Club Stores: Show us the value

Display pallets and promotional packaging—two specialties of co-packers—are gaining steam as merchandising tactics. A third tactic, sustainability, is just getting legs.

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Warehouse club stores have become more aggressive players in packaging by leveraging it as both a promotional and merchandising strategy to impact their bottom line.


Consumer packaged goods (CPG) companies, as a result, are feeling pressure to provide continually changing product assortments and packaging that help to increase transaction size at the checkout. Beyond that, packages are being required to look different for each player in the club channel to heighten the sense that new “treasures” await with each trip to the store.


Facing all these demands, CPGs that want to provide the value that gets their products into club stores—and keeps them there—can achieve the best results by aligning with contract packagers that understand the channel's packaging preferences and requirements.


Although no credible data exists on the growth of contract packaging in the club store market, co-packers who serve the channel say they are thriving. And while experts disagree on how much growth may be left in the channel, warehouse clubs will continue to be among the stores that push the leading edge of packaging strategy. Three primary players—Costco, Sam's, and BJ's—dominate the club store channel, and each is enjoying increasing sales per square foot.


The use of a co-packer for club-store packaging makes sense for two reasons. First, many CPG companies lack enough resources to serve the channel. They see the clubs as “unstable, risky, and too costly,” according to industry newsletter Warehouse Club Focus.


Michael Clayman, the publisher, is a former buyer for Costco. He explains that CPG companies lacking resources still need to track club activities, including merchandising strategies, innovative product needs, and packaging strategies. These efforts have become more difficult as CPG companies downsize and reduce costs while narrowing their focus to creating and marketing products.


The second reason why co-packers should be considered for club-store packaging is that the clubs themselves believe they now know as much about the packaging drivers that produce sales as the CPGs themselves. Clubs are identifying the packaging features they deem important and then specifying them as requirements in their stores.
On both these accounts, contract packagers can advise on current best practices and produce packages that meet or exceed current channel specifications. For example, Sam's wants the 40˝ dimension of the pallet to be the selling face while Costco wants the 48˝ side to face shoppers. But pallets for BJ's can be only 50% of the height of pallets at Sam's or Costco to conform efficiently to BJ's smaller stores.


Production line flexibility is important, too. Co-packers' flexible packaging lines and variable workforces may offer additional value because they don't distract resources away from other necessary tasks inside CPG companies.
On the other hand, Amy Zettlemoyer, director of packaging at Sam's Club, offers this message to contract packagers servicing the club market: “If you've had your filling equipment for a while, it's old and you really should look at replacing it.”


A number of factors are driving the use of contract packagers in club stores, helping them shed their image as houses of products in unimaginative packaging. Here are three:
1. The rise of the display pallet.
2. The emergence of “retailer promotional packaging.”
3. The growing importance of sustainable packaging.


The pallet as the shelf

 
Warehouse clubs offer members value prices on a limited selection of brand-name and private-label products within many product categories. They operate on rapid inventory turnover, high sales volume, and lower operating costs than retailers. Gross margins are 8% to 14%, compared with 20% to 40% at discount stores or supermarkets.
Club stores meet these objectives by dictating which products they stock in their stores and, increasingly, how they are packaged. Why? Channel blurring has caused retail to become oversaturated, according to retail experts. Club stores want product assortments that enable their members to justify their annual membership dues. And, each club wants packaging that fits its specific merchandising strategy.


These factors are placing greater emphasis on secondary and tertiary packaging, with more printing on corrugated. The rise in rapid inventory turnover and visual impact is becoming more evident through the emergence of the display pallet, which has become the shelf in a typical club store.


The most shopper-friendly of these pallets carries the term “360-degree pallet,” and it highlights the channel-specific capabilities of contract packagers. The Oxi-Clean display pallet in the accompanying photo shows how it works. Cartons are loaded to create a display that faces outward and is shoppable on all four sides of the pallet.


Contract packagers build display pallets with another factor in mind—speed to shelf. “The displays have to be shoppable the minute they hit the sales floor,” says John Mazelin, director of business development at Packaging Unlimited (www.pkgunltd.com), which produces display pallets for club stores. “In order for them to be effective, decisions on the display have to be made at purchasing, before a contract packager gets the order.”

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