Bloomberg Businessweek - USA (2019-11-11)

(Antfer) #1
Storebrands havecome a longway
fromblahboxesofknockoffCheerios:
Americansareincreasinglypilingtheir
virtual andIRLshoppingcarts with
in-storebrandsofeverything,whether
coffee,batteries,suitjackets,ormidcen-
turymodernsofas.Becausestoresdon’t
havetohandoverpartofeachpurchase
pricetoCoca-ColaCo.orLeviStrauss&
Co.,they’reoftenabletoselltheirown
brandsforless—andmakemoremoney.
HousebrandsintheU.S.datetoat
leastthe19thcentury,buttheirpopu-
larityhasebbedandflowed.Tothesurpriseofmany,a
numberofstorebrandshavemanagedtobuildloyalfol-
lowingsoftheirowninthelastdecade.What’smore,
they’vemanagedto
dosoevenwhilethe
economywasstrong,
which would seem
to remove price as
a factor and may
marka moresignifi-
cantchangeinwhat
Americans buyand
howcompanies sell
themstuff.
Traditionally,the
drawofa storebrand
waslowprices,not
styleorquality.The

22%


84


ILLUSTRATION

BY

GEORGE

WYLESOL

● HOUSERULES
Can’targuewiththisgrowth:Online
furniture companyWayfairInc.got
69%ofitsrevenuefromhouse
brandsin 2018,upfrom6%in 2015.

● DON’TCALLITGENERIC
Aboutone-fifthofU.S.spending
onhousewaresis forprivate-label
products,accordingtomarket
researcherNPDGroupInc.

newgenericsplaybookisworking,in
part,becauseyoung,web-firstcom-
paniessuchasDollarShaveClubInc.
andCasperSleepInc.havemadepeople
feelmorecomfortablereachingbeyond
thehandfuloftried-and-truebrands.
Amazon.com Inc. has attempted
everytacticpossibletopushitshouse
brands,includingappealspurelyon
valueandstartinganorganicfoodline
anda clothingbrandforthefashion-
consciousbro.Notallhavebeensuc-
cessful,butthee-commercekinghas
pavedthewayinapplyingconsumerdatatocreatenew
productsandnudgepeopletotrythem.
Thisisn’tmerelyan“internetchangedeverything”
story—evenif,OK,that’spartofit.Thesamesetoftac-
ticshasalsoworkedfortraditionalretailers.Walmart,
CostcoWholesale,Target,andothershavefocusedon
private-labelproductstowhichtheycangiveanidentity
andappealbeyondprice.Costco’sKirklandSignatureline
is positionedaslessexpensive,deliciousfoodthatpeople
can’tbuyanywhereelse.AndNordstromInc.linkedup
witha socialmediastarona lineofstore-brandclothes
thatwaspopularenoughtocrashtheretailer’swebsite.
Yourfavoritebrandsfromchildhoodprobablywon’t
goaway.Butthey’regoingtohavetoworka lotharder
togetshoppers’attention.Andit’sgoingtogetuncom-
fortableforproductsthatarestuckinthemiddleground
betweentheiconicandthecheapchic.<BW>�Ovideis a
techcolumnist for Bloomberg Opinion

ByShiraOvide


Shoppers Are Learning That


Brands Aren’t Everything


◼ LAST THING


With Bloomberg Opinion

Bloomberg

Businessweek

(USPS

080

900)

November

11,

2019

(ISSN

0007-7135)

H

Issue

no.

4636

Published

weekly,

except

one

week

in
February,

April,

June,

July,

September,

October

and

two

weeks

in

December

by

Bloomberg

L.P.

Periodicals

postage

paid

at

New

York,

N.Y.,

and

at

additional

mailing

offices.

Executive,

Editorial,

Circulation,

and

Advertising

Offices:

Bloomberg

Businessweek,

731

Lexington

Avenue,

New

York,

NY

10022.

POSTMASTER:

Send

address

changes

to

Bloomberg

Businessweek,

P.O.

Box

37528,

Boone,

IA

50037-0528.

Canada

Post

Publication

Mail

Agreement

Number

41989020.

Return

undeliverable

Canadian

addresses

to

DHL

Global

Mail,

355

Admiral

Blvd.,

Unit

4,

Mississauga, ON L5T 2N1. Email: [email protected]. QST#1008327064. Registered for GST as Bloomberg L.P. GST #12829 9898 RT0001. Copyright 2019 Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. Title registered in the U.S. Patent Office. Single Copy Sales: Call 800 298-9867 or email: [email protected]. Educational Permissions: Copyright Clearance Center at [email protected]. Printed in the U.S.A. CPPAP NUMBER 0414N68830
Free download pdf