What\’s the Value of a Manufacturer’s Brand?

\"ManufacturerOver the past few months as we\’ve sat in strategy development meetings with distributors, reviewed distributor purchasing information and talked to manufacturer reps and contractors we\’ve seen a purchasing trend that is roiling the industry. The trend, which mirrors what is happening in lighting with \”unfamiliar brands\” is accelerated growth, and acceptance, of less familiar brands for infrastructure type products (electrician supplies, boxes, fittings, etc … consummables and products that go within the wall).  This then begs the question of \”what is the value of a manufacturer\’s brand\” and what are the implications for manufacturers and distributors.
Many have seen this as driven by

  • The commoditization of product and the \”need for price\”, There are more companies pursuing a product category than ever before (the benefit of sourcing) and, in many instances, it is extremely difficult to determine if there is any product quality difference.
  • The fact that frequently contractors are focused on price and the belief that \”as long as it lasts a year they don\’t care\” or their customer doesn\’t care about the brand
  • Contractors don\’t see the incremental cost benefit of a product.  With contractors purchasing more than 50% of the electrical material sold in the industry, if they don\’t request a brand, then distributors are free to provide a suitable offering.
  • Distributors seeking incremental gross margin as purchasing at a lower net cost can, if they have a disciplined pricing model, can increase their profitability in excess of the branded company\’s rebate (offered through the marketing group) and many of these \”unfamiliar\” companies do also offer a rebate and some belong to a marketing group.
  • The ease of some of these companies in doing business.  They frequently are not demanding (some say \”arrogant\”) and are strong on delivery.
  • In some cases product innovation
  • Distributors preferring to have at least two tiers of products in many categories … a branded line and then a \”price line\” to help them compete in the marketplace as frequently there can be a 10-40% price differential … and which distributor salesperson is willing to pass on an order … and the average price of a contractor quotation request continues to decline.

We\’ve seen this more on the construction / contractor side of the business.  The industrial side of the business is more brand focused as manufacturers interact with the end-user via their sales and marketing organization, the buyer is perceptually more concerned about quality and standardization, products frequently are more quality-oriented and performance-driven.
Why is this happening:

  • Competition for contractor / customer dollars
  • Less brand loyalty at the sales level, some of which is due to generational change and interaction
  • Distributor need to compete in the marketplace to win the business
  • Lack of manufacturer identification of its value proposition … for its products (if any) and for \”why buy from them\”
  • Lack of manufacturer investment in building a brand, and a reason to purchase, at the contractor level
  • Lack of discernible product differentiation
  • Sales training issues at the manufacturer level as well as the distributor level (and in many cases, the distributor salesperson has too much to \”learn\” so therefore will default to providing to the customer what is acceptable).
  • A generational issue (and here\’s an interesting take from Jim Cramer on millennials being less brand loyal.  Will / is the same mentality flowing into the electrical industry as there is personnel turnover?

The issue becomes,

  • If you are a manufacturer whose product is not requested / known by contractors, what is the value of your brand at the distribution level? Why should they want to buy from you?
  • If you are a distributor typically you\’ll have a relationship with a strong brand (after all, you want to be known by the company you keep and it gives you access to a broad product offering) but you also have at least one price-oriented line that lets you compete in the marketplace.  Yes there is inventory overlap, but the cost of inventory is minimal compared to the cost of losing a sale. (As an example, we know one company that identified that most types of strut could be handled by a \”no-name\” company who had good quality at a 33% discount from a branded line…if the customer doesn\’t care, can you pass up the order? Pass up the opportunity for increased profitability if you can purchase for less and only pass on 1/3 of the savings to the contractor?)

Identifying what \”customers\” (contractors, end-users, distributor management, distributor salespeople, purchasing, your reps) think of you / what they think your value proposition is\” can determine your

  • channel strategy
  • sales messaging
  • product development
  • pricing model
  • distribution \”program\”
  • value-added services

And be the springboard to accelerating growth … essentially your company roadmap.
Consider the wire and cable segment.  Years ago there were many companies\"wire in the space.  How many today? What was the difference?  Their strategy, execution and communication of their strategy and marketing of their business.  They took an undifferentiated product offering, branded their companies based upon some products and service differentiation and then have taken their \”perceived\” differences to grow their companies.  This was the essential roadmap for Southwire and Encore, two stalwarts in the wire / cable industry.  Where are the others today?
If you are a distributor, utilizing these \”unfamiliar / undifferentiated\” lines to capture sales and improve profitability makes sense.  A little more work, a little duplicate inventory, but that\’s the job … service the customer and sell.
If you are a manufacturer, what is your brand? Is it valued?
 
 
\"ChannelChannel Marketing Group can help.

  • End-user brand preference studies
  • Rep 360
  • Distributor brand preference studies
  • Distributor satisfaction assessments
  • Recommend value proposition and strategy
  • Strategic Planning

 

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2 thoughts on “What\’s the Value of a Manufacturer’s Brand?”

  1. Perhaps the reason there are fewer, but larger wire manufacturers is more a result of narrow margins in a segment mostly viewed as a commodity and low interest rates which facilitate buying up competitors.
    Manufacturers are producing more with less largely through automation and the current environment allows them to purchase competitors merely to close a plant and produce both brands at the most desirable location.
    The danger is for those companies who’ve largely stopped making their own products altogether and merely source them from Asia, India, etc..
    Large distributors may very well cut them out and purchase select commodities directly.

  2. Great coverage of a phenomenon taking place across the country. Manufacturers with “brand names” need to understand how their distributors feel about their brand and how to reinforce the specification work of the past.

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