Friday, June 8, 2012

JC Penney offers "A Not So Square Deal"

As part of JC Penney's turnaround strategy they launched a new "Fair and Square" pricing plan at the beginning of 2012. The chain that for decades relied on multiple promotions, percent-off sales, and coupons to drive incremental consumption, has decided to put an end to all of those promotional vehicles in an effort to become less reliant on trade activity. 


This new strategy seemed to make sense given they ran 590 distinct sales in 2011 and drove 70% of its revenue from products sold at least 50% off full retail price. Rather than slowly peel back on the number of promotions, JC Penney decided to go cold turkey and rip the band-aid off with its "Fair and Square" plan, which simplifies their pricing strategy around three levels: "Every Day", "Month Long Value", and "Best Price". The "Every Day" or EDLP price was also lowered 40% vs. the prior traditional high-low pricing strategy.


The only problem is somebody forgot that consumer habits are hard to break and consumers, especially consumers of brands with weak equity and low consumer loyalty, also have very low brand engagement. The low engagement means that consumers are unlikely to realize you changed your pricing strategy in store or in your tv ads, but they will notice you no longer have sales or coupons.  Therefore, even if the absolute price in store is the same or lower, the consumers perception of the price point may actually be higher or they may not be motivated to visit your store without the promotional stimuli.


Hence, nobody should have been surprised when JC Penney announced its latest sales figures: "Comparable store sales for the first quarter declined 18.9 percent. Total sales decreased 20.1 percent, which includes the effects of the Company’s exit from its outlet business. Internet sales through jcp.com were $271 million in the first quarter, decreasing 27.9 percent from last year."


CEO Ron Johnson reacted to results by telling investors “We have work to do to educate the customer on our pricing strategy and to drive more traffic to our stores”.  Anytime a business leader or market says we have to "educate consumers" that should be an immediate red flag. I'm not a believer that consumers can be "educated", and even if they could, its going to be extremely expensive. 


If a new product or retail customer experience aspect isn't intuitive enough for consumers to figure out in a 10 seconds glance, then its not going to sell very well to mainstream mass market. This is why any good new product or brand building strategy has to start with a strong consumer insight and be brought to life in a simple manner that is intuitive.


Now, just months after the launch of the new pricing strategy, Johnson is admitting JC Penney made some mistakes. First, they layered back in 5 extra best priced Friday events, and second, announced that "We're moving away from the word 'month-long value' because no one really understood that, to calling it what we intended to do, a sale . . . Our marketing isn't doing the work . . . We've got to get our pricing across"


While this moves will likely help some, I for one am doubtful this will fix all the woes. As coupons and deals, spur incremental purchase not only because of the low price, but also because they make consumers feel like they are outsmarting their peers and adding time limitations drives consumers to act versus month-long promotions that don't feel as special.

3 comments:

  1. I completely agree, Dan. JCP trained their consumers over decades, then, after a brief, artsy ad campaign, expected shoppers to reform their long-time shopping habits. It didn't work on me, and I'm retailer savvy. Instead, I walked away from jcp quite dissatisfied.

    Frankly, I think jcp might have done better by wisely selecting and supporting more US manufacturing sources and then using in-store signage to promote that value, especially on basics, while at the same time, reducing the levels of markdowns. Why? Because jcp was always strongest in basic soft

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  2. Thanks for the thoughtful comment. The most common mistake brands make when they try to make a relatively drastic brand repositioning is trying to go too far too fast...they forget consumers have been trained through advertising and previous shopping experiences to expect certain things and you cannot just pull the plug overnight and expect consumers to immediately "get it". I like the idea of using advertising to drive traffic and then in-store signage to re-educate consumers mre slowly on the new pricing model. It also makes a lot of sense to focus on basics given that's an area of strength.

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  3. Besides all the "square deal" drivel, the store remodel is ugly, cold and sterile. I hate it and will not be shopping there anymore.

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