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Trends & Insights     >     Publications   >     ACNielsen Insights Asia Pacific

Assortment Analysis

It is important for clients to track performance of their product variants in a particular category and be able to gauge the impact of introducing a new variant to that category. Firstly, to understand the performance of the total category and individual variants, and secondly, to assess the impact of the new variant on the rest of the category.

CASE STUDY
Analysis was recently conducted for a client using ACNielsen's Modelling & Analytical tool, ACNielsen | Explorer, to examine performance of their existing five variants within a particular category, plus a recently established sixth variant, in order to make a decision on which one should be dropped. The client felt that all six could not be supported.

The client’s share benefited from having all six variants present. A 16.5 percent share of the category was recorded when the full range was available for consumers, as opposed to 11.1 percent when only five variants of the range were available.

The stores where all six were present accounted for 80 percent of the client’s total sales in this category, with a further 10 percent coming from the stores with five variants.

Focusing on the stores where all six variants were available to the consumer, because those were the most important, it was found that variants A, F and B were the best performing in terms of sales share.

Variant F was the newly launched product, which had been supported strongly through the launch period. In the latest reading it had achieved a 3.2 percent sales share in those stores and was ranked second within the client’s range.

The question was – had variant F’s arrival, and impressive performance, impacted on the rest of the client’s range?

Isolating the stores handling the new variant F in the latest period (November), and then re-processing that group of stores for the previous five months, allowed us to plot more closely any interactions at the time of the launch.


We found that none of the five established variants were affected by the launch. In fact, the client’s sales share grew more than 3 points to 16.5 percent during the September to November period.

Between October and November the client’s share grew by 2.9 points and appeared to impact a number of the key competitors.

At this point in time the new variant F had achieved a weighted distribution of 60 percent (ie it was present in stores representing 60 percent of the category’s total sales). All of the client’s more established variants had a distribution of more than 90 percent, indicating that F had considerably higher potential.

In this case study, the recommendation would be to maintain all six variants as each have a significant share. The new launch had not cannibalised and had been incremental to the client’s business. It would have been a costly mistake to have dropped one of the variants.

Another recommendation would be to target those stores currently handling the five established variants and push the new variant in alongside. Potentially the client’s share of total market will increase to 16.5 percent, which should more than offset the costs of expanding the new variant’s distribution level and listing fees.

It was further recommended to repeat this study for the next three months to continue tracking progress. There were two reasons for this : (1) ensure that the new variant continued to perform in a favourable way, and (2) quantify the subsequent actions taken by the client to expand distribution.





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