with digital fulfillment.
During the past year, many retailers shifted course and innovated at a speed they once thought impossible. Now is not the time to slow down.
Retailers that can accelerate their progress with targeted investments, embrace new approaches to talent and ecosystems, and free up resources to support promising ventures have the potential to become leaders in the industry for years to come.
Source: - This is a copy of research finding from the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA), with McKinsey & Company as a knowledge partner.