By Saabira Chaudhuri
The world's biggest brands are under siege from an army of
insurgents. Unilever PLC, the maker of Dove soap and Hellmann's
mayonnaise, is fighting back with guerrilla tactics of its own.
The Anglo-Dutch packaged-goods giant resorted to a marketing
prank last year to try to outflank new competitors of its TreSemmé
and Suave shampoos. In July, it launched a copycat high-protein,
low-sugar ice cream after a startup usurped its brand, Breyers, as
America's favorite pint. And in India, executives sought out
Ayurvedic doctors to help whip up a turmeric face wash and a
clove-oil toothpaste to compete with a celebrity yogi's line.
"We have to match them in terms of insight, speed and the
ability, frankly, not to be 110% sure all the time that what you've
got is going to work," said Unilever Chief Financial Officer Graeme
Pitkethly, who is helping to spearhead the company's globe-spanning
reorganization to respond to the new, local competition.
The success of that effort is far from assured. The world's
biggest brands are facing a broad-based revolt among shoppers,
threatening a business model that has served them, and their
investors, for decades. Consumers in rich countries once embraced
the consistency, convenience and affordability of their offerings,
from disposable razors to ready-to-boil ravioli. In other parts of
the world, a growing middle class clamored for many of the same
trusted, Western brands.
Investors loved these standbys, too, for their dependable if
modest growth. Consumers needed these home, personal-care and food
staples in good times and bad, the thinking went. In past sales
downturns, companies ratcheted up research and development --
rolling out "new and improved" versions -- and tapped their vast
marketing budgets.
Today, that isn't good enough. Shoppers have gravitated in
droves toward smaller, niche or locally made products. In many
cases, they are seeking out healthy alternatives and more natural
ingredients. Manufacturing costs have fallen, allowing small
players to seize quickly on trends. Social media and e-commerce
have made marketing and distribution easier.
"Basically there are no entry barriers," says Peter Ter Kulve, a
20-year Unilever veteran tapped as its "chief transformation
officer" to lead the counterattack.
More than a decade ago, he said, Unilever centralized decision
making, believing consumers in similar income brackets, from Miami
to Mumbai, would be drawn to the same global brands. Instead, "the
more things globalize, the more people want to affiliate with
everything that is local," he said. "This has led to unbelievable
fragmentation."
The global market share of the top 15 beauty and personal-care
companies fell to 51.8% in 2016 from 52.5% in 2011, according to
Euromonitor. Meanwhile, the share of the next 85 grew to 19.8% from
18.1%.
The stakes are especially high for Unilever. The company was
formed in 1929, when a British soap maker founded in the Victorian
era combined forces with a slightly older Dutch margarine producer.
Today, it remains a global giant in two of the consumer-goods
sectors hardest hit by changing consumer tastes and the rise of
smaller entrants: home and personal-care products like kitchen
cleaners and Q-tips, and packaged food like tea and soup.
Some of the world's biggest investors say these big brands are
doomed if they don't change radically. In December, veteran
activist investor Nelson Peltz won a highly public battle for a
board seat at Procter & Gamble Co., maker of Gillette razors
and Tide detergent. He is pushing for a massive overhaul at the
Cincinnati giant to retool its approach to selling consumer goods
around the world. P&G says the same big brands that have
powered it through past decades remain relevant today and just need
to be presented in different ways, using different media.
Switzerland-based Nestlé SA, the world's biggest packaged-food
company, has an activist investor of its own in American
billionaire Dan Loeb. Nestlé's new CEO, Mark Schneider, has been
snapping up small, local brands -- such as Sweet Earth, a vegan
line of frozen food -- to cushion falling sales of its older brands
like Lean Cuisine and Stouffer's. "Thirty, forty years ago being
global almost automatically meant 'this is cool,'" Mr. Schneider
said in September. "These days the head-start belongs to a lot of
the local things."
The S&P 500 consumer-staples index, which includes companies
that make both personal-care products and food, was up 10.46% in
2017, gaining ground at just over half the rate of the broader
S&P 500.
Early last year, Unilever found itself in the crosshairs, too,
after Kraft Heinz Co. launched a surprise $143-billion takeover
bid. Unilever Chief Executive Paul Polman fended off the approach,
but executives were shaken by the unwelcome bid.
Unilever shares rallied in February following Kraft's approach
and kept rising most of the year as Mr. Polman announced a share
buyback and the sale of the company's spreads business, among other
moves, and raised its dividend. Its stock price sank after a dire
third-quarter sales report in October, but was still up 37% for the
year.
Mr. Pitkethly, the CFO, unveiled in 2016 what he called the
company's biggest shake-up in a decade, pushing more
decision-making to local executives and giving them more say over
how and when to launch new products. The company is also cutting
costs.
Unilever says the changes have helped speed up its reactions to
new threats and opportunities. The death of Thailand's king in
October 2016 triggered a year-long period of mourning there.
Unilever's Thai unit launched Breeze Black, a detergent formulated
for black clothes, in 12 weeks -- about a quarter of the usual
launch time for a new product.
The company increased the number of products it launched for
local markets by over 50% in 2017. At the same time it has scaled
back the number of global launches but increased their size,
rolling out pints of Magnum ice cream and a Dove variant for babies
across 20 markets in one year. The restructuring "enables us to be
more global, more local," said home-care head Nitin Paranjpe.
Critics, though, say the restructuring hasn't gone far
enough.
"We think big incumbents -- however well managed -- are going to
continue to struggle against the depredations of the
'ankle-biters'," said RBC analyst James Edwardes Jones.
There have been missteps. Local teams have on occasion hustled
to push out new products -- without some of the time-consuming
market research of the past -- and have been disappointed.
Unilever's India unit rushed out a masala mix in 75-gram zip-lock
pouches under its popular Knorr brand, only to discover that
Indians prefer the 50-gram and 100-gram cartons competitors
offered. The new mix also didn't account for variations in how
people in different regions of India use spices.
Unilever says such mistakes pay off. "It's better to experiment
in a couple of markets and learn by doing, improving, iterating
with consumers, and then when it works try to roll it out to other
places," Mr. Ter Kulve said.
In some other key battles, Unilever is being outfoxed. Halo Top,
a privately held low-sugar, high-protein ice cream, exploded from a
kitchen experiment seven years ago to become a household name. When
the Los Angeles-based brand became America's best-selling ice-cream
pint last year, executives at Unilever's premium brand, Ben &
Jerry's, were stunned.
"It's all they talked about," said a former Ben & Jerry's
executive, referring to former colleagues.
Marketing of the multibillion-dollar brand is still built around
its founders, Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, who sold the
higher-priced, natural-ingredients ice cream to Unilever in 2000.
Because of that branding, Unilever felt Ben & Jerry's couldn't
take a run directly at Halo Top, whose magic ingredient and
sweetening agent is sugar alcohol, the former executive said.
Instead, Unilever turned to its lower-priced Breyers brand, and
rolled out an answer over the summer: Breyers Delights uses sugar
alcohol, too, and mimics Halo Top's packaging -- splashing its
calorie and protein content in big numbers on the front of cartons.
But the new product hasn't yet done much to shore up Breyers'
position.
Mr. Pitkethly in October estimated Halo Top had about 5% of the
overall U.S. ice- cream market, 1.5% of which it stole from
Unilever. He expects a pickup for the companies' brands this year
but says Unilever's reaction to Halo Top is still "not quick
enough."
Halo Top's 38-year-old CEO Justin Woolverton says he has seen
the "copycat brands" from Unilever and Nestlé -- which launched new
high-protein, low-calorie variants under its Skinny Cow brand --
but is focused on raising brand awareness and getting into more
stores. "We are very, very differentiated from old- school brands,"
he said. "We understand social media out there because we are a
younger company."
Unilever wasn't supposed to have this kind of problem. It sells
products in 190 countries, making most of its revenue from emerging
markets where its roots stretch back to colonial days. Over the
decades, it has worked to tweak its biggest global brands to
account for regional tastes. In Indonesia, for example, it says its
Sunsilk shampoo is formulated for hijab-wearing women who
complained about oily and sweaty scalps.
More recently, though, it hasn't been able to keep up. One
strategy it and other big companies have used to strike back: buy
the upstarts. After rebuffing Kraft Heinz, Mr. Polman has made a
string of acquisitions and investments, including Brazilian organic
packaged-foods maker Mãe Terra; Carver Korea, a Seoul-based maker
of toners and moisturizers; Beauty Bakerie, a six-year-old San
Diego-based online makeup brand aimed at millennials; and Pukka
Herbal, a British herbal-tea brand.
Unilever executives, however, believe the only way to win the
war is to take the fight behind enemy lines.
Take shampoo. In recent years, a handful of small high-end
brands in the U.S. have turned the decades-old shampoo wars between
P&G-owned Pantene and Unilever's TreSemmé into a free-for-all.
Online subscription beauty services like Birchbox and specialty
stores like Sephora provide new avenues for pricey niche brands
that cultivate a more personal link to consumers.
Jen Atkin, the hairdresser for the Kardashians, uses Instagram
to boost sales for her new brand, Ouai, which sells on Birchbox for
$28 for a 10-ounce bottle. Ms. Atkin says she crowdsources to
unearth concerns about hair health and hair-color preferences,
calling the feedback "invaluable."
"Bigger brands that aren't having that same conversation really
stand to lose out," said Dana Aidekman, merchandising head for
Birchbox's hair division.
Unilever has tried to turn the tables. In poring over data
gleaned from social media, Jennifer Bremner, marketing director for
Unilever's lower-priced Suave shampoo brand, was struck by one
conclusion: Women tended to be skeptical of quality if prices were
low. At Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Suave sells for under $3 for a
30-ounce bottle.
Trying to blow up that perception, Ms. Bremner and a team of
three fell back on a tried-and-true, big-brand gimmick: an
internet-era version of the grocery-aisle blind-taste test. They
repackaged Suave in squat, understated white-and- peach bottles,
labeled it evaus -- Suave spelled backward -- and sent it out to
beauty bloggers.
Fashion blogger Kathleen Harper recalls getting evaus shampoo,
conditioner and hair serum last year. She thought they were
"boutique and high-end," the 25-year-old said.
After trying evaus, Ms. Harper was invited to a studio in
Manhattan to be part of what she was told was a casting call to
advertise the new brand. Halfway through an on-camera discussion, a
producer let her in on the prank. Unilever made a video of her
surprise reaction, along with those of other bloggers, and used it
as part of an online campaign for Suave. Subsequent market research
showed "a significant improvement in quality perception" among
millennials, according to a spokeswoman.
In India, the insurgent is Patanjali Ayurved Ltd., founded by
Baba Ramdev, known across the country for his TV yoga sessions.
Eleven years ago, he started selling a line of soaps, creams, jams
and juices based on Ayurveda, an ancient Indian system of medicine
rooted in complex herb and mineral therapies. Patanjali now sells
about 450 products, including a soap containing dung and urine from
cows.
"They're natural products, Indian products," said Bangalore
retiree Kusumprasad as she left a Patanjali megastore, where
customers are greeted by a life-size image of Baba Ramdev dressed
in saffron robes.
"Multinationals look at the market size and then plan; we look
at how can we help people and propagate Ayurveda," said Acharya
Balkrishna, the CEO of Patanjali, who started the company in 2006
with fellow yogi Baba Ramdev and doesn't take a salary.
Hindustan Unilever Ltd. is by far India's biggest consumer-goods
seller, but its grip is slipping. Its market share for beauty and
personal care is now 25%, down from 27.8% six years ago, according
to Euromonitor. Patanjali, meanwhile, has built up a 1% share --
enough to make it a top-20 player in the country in just over a
decade.
Unilever has long sold tweaked, "natural" versions of its big
global brands like Dove, Sunsilk and Clinic Plus in India. After
Patanjali exploded onto the scene, executives decided "we need to
play a much more comprehensive role in the natural space," said
Sandeep Kohli, head of personal care at Hindustan Unilever. "We
said, OK, now we go for it, and we go for it big time."
In 2016, Unilever bought Ayurvedic hair-oil brand Indulekha.
Separately it joined with one of India's best known Ayurvedic
pharmacies to create a new line of personal-care products under its
little-known Ayush brand. Unilever executives contributed know-how
about the smells and textures Indian consumers liked, based on
decades of traditional market research. Ayurvedic doctors at a
74-year-old pharmacy in Coimbatore, in the south Indian state of
Tamil Nadu, meshed that with recipes dating back thousands of
years.
They concocted a face wash made from turmeric and other
ingredients, boiled together for days. For a new soap, they used
clarified butter treated with water more than 100 times to soften
the emulsion. The marketing spiel: a 5,000-year-old Ayurvedic
solution to modern beauty problems.
Unilever has rolled out 36 new Ayurvedic shampoos, soaps,
moisturizers and other products in a little over a year. It
eschewed market research ahead of time, relying instead on customer
feedback. After what the company said was a good reception in
southern India, it is now introducing the line nationwide.
"Unilever was never mindlessly global, but we've realized that
we need to get much more fast, much more agile," Mr. Pitkethly
said. "There's nothing that Patanjali does, or any local competitor
does, that's not replicable."
Write to Saabira Chaudhuri at saabira.chaudhuri@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 02, 2018 11:37 ET (16:37 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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