As Japan's consumers evolve, so must the companies that serve
them. The trouble is traditional business models aren't able to
keep pace. Our research and work with clients shows that retailers
and consumer products companies that succeed are those that fully
integrate their management structure, processes and culture with
the aim of addressing fast-changing consumer needs. They invest to
generate the intelligence that helps them understand how customers
are-and are not-changing. They create nimble organizations capable
of quickly responding to those changes with new or reformulated
products-or ways of better serving customers.
What's striking in Japan is that many of the winners are middle
to smaller businesses. Their ability to emerge from the recession
in even stronger shape provides important lessons for larger
companies about how to adapt to consumers who are breaking with
tradition. While it may seem difficult for large, established firms
to mimic their success, the truth is that these are things that
companies of all sizes should be doing.
Consider the innovative concept introduced by eyeglass maker
Megane Top when it realized that customers' fast-paced lives gave
them less and less tolerance for waiting. The company revised its
business model and supply chain and introduced Japan to 25-minute
eyeglasses. Previously, it took one week to deliver glasses. The
concept boosted sales from 34 billion yen [$377 million] in 2006 to
46 billion yen [$511 million] by 2008. And when casual wear maker
Uniqlo saw department store sales plunging with successive
downturns, it opened shops in railroad stations with product lines
geared towards travelers. These midsize shops now sell four times
more merchandise than the company's larger stores.
Companies also must adapt to another major shift. The Japanese
consumer is getting older, with changing needs and interests. The
nation's most influential consumers are families whose heads of
households are over 50 years old. The segment has continued to grow
in recent years and now accounts for 80% of consumers' financial
assets and income.
We found other new trends that are altering shopper's buying
habits. For all their thriftiness, Japanese shoppers are becoming
more individualistic. They told us they are willing to make a
purchase that once might have been viewed as indulgent if it will
promote their lifestyle or improve their self image. And, while
they are more price conscious, the lowest price isn't always the
deciding factor. Over 62% of consumers surveyed by Nomura Research
in 2006 said they primarily consider "value for the money" compared
to 52% in 2000.
Winning consumer product companies and retailers are able to use
these changes in consumer behavior as a springboard for their
business. They succeed by organically integrating five major
business skills that give them a competitive edge.
Top management at winning companies has an unrelenting focus on
customers changing needs. They look for every opportunity to track
consumer shifts, relying on sophisticated data gathering systems to
analyze customer buying trends. But the difference sometimes boils
down to this: some senior executives do not rely solely on
computer-generated reports. Often, they spend time in the field
themselves. At specialty shoe retailer ABC-Mart, President and
Director Minoru Noguchi and his staff visit and work in stores on
weekends to learn first-hand what customers want. That's how the
company first struck upon the idea of boosting profits by selling
private-label brands. For its part, cosmetics' maker and health
food company Dr. Ci:Labo has tapped into a wealth of new concepts
by inviting customers to register their ideas for new products on
its community web site. A few of them now are successful products
such as scented moisturizers Rose Charge and Karada Mint,
delivering substantial sales.
Market leaders know how to redefine a product's quality, cost
and price to better meet consumer needs. ABC-Mart has earned a
reputation for purchasing low-priced foreign product lines and then
repositioning them as a major private-label brand through
well-targeted product development and promotion. Hawkins is a prime
example. Former CEO Masahiro Miki spotted the brand's potential
during a trip to London. It ultimately won the trademark to
manufacture the Hawkins brand as its own private label. It targets
younger women and now generates 20% of ABC's sales. In September,
same-store sales rose 6.3% from a year ago. In addition to becoming
a sales engine, the Hawkins experience has given ABC-Mart knowledge
about shoe production costs that has helped the company negotiate
better deals with other shoe manufacturers.
Leaders also look outside their own companies for partners that
can help them develop products that provide added value for
consumers. In 2006, Uniqlo teamed with yarn maker Toray's engineers
to create high-tech thermal underwear that's promoted as quick
drying, warm and preserves skin suppleness. The product has become
a perennial winner each winter for Uniqlo.
Sometimes, innovation can be as simple as changing a product's
image. Kobayashi Pharmaceutical boosted sales of its "Nicitol 85"
by turning the women's diet product into a diet medicine for men
with metabolic syndrome.
As they innovate products, winning companies also work to foster
stronger ties with customers. One way is by finding more occasions
to interact with them. Dr. Ci:Labo uses its call centers to provide
what the cosmetics maker calls "counseling order-taking." Staffed
from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. year around, the 120 female operators are
encouraged to spend time talking with customers as they place
orders, counseling them about the best products to buy and, at the
same time, gaining insights into what the largely female clientele
wants.
Another way companies are building customer loyalty: adding
full-time employees in high-sales areas so that customers receive
more personalized attention. Ozeki found it improved customer
service in its supermarkets by doubling the number of sales staff
on the floor compared to competitors. Other retailers build
customer communities and promote memorable experiences. The goal is
to encourage customers to return, again and again. Village Vanguard
bookstores achieves this by creating playful environments, with its
trademark humorous point-of-sale displays. DiskUNION develops its
stores around music genres and uses employees with music skills to
foster communities.
To gain a competitive edge, winners also are expert cost
cutters, often while improving performance. They trim operating
costs by moving manufacturing sites to less expensive countries.
And they reduce total costs through operational improvements. Ozeki
has increased the efficiency of its inventory management by
purchasing smaller quantities and better understanding what
customers want so inventory isn't left on the shelf.
Kobayashi is able to save on costs and speed ideas to market by
streamlining the product innovation process. The company
implemented a program by which R&D and product development
occur simultaneously, minimizing yield loss and cutting the time
required to get new products to market. For example, its popular
nighttime facemask product was launched just 13 months after its
conception. Within six months, it was generating sales at an annual
rate of $10 million.
In addition to honing operations, leading consumer products
makers and retailers take full advantage of each employee's
potential. In doing so they build a winning culture that can help
them consistently outperform the competition. Culture motivates
employees to do the right thing, not just the easy thing, and
always with customers in mind. The importance of culture was
validated by a Bain & Company worldwide survey of 1,430 top
executives conducted as the global downturn intensified in January
2009. Among the respondents, 88 percent said culture is as
important as strategy for business success. Yet our research
indicates that fewer than 10 percent of companies succeed in
building vibrant, distinctive cultures.
Ozeki's management team motivates its workforce by spending 20% of
its time working alongside employees in the supermarkets and using
the occasion to provide coaching. Kobayashi maintains a
decentralized management structure that values continuous employee
feedback. And ABC-Mart deploys a point-of-sale system that shows
employees their sales ranking in real time, encouraging internal
competition. Other companies empower workers by urging them to take
risks. For example, workers at Village Vanguard bookstores
individualize displays based on their own beliefs about what will
please their customers.
As Japan's economy rebounds, the winners will be those companies
that can integrate these five skills. Success depends on their
ability to innovate the way their organizations work, a skill
that's not common in Japan. Most important, top management must do
more than simply set the vision and tone for an unrelenting focus
on changing customers-they must take the lead, staying personally
involved to champion the effort. Because Japan's consumers are
breaking with tradition, companies serving them must do the
same.
Hiroshi Makioka is a partner in Bain & Company's Tokyo
office and a member of the firm's Consumer Products and Retail
practices.