Using data to help retailers get closer to customers
PepsiCo’s Pep Worx data and analytics platform used by such chains as Kroger, Dollar General
August 31, 2018
An advanced data platform from PepsiCo is helping supermarkets and other food and beverage retailers get to know their customers better.
Called Pep Worx, the cloud-based data and analytics solution assists retailers in making more informed decisions on PepsiCo product assortments, merchandising and other point-of-sale areas by identifying valuable shoppers by location.
According to Jeff Swearingen, senior vice president of marketing at PepsiCo, the granular data allows chains to map by store which items to stock, where to place them and what kinds of promotions to offer.
The objective: Help large retailers speed in-store decision-making — from days to hours — and cultivate more personalized relationships with shoppers.
“The corner store that we all grew up with was a place where people gathered and the owner and the manager knew everyone. It was a very personalized experience. Over the last 30 or 40 years, as retail has grown out and the population has grown in the U.S., it has become a bit less so,” said Swearingen (left).
“We wanted to bring some of that magic back to CPG and retail to create an environment where you not only have the scale that we see in retail today but also a little of that personal experience and insight,” he explained. “Pep Worx is an analytics capability that allows us to hopefully create a more personal experience for consumers and be a better partner to our retailers.”
The Pep Worx suite includes about 10 applications, led by such tools as Most Valuable Shopper and Most Valuable Store.
“Those tools allow us to identify the shoppers in the U.S. who we believe will be most interested in a particular brand, innovation or marketing idea and to identify the stores that we believe will be the best fit,” Swearingen said. “Just about everybody knows our brands and loves the things that we make, but people all have their favorites. If we can do a better job using those capabilities to connect people with their favorites, they reward us for that.”
Purchase, N.Y.-based PepsiCo — whose brands include Pepsi, Frito-Lay, Quaker, Lipton, Tropicana, Gatorade, Mountain Dew, 7Up and Aquafina, among others — uses Pep Worx in-house to zero in on valuable shoppers and then works with its retail partners to bring its brand programs and innovations to life at the store level.
“And we do this in a way that will best match those consumers with the retail environments where they shop,” Swearingen said.
For example, Pep Worx helped PepsiCo identify 24 million households from its data set of 110 million U.S. households that were the best fit for Quaker Overnight Oats, a single-serve cup of dry oats soaked overnight in milk or yogurt in the refrigerator to provide a healthy, cold breakfast cereal by the morning. The company then mapped these households against shopping venues — both brick and mortar and online — where these consumers were most likely to shop.
“We were able to launch the product using very targeted media, all the way through targeted in-store support, to engage those most valuable shoppers and bring the product to life at retail in a unique way,” Swearingen said, adding that these priority customers drove 80% of the product’s sales growth in the first 12 weeks after launch.
“We have worked with many retailers on this [Pep Worx] and saw a genuine interest in, first, trying to better meet consumers’ needs and then unlocking granular growth,” he said.
Michael McGowan, vice president of merchandising insights and activation at The Kroger Co.’s 84.51° shopper intelligence unit, said his firm leveraged Pep Worx’s Most Valuable Shopper and Most Valuable Store tools, along with its own data set, for customer analytics, activation and communications.