WARC, 28 September 2011
CINCINNATI: Procter & Gamble, the FMCG giant, believes
sales levels in emerging markets will reach an "inflection point"
this year, as it seeks to catch up with major rivals in these nations.
The organisation generated revenues of $27bn from
fast-growth economies in 2010, out of a global total of $79bn. This is
proportionally lower than the revenues derived from fast-growth economies by
Unilever and Colgate-Palmolive.
Speaking to the Financial Times, Bob McDonald, Procter &
Gamble's CEO, argued it would see an "inflection point" in 2011.
"Today [revenues are] roughly $27bn, and we think it'll be half the
company over the next decade," he said.
A challenge that comes with serving shoppers in these
countries is creating lines which are affordable for households possessing
limited disposable income, although this offers certain benefits.
"A lot of our products are sold in single use sachets,
and when you have a single use sachet you either price it at one peso or two
pesos, you can't price it at one and a half pesos," said McDonald.
"So automatically you price it to two pesos and you get a margin lift."
McDonald revealed P&G's pre-tax margins were
"roughly lower" in developing nations than the US and Western Europe,
but its post-tax margins are largely equivalent, mainly due to the reduced
levies experienced in most emerging markets.
A main advantage favouring P&G is its superior level of
know-how and technology, meaning the gap separating its offerings and those
made by indigenous competitors is like that between own label and big-name
brands in the US.
"Generally those companies aren't able to innovate to
the same degree as we would be and what you end up having is a
bifurcation," McDonald said.
"Our products [are] generally more higher priced maybe
than the local product, but the local product has unequal quality because they
use daily labour and they lack some of the innovative materials that a global
company can develop."
In areas where consumers typically wash clothes by hand, for
example, P&G has adapted its Tide and Ariel detergents, utilising
constituents looking after customers' skin instead of formulations to protect
washing machines.
At present, 19 of the 20 plants P&G has under
construction are based in fast-growing economies, and it is also considering
wider changes to reflect its focus on these markets.
"We change the shape of the workforce on an ongoing
basis," said McDonald. "We're constantly working to simplify the
company."
Data sourced from Financial Times; additional content by
Warc staff
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