Reckitt Benckiser chief executive Rakesh Kapoor reshapes the world of marketing

February 9, 2012

Lapac and Rumea sound a bit like those ancient continents Gondwana and Laurea, which straddled the Earth before tectonic plates carved them into the world map we’re all familiar with.

Actually, the parallel is not so very far off the mark. Except, the carving of these new continental landmasses is being done, even as we speak, by Rakesh Kapoor, recently appointed chief executive of healthcare-to-household conglomerate Reckitt Benckiser.

This is part and parcel of his new vision of the commercial world, articulated as a kind of antidote to some not-overly-impressive full year figures which have been announced at the same time.

As Kapoor sees it the motor-force markets of North America and Europe will, at best, stagnate in the years to come, so he’s taken the radical step of downsizing them into a single operation, centered on Amsterdam, in order to cut costs.

At the same time emerging markets, where almost all RB’s future growth is expected to come from, have been recast with new and emphatic importance. Hence “Lapac”, or Latin America and Pacific countries; and “Rumea”, Russia, the Middle East and Africa.

These are no mere geographical expressions either; Kapoor intends to put RB’s money where his mouth is. At the moment, only half the company’s capital expenditure goes into these regions. By 2016 this will rise to 80%. And we can expect little less revolution in the way the marketing budget be allocated: the bias towards emerging markets will shift from 44% to 55% over the same period.

It can hardly have escaped notice that a strategic realignment of this kind was implicit in Kapoor’s appointment as CEO in the first place. He is the first Indian to lead RB’s stalwartly Caucasian board. As such, he is part of a growing trend in multinational companies: the displacement of WASP leadership.

Look around you and you will see Coca-Cola and Pepsi rearming for an all-too-traditional cola war, with greatly increased marketing budgets. But one corporation is now led by a Turkish-American Muslim, Muhtar Kent, and the other by Indian-born Indra Nooyi. They’re not there by historical coincidence. A lot of that money will be spent over the next 4 years encouraging people in emerging markets to drink cola; rather than simply refreshing the palates of jaded North Americans.

We might note the same trend at Citigroup, whose chief executive is Vikram Pandit, and Deutsche Bank, which has picked Anshu Jain as its new co-chief executive. Or even at that redoubtable WASP establishment Harvard Business School, whose dean of two years is Nitin Nohria.

The big surprise is that Unilever did not take this route when appointing a successor to Patrick Cescau, instead plumping for a Dutch outsider with a P&G and Nestlé pedigree, Paul Polman. Maybe appointing a non-European would have been too far ahead of the curve in early 2009.

That said, the two most promising internal candidates for the CEO job, Harish Manwani and Vindi Banga, were – as their names clearly indicate – both Indian. If Polman decides to move on, I’ll wager that the next Unilever CEO will be Indian.

About these ads

Bart Becht quits while he’s ahead

April 15, 2011

The Financial Times headline almost said it all: “Becht goes out with a bang as £2bn is wiped off Reckitt shares.” Bart Becht, chief executive of Reckitt Benckiser, has abruptly announced his departure from the household goods company he had steered to unprecedented success over the past 16 years. An instant £2bn personal valuation was his reward. A better launch-pad for a portfolio career would be hard to imagine, if that is what he has in mind.

But with the bouquet came a few brickbats as well. Could it be that arguably the most successful corporate businessman of his generation was also one of its most selfish? I’m not talking about the £90m “fat cat” cheque he received in 2009 for services rendered, but the manner in which he announced his departure.

Far from organising an orderly succession, Becht brutally declared he was going in September, leaving – by some accounts – the company rudderless. Or rather, in the hands of the no doubt competent, but almost unknown, Rakesh Kapoor. In so doing, he had arrogantly put his own interests ahead of those of shareholders, who had invested in the Becht marketing magic, mistakenly believing he would be there forever.

I’m afraid I don’t buy that argument in its entirety. All right, the announcement was a shock – Becht is only 54 and had given no previous indication of his desire to quit, from what we are told. But when you invest in personality, you also invest in that personality’s potency. The minute a successor is announced, the potency is diminished and the magic fades. Ask yourself why Elizabeth 1, a potent leader if ever there was one, never announced a successor until she was on her death-bed. Ask yourself why there is no successor in sight at WPP.

An interregnum, however defined, carries risks all of its own. Stakeholders (whether subjects or shareholders) worry about the competence of the successor, who can never be tried and tested enough. The barons/boardroom rivals become refractory and disloyal – why wasn’t one of them chosen? The former leader can’t quite bear the idea of stepping back and letting go: Sir Stuart Rose’s latterday conduct at Marks & Spencer springs to mind.

No, quit while you’re ahead. There’s a lot to be said for a clean, swift break. Shareholders will get over the shock in a surprisingly short time.


Cookeing the media-buying goose

July 9, 2010

Outrageous indeed. I couldn’t agree more with IPA director-general Hamish Pringle’s take on Thomas Cooke’s contribution to an increasingly acrimonious global media-buying debate.

The travel operator is reported to be demanding a £1m signing-on fee at the conclusion of its £30m media review – in addition to “a reduction in agency fees currently paid” and “a minimum 10% saving through consolidated media buying” stipulated in the original brief for the 3-year contract.

And yet, the Thomas Cooke affair is only the most egregious example (to date) of a ripple of client practices which are causing stupefaction in media agency circles. It’s the way the world is going.

The principal bugbears in the debate are Unilever and Reckitt Benckiser. It is no coincidence that they are, respectively, India’s number one and number two advertisers. India, land of the cut-price call centre and the $2,500 Tata car, is after all where most of the low-cost action is to be found these days.

By way of background, read (if you haven’t read it already) a column by Les Margulis, an American media veteran – 22 years at BBDO. Promisingly entitled ‘When to walk away from an energy-sucking client’, the content below the headline does not disappoint. It’s a withering diatribe aimed at Rahul Welde – VP of media at Unilever for Asia, Africa, Middle East and Turkey – in particular, and cheapskate clients in general.

What (apart from an arrogant manner) had Welde done to deserve this opprobrium? About a month previously in a keynote speech encompassing the future of advertising, he had had the temerity to suggest that “marketing is all about brilliant ideas”. And one of them, apparently, is screwing down agencies, creative as well as media, to zero costs – if necessary by posting the brief on the internet and doing a bit of on-the-cheap crowdsourcing. See also George Parker on “Vindaloo Rat” and Jim Edwards at bNet.

Reckitt has stoked this controversy to fever-pitch by going one step further. Allegedly, it plans to charge each of the participants in a pitch for its Indian media-buying business up to $10,000. The suggestion has so upset the Advertising Agencies Association of India that it is advising member agencies not to pitch.

This bit may be a storm in a tea-cup, as I am assured by those in a position to know that RB has not actually asked for money (or is that just wiser-after-the-event back-pedalling?). Even so, the proven terms could scarcely be considered lenient: the “winner” will have to rebate volume discounts paid by media owners as well as offer compensation for any drops in TV ratings.

Which brings me back to Thomas Cooke’s modest contribution to the “media, it’s just a commodity” debate. What puzzles me, given that media agencies are being awarded virtually zero compensation these days, and are expected to indemnify the client against loss, is this: how does anyone make any money? It’s certainly not on the overnight interest rate. And yet media agencies continue to queue up and be plucked.

As for Thomas Cooke’s proposal, my only surprise is that it didn’t come from Ryanair first. Now that really would be “rapacious”, to use one of Michael O’Leary’s favourite words.


Is own-label really Miles better? Or Becht simply best?

October 27, 2009

Who’s right, Miles Roberts, ceo of McBride – own-label purveyor to the likes of Tesco and Carrefour – or Bart Becht, ceo of Reckitt Benckiser and arch-high-priest of the cult of the brand? Both claim to be winning the battle for the hearts and minds of consumers. Both can produce ample evidence to support their conviction.

Miles RobertsRoberts is sitting atop a sparkling set of first quarter financial results. He’s had an altogether good year, with McBride earnings well above trend as consumers look more critically at their shopping list in the midst of recession. This particular Q1 set were so good that there will be no need of Tesco own-label teeth-whitener to bring a gleam to Roberts’ smile. McBride’s share price shot up 10% as City analysts jostled to upgrade their underpowered year-end forecasts.

But Becht has been no slouch either. Profits for the maker of Cillit Bang, Vanish, Dettol and Finish were up 40% last year, and the City was just as eagerly awaiting his news and views as Q3 announcement time hoved into view.

And he has not  disappointed. RB has just released its own set of stunning quarterly results: profits were up 25%. A tribute, says Becht, to “our 17 Powerbrands, …. significant investment in media and marketing, and successful new product initiatives.”

“We see no let-up in the demand from retailers for great value and great performing products,” says Roberts. “The only way we you can do that is with own-brand.”

Bart BechtNot so contends Becht: “We are typically market leaders in higher growth categories. We clean dishes not shoes. I don’t have to tell you why. Penetration of dishwashers is going up but shoe polish is not growing because there are fewer people using these products.”

The impression we are left with is that own-label is growing, but RB is taking a larger slice of the high-margin branded sector that remains. It can do this because RB’s powers of innovation in engineering higher-margin products is second to none. Only, it’s not that simple. Part of McBride’s success has stemmed from greater product specialisation and innovation. It would appear that Roberts is no more interested in “shoe polish” than Becht. Instead McBride has been doing exactly the same as RB: engineering higher-margin products such as a five-in-one dishwasher tablet.

So in answer to the question: who’s right?  – it’s neither and both. A case of Frank Sinatra marketing: “I did it my way.”


Why Diageo needs to sue the socks off Sainsbury’s

August 18, 2009

Oh no (yawn!), not another supermarket copycat product. The owner of Pimm’s is getting nasty with Sainsbury’s over something called Pitchers, which looks disturbingly similar – but is notably cheaper. Goes on all the time doesn’t it?

Well, yes it does. It’s the way you tell them, though. Let’s try again.

Spot the difference

Spot the difference

Diageo, the world’s most powerful drinks company, is taking Sainsbury’s to court over what amounts to alleged criminal theft. It marks the first time in 12 years that a brand owner has felt sufficiently aggrieved, and sufficiently invulnerable, to mount a legal challenge against a supermarket over the defence of its intellectual property rights. There, that’s more interesting isn’t it?

Last time, in the case of Penguin v Puffin (as it came to be known), Penguin’s owner United Biscuits successfully sued Asda for “passing off” its brand with a cheaper supermarket imitation. Asda was allowed to keep the own-label brand name temporarily, but forced to change the packaging – a decision which effectively neutered the purpose of the copycat in the first place.

Before moving on to how Diageo intends to ‘neuter’ Sainsbury’s, perhaps we’d better tackle an elephant lurking in the room. How come, if UB was so successful and created a legal precedent, that supermarkets have largely ignored the implications of the court ruling and blithely continued with imitations that are a hair-split away from the branded originals? I call to witness, for example, Tesco Temptations crisps, a flattering tribute to the success of Walkers Sensations (2003). Then, let me see, there’s Asda’s ‘You’d Butter Believe It’ margarine, spookily similar to Unilever’s ‘I can’t Believe It’s not Butter’; and Lidl’s ‘Jammy Rings’, so comfortingly close to Burton’s Biscuits ‘Jammie Dodgers’.

The supermarkets do it because they can. In the first place, the law on passing off is weak and ambiguous. Any brand owner taking a supermarket to court could not, heretofore, be certain of a positive outcome.

And that neatly brings me on to a second explanation. Which brand owner in its right mind would dare to do so? Answer: only a very powerful one. The reason is not hard to find. Supermarkets have an ambivalent relationship with brand owners. They  are at once principal customers and competitors (as own-label producers). Offend them, and you risk destroying your distribution.

Indeed, one way of viewing the copycat issue is that it is a symptom of the abuse of market power by our retailers. When I last checked, Tesco held about 31% share of the UK grocery market, and the next three grocers a further 45% between them. Supermarkets may be the main abusers, but they are not unique. Consider, for example, Boots Alliance. Are we seriously supposed to believe that Boots Foot Survival is not a rip-off of Scholl Party Feet? In short, copycatting is arguably as much of an issue for the competition authorities as it is for the passing-off specialists.

But I digress. We’ve looked at why brand owners fear challenging powerful retailers, but not whether, outside the interests of their own shareholders, they are right to do so. Surely we could turn the whole copycatting argument on its head and lionise the supermarkets. Are they not championing consumer interests against greedy manufacturers by producing own-label versions of desirable products at a more affordable, accessible price?

Well, no they are not – whatever they may say. While it is true that the consumer benefits in the short term from a lower price, in the longer run he or she is just as much of a loser as the brand owner. In effect unfettered copy-catting coat-tails on the success of brand-owners at a fraction of the original investment. But the easy ride comes at a high cost. That cost is the chilling effect on future product development by brand owners. If, after years of expensive product development, they are going to be ripped off and their brand premium undermined, why bother? Indeed, some may conclude that it’s better to get into generic production straightaway and form an explicit own-label alliance with the supermarkets; which at least has the merit of keeping the factory production line rolling. It is a process that Andy Knowles, founding partner of design consultancy Jones Knowles Ritchie, has dubbed “brand commoditisation” – the slow death of the brand premium.

Will the Diageo court case make any difference? Surprisingly – given the background – it may. The rights and wrongs of intellectual property law in this area have been left in a mess after a High Court judgement handed down by Lord Justice Jacob in December 2006. This particular case centred not on supermarket “knock-offs” but a dispute between two brand owners, Procter & Gamble and Reckitt Benckiser. Briefly, P&G claimed RB had copied its Febreze air freshener design. Despite the fact that there was an uncanny similarity between the two products (other than the price, that is), P&G lost. And it lost on the curious grounds, according to the judge, that because the RB product was a manifestly cheap imitation, it didn’t deceive anyone. It was the first time a UK court had been asked to decide the scope of a new piece of EC regulation, the so-called Registered Community Design (RCD), and by common account it fell down on the job – creating instead a “Charter for Copycats”.

So, why does Diageo think it might get lucky? Probably because there has been yet another subtle shift in the law that may allow it to have a shot at the problem from a different angle. Last May new consumer protection regulations came into force banning lookalike products which are packaged and marketed with the intention of misleading consumers.

So far they are untested. In the words of Nina Best, an expert in advertising and marketing law at legal practice Browne Jacobson: “…If Trading Standards were to decide to investigate this potential breach of the regulations, it would undoubtedly strengthen Diageo’s case as well as give them the right to apply to the criminal courts for the forfeiture of Sainsbury’s Pitchers.”

Sainsbury’s would enjoy that experience about as much as Admiral Byng his execution. Others, however, might be suitably encouraged.


RB restores lustre to dulled FMCG careers

July 14, 2009

RBReckitt Benckiser is demonstrating its customary approach to risk and innovation with an ambitious corporate marketing communications campaign.

RB has long outperformed its rivals in what to the uninitiated is the dull household sector. With the aid of a clutch of power brands such as Vanish, Cillit Bang, Finish, Nurofen and Clearasil, it regularly bests them on organic growth and profit margins, facts not unnoticed in the City. Not only that, it is virtually the only packaged goods company which continues to beat supermarket own-labels at their own game, proving the consumer will pay a premium for branded goods as long as they are a) better and b) better marketed.

While the RB success story is well rehearsed in the marketing and investment communities it is, I would guess, almost unknown to consumers, who buy solely on the strength of individually marketed products. In this, RB has been missing a trick. And the surprise is, missing it for a long time, considering the trail blazed by the likes of Cadbury or Unilever.

AndraeaThe new global campaign, which is being masterminded by corporate affairs director Andraea Dawson-Shepherd (herself a recruit from Cadbury), sets out to remedy this deficiency in the wake of RB’s corporate rebrand last spring. Handled by Euro RSCG, it is weighted towards building awareness among 22-32 year olds, via social media. But it aims to do a lot more besides.

“Our power brands are already well known,” says Dawson-Shepherd. “We need to make ourselves better known among the next generation of people considering a career in consumer goods and let them know what the company has to offer.” Noting that financial services isn’t the magnet it used to be for ambitious marketers, she hopes to restore the dulled colours of a career in FMCG.

Lateral thinking in the middle of a recession. Size of communications budget almost no object. Now there’s a thing.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 415 other followers

%d bloggers like this: