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Shopper Marketing: How to Increase Purchase Decisions at the Point of Sale

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New and growing, Shopper Marketing is one of the hottest trends in marketing today. It targets consumers while they are in the store and involves every aspect of the shopping experience, from promotions, displays and packaging to the store layout itself.  According to a study by Deloitte, spending on shopper marketing has doubled since 2004.  Procter & Gamble alone invests at least 500 million dollars a year in shopper marketing. Microsoft, IBM, Coca-Cola and Nestle all have their own shopper marketing units. 

This book combines the perspectives of 35 internationally recognized shopper marketing experts, among them renowned author Paco Underhill.  Its three sections include research into shopper behavior [Insights]; interviews with experts [Strategy] and case studies of successful shopper marketing activities [Practice].

240 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2009

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Nathan Albright.
4,487 reviews169 followers
December 28, 2020
This book is in many ways a confusing one, even though all of the complexity of this book tends to at least be connected to the titular subject matter of exploring the field of shopper marketing and seeking to provide insight on how one can market to those who are already in stores in order to encourage them to buy more things than they would otherwise do. The confusing nature of this book comes from the fact that most of the people writing essays as part of this book are themselves marketers who use their own personal experiences as marketers of one form or another as the platform to proclaim their own insights to fields, and because so many of the essays seek to increase the profitability of companies without always serving the interests or needs of the shoppers themselves. There is a high degree of cynicism present in this book and its material that makes it less than ideal in terms of addressing the well-being of the shopper within the retail model, but as a book that demonstrates the perspective and point of view of those who market to shoppers, the attitude of these essays, as fragmented as the views are, seems to be at least an honest portrayal of the writers themselves.

This book is between 200 and 250 pages and is divided into three parts and 34 essays. After a preface, acknowledgements, and introduction, the first part of the book contains essays that seek to define what is shopper marketing (I), including discussions of the science of shopping (1), points of view (2), the discipline and approach (3), seven steps towards effective shopper marketing (4), bringing the shopper into category management (5), the illogic of the customer (6), the importance of home (7), mega-trends among shoppers (8), understanding the decisions of shoppers (9), shopping currencies (10), and shopper solutions (11). The second part of the book discusses strategy on how to approach shopper marketing (II), including connecting, engaging, and exciting shoppers (12), retailing for the future (13), using retail media (14), integrated communications planning (15), conversion modeling (16), in-store measurements (17), turning shopper insight into practice (18), capitalizing on unrealized shopper demand (19), building loyalty (20), overcoming common mistakes (21), and dealing with the difference of definitions (22), retail partnerships (23), collaborating to ensure marketing execution (24), and putting the shopper into one's marketing strategy (25). The last set of essays involves execution of shopper marketing (III), with essays on increasing profitability through promotions (26), Russia's shopping environment (27), using emotional insight (28), cause marketing (29), looking at Tesco Fresh & Easy as a case study (30), pricing strategies (31), packaging (32, 33), and maximizing ROI with package promotions (34), after which there is an index.

In reading a book like this one, the reader is cautioned that at least some of the advice in this book is contradictory, and a great many of the writers are seeking to make a place for themselves as being insightful and worthwhile observers and consultants to those who are seeking to maximize their profits as retailers or as brands within a highly competitive world. This particular book was published in 2010, so there is a lot of recent technological and cultural change over the past decade that is not discussed. And some of the writers seek to argue for regional differences such that situations in Russia, to take but one example, are viewed as being closer to the "golden age of retailing" than the much grimmer picture in Europe, the UK, and the United States where competition is much more fierce and consumers much more wary of marketing efforts. While the book itself is written with the approach of data relating to customer behavior, some of the writers wisely question the assumption that shoppers make 70% of brand choices within stores as well as the presumption that 68% of purchases are not planned in advance. Such numbers are certainly not true of my own shopping, to be sure.
Profile Image for Xiao Yiwen.
4 reviews
September 17, 2019
As a marketer who have worked at the brand and trade marketing in FMCG industry, this is a basic book.

Bulk of the information presented in this book, we have already learn it through experience. The writers simply re-arrange these experience in the shopper marketing context.

It's a good book as a refresher, or individuals who want to venture into FMCG industry.
Profile Image for Tin Ton.
17 reviews
April 11, 2020
Mostly basis about shopper marketing but very essential to anyone that works in retail industry. Some parts of this book feels like a self-promotion of the author about their capability and marketing solution. It offers a big pile of information and knowledge but remains somewhat general and not much in details.

Still recommend for kick-starters in trade marketing though.
Profile Image for Alma Bautista.
7 reviews
July 9, 2018
Boring for people with experience in Marketing or Trade. If someone is starting to work in these areas it is OK or to students.
16 reviews
May 5, 2025
Insightful and engaging - would recommend to anymore who has an interest in using data analytics for marketing
620 reviews49 followers
August 23, 2010
At last, marketing gets around to the shopper

Shopper marketing is a rapidly growing concept in sales promotion, but how can you put it to work? Marketing consultants and editors Markus Ståhlberg and Ville Maila, and 35 other shopper-marketing experts, offer almost three dozen essays that detail how this tactic works, outline its benefits and explain how to implement it. getAbstract strongly recommends this definitive shopper-marketing resource. Its mix of savvy insights and suggestions from those on the front lines of retailing will appeal to product and brand managers, packaging experts, display designers, merchandising specialists, retail and manufacturing marketing and sales executives, as well as students of marketing, merchandising and selling.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews