The sheer amount of compounding demand information being created on a daily, weekly and yearly basis is causing a shift in the way CPG companies need to approach data capture and governance. Entirely new tools are becoming not only helpful, but necessary. This phenomenon could not be displayed more clearly than it was in a recent article posted on the home page of MarketWatch discussing the sharp rise in use of the Demand Signal Repository, or DSR. Read more…
The article “Are You Prepared to Store All This Data?” recently published by SourceMedia offers some staging numbers on the growth of digital information. As previously mentioned on this blog and myriad websites, the world’s mass of digital data is constantly expanding – and constantly quickening its pace of expansion. SourceMedia writes that the amount of information created in 2010 will equal about 1.2 zettabytes. Here are a few statistics to show what 1.2 zettabytes would equal in layman’s terms: Read more…
Information Management posted an article on its website recently in which a data management consulting expert delineated what she thought necessary, at the onset, to implement a data management system within a company. Written by a partner at a respectable consulting firm (Jane Griffin for Deloitte Consulting LLP), the article is titled “Implementing a Data Governance Initiative,” and in the interest of having a diverse array of input on such implementation, here are the components she sees as necessary for efficient data management: Read more…
In conjunction with our previous blog post, another very interesting article within The Economist’s special report on the current deluge of data discussed the role of machines in handling the massive amount of data generated every day. The human brain, complex as it is, can only process a limited number of pieces of information simultaneously. Theories quoted in the article place the number of pieces at around seven, and it claims that when it comes to simultaneous concepts or relationships that number drops to four. The molecular biologist dispensing these numbers, Carl Pabo, says that, “there is an immense risk of cognitive overload,” with the rising torrent of information. Read more…
The cover of a recent issue (Feb. 27th – Mar. 5th) of The Economist depicts a man standing with a large umbrella above his head and vast amounts of binary code falling from the sky. Above him, ominous letters spell out, “The Data Deluge.” The largest section of the issue is dedicated to a few articles on the increasing mass of data in the world today and how it is being dealt with – and how it is being mishandled. Read more…
In a rapidly evolving CPG world, the arena of marketing can be a difficult place. Marketing departments and their CMOs are consistently asked to justify the effectiveness of all money spent, and that is a very difficult thing in an industry in which the technological potential and ideas for connecting with customers are always being chased by the actual development of tangible technology infrastructure. In a recent interview in CGT, staff writer Albert Guffanti discussed the dilemma with Kevin Tigges, Microsoft’s Consumer Goods Industry Solutions Director. Read more…
Consumer Goods Technology recently posted an article on their website that truly shows the rate at which mobile technology is starting to dominate the retail world. According to their figures, mobile online shopping rose in the United States from $396 million in 2008 to $1.2 billion in 2009. Read more…
When a technology platform moves from fledgling to becoming a dominant medium in a market, it often brings a whole new type of economy. In the most recent issue of Information Management, editorial director Jim Ericson explored what a web data service economy implies for businesses. In the article, Ericson again touched on the in-between state of the data management enterprise. “There is reason to hope and believe,” he writes, “that the last few years have given rise to a new era of maturity in data and information management. The early limitations of hardware and networks, and ensuing challenges of application and data integration, are largely conquered (or at least understood) for now. CPU and storage costs are less and less a barrier to any project, and analytic tools have matured.” This seems an overall optimistic view of the state of the data management industry. Read more…
After interviewing several category managers, the alqemyiQ marketing team identified a few unique and common problems in the world of the category manager. First there is the fact that the job is done differently by the many different people who fill it. There is no set way to manage a category. On top of that, or more precisely lending to it, is the fact that the job of a category manager involves serving two masters. The manager is usually working for a manufacturer to grow the manufacturer’s category, but also working with the retailer trying to optimize sales and gain the trust needed to become an advisor to the retailer.
In order to serve these two masters best, the category manager uses a number of tools to help managers optimize pricing and promotions tailored to a specific retailer and even specific stores. They will use an inordinate amount of data from consumers, retailers, syndicated data providers, private parties, manufacturers, online advertising results, etc. The list could go on forever as to the various data sources that will help a category manager to accomplish the main task of the job: to grow the category.
On the front lines of growing the category, the category manager will have a hand in developing planograms (the diagram of what an item or items will look like on the shelf) for the retailer. The manager will also work closely with the category captain (usually the leading supplier in a certain category) to continue to grow the category. Through sound methodology used for data analysis to optimize pricing and promotions and through trustworthy relationships with both the manufacturer and the retailer, the category will grow. The best category managers will then take what works and duplicate it.
A quick glance around your office or local coffee shop will provide sufficient evidence that mobile technology has become prevalent in present day life and that its popularity is ever on the rise. A report from Morgan Stanley’s October 2009 Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco claims that mobile technology is the incremental driver of Internet user growth. Read more…