Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Big food firms using analytics to become nimbler, responsive to consumers

- DEENA SHANKER AND HENRY REN

When a handful of teens took to social media to complain about the paltry size of their microwavea­ble mac and cheese, Big Food was paying attention.

At Kraft Heinz, the corporate behemoth that’s responsibl­e for a lot of the items in people’s pantries, a “social listening team” picked up on that chatter in the summer of 2019. Months later — lightning speed in the food world — Kraft Macaroni and Cheese Big Bowls were on store shelves.

Tracking social media buzz is one of the newly honed tools in Kraft’s data collection toolbox, and both the company and its packaged-food peers are increasing­ly thinking about how they gather and use informatio­n like this to speed product developmen­t.

“For a food brand it’s really no longer about who has the biggest factory or who has the biggest media budget,” said Taylor Smith, a partner at Boston Consulting Group. “It’s about what data you have and how you use it.”

From Kraft to General Mills to Conagra Brands, big foodmakers are finally warming to analytics as they try to become nimbler and more responsive to consumer whims. A pandemic-driven rise in online shopping and grocery delivery has widened the trove of data available to food companies that have long struggled to gain insight into shopping trends because retailers, not manufactur­ers, have been the gatekeeper­s to most shopper transactio­ns.

And Big Food isn’t just keeping an eye on Twitter feeds or delivery orders. Some companies are grabbing cellphone tracking informatio­n, scouring customers’ grocery receipts and keeping tabs on how long it takes to clean up dinner. Conagra is even monitoring Peloton subscripti­ons to gauge whether shoppers would be more inclined to buy health food versus junk food, and tweaking its marketing accordingl­y.

Data analytics are shaping up to be a critical factor in determinin­g which food companies can thrive in a post-pandemic world. Americans have turned back to old pantry stalwarts over the past year, giving new life to staid brands that had been losing out to smaller competitor­s. But investors are realizing not everyone can hold onto those gains once the economy opens back up and people eat less at home. Pandemic outperform­ers like Clorox are facing similar questions about how they’ll fare once things get back to normal.

An S&P index of consumer staples stocks is up about 27% in the past year, the best 12-month performanc­e in that period in over a decade. Yet that pales in comparison to the 63% surge in the broader S&P 500. And food-makers like Campbell Soup and Kellogg are among the worst perform

ers in that consumer index, which also includes toiletpape­r manufactur­ers, grocery stores and cigarette makers.

For other industries, the use of analytics is nothing new — everything from banking to health care to retail has been reshaped by user data. But large food manufactur­ers have been late to the party. With long-establishe­d brands like Betty Crocker and Oscar Mayer, market-leading companies have been largely content to drive sales through traditiona­l advertisin­g or simple name recognitio­n.

One obstacle they’ve long faced is in data collection. Since the products are generally sold through grocery stores rather than directly to consumers, food makers have less insight into the details of the transactio­n, including what other products customers are buying. The largest consumer packaged goods companies have only one-tenth the size of customer databases compared with retail peers, according to Boston Consulting Group’s data.

A rise in delivery and growing direct-to-consumer efforts that accelerate­d in 2020 have started to shift the balance. The data available through ecommerce is similar in many ways to what supermarke­t loyalty programs already offered, but it’s now available at a much larger scale and more quickly, explained Bob Nolan, who leads Conagra’s insights and analytics team. Merchants can see what shoppers purchased, what they clicked on but didn’t purchase, what else was in their baskets and what they’ve bought over time.

Manufactur­ers are also getting more creative in the ways they’re getting informatio­n. Besides Peloton subscripti­ons, Conagra gathers data on recipe searches online and appliance sales to tailor its marketing efforts. Ovens are the secondmost-used kitchen appliance after stovetops, said Nolan. So when his team saw sheet-pan meals was a popular search on Pinterest, it launched sheet-panready Birds Eye Oven Roasters in six months. When air fryers became hot, the company made videos for social media showing how to make its broccoli bites and cauliflowe­r wings in the device. Conagra has sold $27 million oven roasters over the past year.

Food companies “have tried to listen to the consumer and make themselves more relevant in terms of taste and ingredient­s,” said Nicholas Fereday, a consumer foods analyst at Rabobank. “They are playing in an area that traditiona­lly we assumed the small brands had an upper hand in because they are more socially savvy.”

Kraft’s super-sized mac and cheese shows just how savvy the big players are becoming. The product was developed quickly and is now outperform­ing internal expectatio­ns. Without the kind of social media monitoring that Kraft has been refining, “this could be a multiyear process because you’ve missed your annual planning window,” said U.S. Chief Growth Officer Sanjiv Gajiwala.

Some companies are still employing more old-school methods, like focus groups and consumer surveys. On a recent investor call, JPMorgan Chase’s Ken Goldman pressed Campbell Soup for any data that could help the company confidentl­y predict consumer behavior post-pandemic, leading CEO Mark Clouse to acknowledg­e that its prediction­s are merely “theoretica­l.”

The problem isn’t with Campbell specifical­ly, Goldman told Bloomberg in an email. Many companies rely on optimistic consumer surveys that aren’t necessaril­y reliable in such an uncertain environmen­t.

“Consumers don’t know what they are going to do in a year,” he said. Post-pandemic life is “uncharted waters.”

But while data usage is on the rise, Big Food’s embrace of analytics brings some challenges. At the top of the list: It brings risks of privacy issues for customers, who may not always realize how much informatio­n they’re handing over.

In 2019, General Mills altered its Box Tops for Education program in a way that turned it into a significan­t data collection operation. Rather than clip box tops, shoppers are now directed to upload scans of their grocery receipts to an app, showing the company what else they bought along with the company’s products.

“We’ll have the history of your shopping trips, will understand what products you like,” said North American retail president Jon Nudi. The company can tailor its coupons based on how long since you last purchased a General Mills product — or a competing item. “If we know you like Cheerios but you haven’t bought it, we can serve up a promotion on Cheerios.”

Participan­ts can block out other receipt items if they’d like, the company says. Still, the change has drawn criticism on social media and other sites such as parenting forums on Reddit.

But Big Food isn’t exactly Big Brother, according to Ray Yu, a partner at Boston Consulting Group. The data gathered tends to be aggregated on a macro scale, helping companies identify broader trends, he said.

There’s also no turning back. With the new ways to collect informatio­n and the speed at which the market is changing, food manufactur­ers know they have to embrace data or risk getting left behind.

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