Lafley refocused the company of its top ten brands, the bestsellers that each generated over $1 billion in sales combined to make up more than half of P&Gâs total revenues. âItâs a basic strategy that worked for me in the navy,â said Lafley, who, as a supply officer, ran a department store for servicemen. âI learned that even when youâve got a complex business, thereâs a core, and the core is what generates most of the cash, most of the profits. The trick was to find the few things that were really going to sell, and to sell as many of them as you could.
Related Quotes
With ten countries representing 85 percent of profits, P&G had to focus on winning in those countries. We asked where consumers expected P&G brands and products to be sold, that is, mass merchandisers and discounters, drugstores, and grocery stores. Core became a theme in innovation as well. P&G scientists determined the core technologies that were important across the businesses and focused on those technologies above all others. We wanted to shift from a pure invention mind-set to one of strategic innovation; the goal was innovation that drove the core. Core consumers were a theme too; we pushed businesses to focus on the consumer who matters most, targeting the most attractive consumer segments. Core was the first and most fundamental where-to-play choiceâto focus on core brands, geographies, channels, technologies, and consumers as a platform for growth.
For Olay, the how-to-win choices were to formulate genuinely better skin-care products that could actually fight the signs of aging, to create a powerful marketing campaign that clearly articulated the brand promise (âFight the Seven Signs of Agingâ), and to establish a masstige channel, working with mass retailers to compete directly with prestige brands. The masstige choice, which was a decision to win in the channels P&G knew best, required significant changes in product formulation, package design, branding, and pricing to reframe the value proposition for retailers and consumers.
Strategy as Winning â A.G. Lafley:
By the time of my election to CEO in 2000, most of P&Gâs businesses were missing their goals, many by a wide margin. The company was overinvested and overextended. It was not winning with those who mattered mostâconsumers and customers. When I visited all our top retailers in my first thirty days on the job, I found that P&G was their biggest supplier but nowhere near their best supplier. Consumers were abandoning P&G, as evidenced by declining trial rates and market share on most of our leading brands. I was
determined to get P&Gâs strategy right. To me, right meant that P&G would focus on
achievable ways to win with the consumers who mattered the most and against the very
best competition. It meant leaders would make real strategic choices (identifying what they would do and not do, where they would play and not play, and how specifically they would create competitive advantage to win). And it meant that leaders at all levels of the company would become capable strategists as well as capable operators. I was going to teach strategy until P&G was excellent at it. I wanted my team to understand that strategy is disciplined thinking that requires tough choices and is all about winning. Grow or grow faster is not a strategy. Build market share is not a strategy. Ten percent or greater earnings-per-share growth is not a strategy. Beat XYZ competitor is not a strategy. A strategy is a coordinated and integrated set of where-to-play, how-to-win, core capability, and management system choices that uniquely meet a consumerâs needs, thereby creating competitive advantage and superior value for a business. Strategy is a way to winâand nothing less.
Like the home-care team, it attacked in an area of least resistanceâmenâs fragrances and younger, sportier scents, rather than in the heart of the most intense competition in womenâs prestige brands. The team found new ways to win by creating brands based on specific consumer needs and wants, partnering in distinctively successful ways with fragrance houses and designers. In doing so, the fine-fragrance business became part of P&Gâs larger how-to-win strategy, another way to differentiate brands along a dimension that consumers care about and to leverage the benefits of global scale.
Communication to the Organization â A.G. Lafley
I prioritized the consumer ahead of all other stakeholders, including customers, shareholders, and employees. I started with consumers, because the purpose of a business is to create consumers and to serve them better than anyone else can. No consumers, no business. I said P&G had to win the consumer value equation and the first two consumer moments of truth. I talked about retail customers and suppliers as partners in serving consumers better...
I really tried to distill things down as a way to get the choices understood. Thereâs no doubt in my mind that clarity makes a difference. Clear and simple, easily translatable choices were crucial to get 135,000 P&G-ers in ninety countries operating with excellence every
day.