Bangkok Post

Danone cuts product range as shoppers baulk at high prices

- RICHA NAIDU

LONDON: French food giant Danone SA is cutting the variety of products it sells to retailers to cut costs, a top executive told Reuters, meaning yoghurt fans may in future miss out on the exact flavour or pot-size they’re used to.

Supermarke­ts and the makers of packaged food are struggling to combat rising costs, with products ranging from crude oil to paper packaging becoming more expensive due to a protracted pandemic-led shipping crunch and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Soaring inflation also means shoppers are tightening their belts. On Friday, Tesco Plc warned Britons are buying less, switching to cheaper, ownbrand products and shopping more often as they try to cope with the cost of living crisis.

Earlier this year, some food stores were forced to take products off shelves because they could no longer afford to sell them.

Those factors are prompting one of the world’s top food manufactur­ers to rethink how it sells its best-selling products which range from Activia yoghurt and Evian water.

“Inflation is a dynamic, particular­ly in Europe, that we need to start to get used to,” Ayla Ziz, Danone’s global head of sales, said.

“The company is cutting back on so-called “stock keeping units” (SKUs), meaning that some supermarke­ts will have fewer variations of products when it comes to flavours and sizes, she said.

Having fewer SKUs would help cut costs per type of product, Ziz said, adding that Danone was reviewing its “entire portfolio” with every customer to see which SKUs it wants to discontinu­e.

Consumer companies like Danone make many versions of the same product — from big and small tubs of the same yoghurt to different flavours and value packs.

It’s not pulling a whole product line from the market, but simplifyin­g its range means some of these could be sacrificed to make it cheaper for retailers to stock and manage a smaller, less complex inventory.

For instance, supermarke­ts would need to allocate less money to storing, monitoring and transporti­ng products.

Ziz did not identify which ranges might be targeted. “It’s not a global cut of some products.”

Maria Castroviej­o, senior analyst at Rabobank Research, said the measures made sense for companies trying to be more efficient.

“If you have to make a lot of small batches of different products, you have more disruption­s, you have to find have more ingredient­s,” she said.

Danone wants to “stay competitiv­e” so it is not cutting back on promotions but, rather, selling fewer types of products will also help it save logistics costs.

Ziz said Danone was also investing in software that helps it price products to a more precise degree that consumers will be able to accept.

These moves come as food manufactur­ers continue prolonged talks over prices that started last year with supermarke­ts as shipping costs climbed to a record high.

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