Consumer goods and services
The consumer goods and services sector is rapidly evolving. However, the key issues facing the sector remain fundamentally the same: brand positioning, brand equity, customer loyalty, increasing competition and evolving customer needs. Moving forward the market will be marked by aggressive brand marketing and campaigns aimed at retaining customer loyalty.
AMR International provides clients with clear and concise recommendations based on expert knowledge of the consumer goods and services sector, in depth research and detailed analysis.
AMR International has provided CDD to support the following investments:
|
With all the ongoing explosion of technology, particularly in consumer products, it made a change to review a company whose first product was launched in 1812!
Could a paper diary company survive in the electronic age? Would electronic organisers sweep away 188 years of tradition?
Diaries are clearly time-management tools, but that's not the only function that they serve. They are also a mainstay of the corporate gift market. They have many advantages: they are relatively cheap, they rarely offend, and customers (and employees) get into the habit of expecting one each year. Once a company starts giving a diary, it's difficult to stop.
The general public increasingly sees diaries as fashion accessories. The Italians are renowned for their design skills, and the diary market is no exception - Italian companies had been increasing market share in the UK with a range of innovative designs. The question was: did they pose a serious threat to Letts' future? And what about the market outside the UK? Letts exported mainly to the USA and the Middle East, and wanted to know more about the potential there. Were opportunities being missed?
AMR spoke extensively to leading high-street retailers, commercial stationers, corporate marketing departments, even trade unions and the Royal National Lifeboat Institution. The conclusion: Letts is the clear market leader, a company with an outstanding reputation amongst its customers. The business customers in particular appreciated the quality and tradition associated with Letts' products. Retailers were more interested in fashion, but here Letts had improved its range of products, and it was felt that the company was in good shape to hold off the Italian challenge.
We looked at the threat from electronic organisers in depth. In the corporate gift market, electronic organisers are simply too expensive to give away to all but the top tier of customers. As a time-management tool, our research showed that although electronic organisers are becoming more popular, people often use them in conjunction with a paper diary. Paper diaries have three key advantages: they are still quicker and easier to use than most organisers; they are more reliable (the batteries never run out!); and they are, and will remain, much cheaper than an electronic organiser.
We looked in detail at the market outside the UK. The USA clearly has huge potential: we showed that the promotional gifts market there has now reached $15 billion, and is growing at 17% a year. Diary sales are a significant part of this growth trend. And we established that Letts' US distributor had, via a string of acquisitions during the 1990s, established itself as the world's largest supplier of promotional products. We recommended that Letts devote more resources to tapping this huge market. Our conclusion: with a strong management team, recognised brand, and good products, Letts will be a successful business for many years to come.
A £17 million transaction, led by Dunedin Capital Partners Limited, was completed shortly after the end of AMR's project.