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Expanding Opportunities for Milk Vending

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Vending adds a new incremental sales channel for selling single-serve milk products ... as experience, if not with milk vending, with fresh food and other beverages ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Expanding Opportunities for Milk Vending


1
Expanding Opportunities for Milk Vending
  • The Multi-Channel Milk Vending Test

October 2003
RESEARCH CONSULTING FOR THE GLOBAL BEVERAGE
INDUSTRY
2
Contents
  • Introduction/Background
  • Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • Key Findings and Conclusions
  • Test Results
  • Financial Analysis
  • Milks Vending Opportunity

3
Beverage Immediate Consumption Growth
Introduction/Background
  • Immediate consumption of beverages has grown at a
    rate more than 3X take-home in recent years
  • Consumers are on-the-go more than ever, and
    beverage brands are responding by being more
    widely available and in convenience packaging

Growth of Immediate Consumption
Beverages(1) 1997- 2002
5-Year CAGR
Total Industry Volume(2)
Per Capita Consumption
CAGR Compound Annual Growth Rate (1)
Non-alcoholic (2) Millions of gallons Source
Beverage Marketing Corp. IRI
4
Introduction/Background
Milks Availability Disadvantage
  • Milk, however is significantly underrepresented
    in the immediate consumption channels
    (convenience, vending, down-the-street)
  • Lack of availability in these channels puts milk
    at a significant competitive disadvantage

Estimated Retail Channel Shares 2002
Fruit Juice
PET Water
  • Reasons Why
  • Milks perishability
  • Limited single-serve packaging
  • Limited product variety and lack of strong
    brands
  • Milk outspent by competitors marketing,
    distribution, equipment

Retail Channel
CSDs
Milk
Take-Home 86 45 47 70 Immediate
Consumption 6 30 48 17 Foodservice 8 25 5 1
3 Total 100 100 100 100
(1)
(1)
(1) Includes fountain
5
Competitive Vending Presence
Introduction/Background
  • Milks presence in vending, a key and rapidly
    growing immediate consumption channel, remains
    virtually non-existent
  • For competitive beverages, on the other hand, 3
    to 12 of volume is sold through venders

Vendings Estimated Share of Volume
Volume Sold Thru Vending
Growth Trend
Soft Drinks 12 Bottled Water 5 Ready-To-Dr
ink Tea 4 Sports Drinks 4 Fruit
Beverages 3 Milk lt1 -
Source Beverage Marketing Corp. Vending Times
6
Introduction/Background
Foundation for Milk Vending
  • Recently, however, dairy industry innovations
    have provided the foundation for substantial
    vended milk opportunity
  • Consumers are increasingly on-the-go and eating
    more meals away from home they expect products
    to be available wherever they are and whenever
    they want them
  • The dairy industry has recently been very
    innovative in terms of developing single-serve
    packaging and a broadened array of milk products
    that fit the vending channel (e.g. flavors,
    16-ounce plastic)
  • Strong branding initiatives by processors, as
    well as national brand owners, have broadened the
    appeal of milk as a contemporary, competitive
    beverage

Key Drivers of Vended Milk Opportunity
7
Introduction/Background
Recent Milk Vending Initiatives
  • Recognizing vendings potential, the milk
    industry set out to objectively test and
    understand the opportunity through a number of
    initiatives

Milk Vending Tests/Initiatives
  • Upstate New York Secondary School Single-Serve
    Test
  • School Milk Vending Test
  • Local/Regional Dairy Council Initiatives
  • Multi-Channel Vend Test

8
Introduction/Background
Key Learnings from Vending Initiatives
  • The highly successful School Milk Vending Test,
    along with anecdotal evidence from milk
    processors who have initiated school milk vending
    programs, showed that
  • School milk Vending represents a profitable
    business opportunity for processors, vend
    operators and schools
  • Vending adds a new incremental sales channel for
    selling single-serve milk products
  • Vending satisfies consumer demand for milk in
    non-traditional settings/occasions
  • Vending serves as a low-cost marketing vehicle
    for milk brands

9
Vending Location Demographics
Introduction/Background
  • However, schools may represent only a very small
    portion of the total milk vending opportunity
  • There are over a million vending locations
    representing a significant cross-section of
    consumer segments
  • Vending Industry Location Demographic Summary1
  • 1 Vending Times, 2002 Census of the Industry
  • 2 Bachtelle and Associates location volume
    index calculations comparing location volume
    share versus location count share

10
Introduction/Background
Adding to Our Fact Base
  • The Multi-Channel Milk Vending Test took the
    prior school vending analysis a few important
    steps further to determine
  • Which locations, besides schools, are
    high-opportunity for milk vending?
  • What is the optimal product set for a milk
    vender?
  • What are the benefits of different types of milk
    venders?

Ultimately, we can model an optimized
total vending opportunity for milk processors
11
Introduction/Background
Vending Locations Considerations
  • Due to the differences in the consumers and the
    location dynamics, we would not expect milk
    vending in other channels to look exactly like
    school milk vending

School Milk Vending
Milk Vending in Other Channels
  • Kids are the heaviest milk drinkers
  • Per capita milk consumption for adults is roughly
    half that of kids in traditional channels

Consumer Realities
  • Often fewer beverage choices in schools
  • Students are captive audience 8 hours per
    day
  • Schools are densely populated 700-3,000 students
    in our test schools
  • Heavy beverage vending available, plus options
    outside the locations
  • For Public and CU variable and transient
    population (foot traffic)
  • Populations tended to be lower at BI test
    locations vs. test schools

Location Dynamics
12
Contents
  • Introduction/Background
  • Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • Key Findings and Conclusions
  • Test Results
  • Financial Analysis
  • Milks Vending Opportunity

13
Test Objectives
Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • The primary objective of the Multi-Channel Vend
    Test was to evaluate the opportunity and
    viability of milk vending in key, non-school
    channels
  • Building on and supplementing learnings from the
    school vending test
  • Developing detailed understanding of sales
    velocities, traffic requirements, demographic
    influences, etc.
  • Additional objectives were to understand and
    quantify the volume and economic potential for a
    processors total milk vending business

14
Vending Test Design
Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • 150 venders
  • Four markets 2 in Southwest, Midwest, Southeast
  • Three channels
  • Business/Industry (Blue Collar/White Collar)
  • Colleges/University
  • Public (e.g. Retail, Neighborhood Centers,
    Clinics)
  • Selling milk only
  • 12-, 14- or 16-ounce plastic packages
  • Processor-owned local/regional brands and
    national brands (NesQuik, Hersheys)
  • Range of flavors
  • Alternative Vending machine types

15
Market Selection Criteria
Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • The key criteria for market selection was the
    presence of large, best-in-class vend operator
  • Diverse, broad-market vending accounts/locations
  • Ability to sell in and physically place 50 milk
    venders
  • Good reputation, easy to work with, eager to
    participate
  • Additional market criteria included
  • High market Product Develop Index (PDI) for
    flavored milk
  • Processor with broad line of plastic milk
    offerings
  • Geographic diversity

16
Other Variables
Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • Three vender types were tested
  • Full vs. Limited product line venders were
    compared to see the impact of variety
  • Full 10-15 varieties
  • Limited 5-6 varieties

Dixie-Narco Glass Front
Royal Closed-Front
Royal Live-Display
17
Test Location Cell Structure
Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • The 150 test machines included
  • 90 glass front venders (identical to school test
    equipment)
  • 30 each of closed-front and live-display machine
    configurations

18
Cell Data Utilization
Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • The machine cell allocations allowed a variety of
    rather complex cell comparisons

Machine Type Comparison
BI Demographic Comparison (Blue vs. White Collar)
Product Set Comparison (Full vs. Limited)
Base Channel Comparison (BI, C/U, Public)
19
Test Extension Methodology
Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • After the milk vending test was concluded, an
    additional smaller test was conducted to indicate
    the relative impact of including non-milk
    beverages in milk venders
  • The sample for the test extension was limited to
    a relatively small number of machines in only one
    market
  • Test Extension Structure
  • One market Columbus, Ohio
  • 18 machines, divided between three (3) cells
  • Cell A Milk Only (local processor brand and
    national brand products)
  • Cell B Milk products plus expanded local
    processor items, including juice drinks, etc.
  • Cell C Milk products plus variety of
    alternative beverages, i.e., juices, Gatorade,
    etc.
  • All glass front machines
  • 12 weeks, reported in four-week segments
  • All locations selected from Multi-Channel Milk
    Vending Test sites

20
Test Extension Products
Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • Non-milk products included processor-manufactured
    juices and fruit drinks, as well as national
    brand juices/drinks, water and Gatorade

21
Test Extension Qualifications
Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • There were a number of factors inherent in the
    test extension that limit the findings to use
    directionally, rather than quantitatively
  • One market and small sample size
  • Forced vender placement in non-optimal
    locations
  • Location-specific variables/dynamics e.g.
    operator ran promotion on other venders
  • Reported test data that did not match machine
    revenue amounts
  • In a larger test, these factors would be
    smoothed out across the sample
  • Three valid adjustments were made to the data
    to address the issues, giving enough confidence
    in the data to identify directional findings
  • Seasonality adjustment
  • Comparison with snack vender volume changes
  • Internal adjustment to match data to actual
    vender revenues

22
Project Timeline
Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • The comprehensive test was planned, executed and
    analyzed over a year-long period

Multi-Channel Vending Test Timeline
March 02
July 02
January 03
July 03
Test Planning and Set Up
Test Execution
Analysis and Reporting
Test Extension
Venders Installed
23
Contents
  • Introduction/Background
  • Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • Key Findings and Conclusions
  • Test Results
  • Financial Analysis
  • Milks Vending Opportunity

24
Key Findings and Conclusions
  • Demand exists for vended milk in all the channels
    tested
  • Business and Industry blue and white collar
  • Public locations
  • Colleges and Universities
  • Milk vending can be a profitable business for
    both processors and independent vend operators
    across all channels tested
  • Within each channel, there are good and bad
    locations for venders
  • Success is largely driven by foot
    traffic/population at the location
  • Channel-specific milk vending profitability
    varies, based on different levels of foot
    traffic, seasonality (e.g. C/U may have reduced
    summer activity), availability of competitive
    products (e.g. BI with or without an employee
    cafeteria) , product pricing and commission
    structure
  • However, venders in each channel can be
    profitable, and an efficient business model would
    likely include placing venders in appropriate
    locations across all the channels

25
Key Findings and Conclusions (contd)
  • BI locations generally produced the highest per
    vender sales
  • Per capita consumption in BI locations was even
    higher than in the school test a surprising
    finding
  • This finding confirms that availability of
    single-serve product can be a driver of increased
    milk consumption for adults as well as kids
  • Per capita vended sales decline when other
    foodservice exists, however, total sales are
    often higher due to the larger location
    populations
  • Within BI, higher per caps were realized in
    locations without employee cafeterias
  • Having a variety of brands and flavors drives
    increased sales
  • The test proved the importance of broad product
    variety, which may include a combination of more
    flavors, fat-levels and strong brands
  • The best total volume and profit opportunity is
    in mixed venders with milk and other beverages
  • In fact, including non-milk beverages may make
    vending locations viable where milk-dedicated
    vending would be unsupportable

26
Key Findings and Conclusions (contd)
  • Glass front venders, which clearly display and
    merchandise the milk products, deliver higher
    location and per capita sales volumes
  • However, alternative business approaches will
    make sense when equipment requirements and
    potential profitability are considered (e.g.
    glass front venders may not be appropriate for
    outdoor placements and are often more costly)
  • Working with independent vend operators to enter
    the milk vending business will be the more
    attractive option for most dairy processors, at
    least initially
  • Independent operators have existing required
    infrastructure as well as experience, if not with
    milk vending, with fresh food and other beverages
  • Independent operators will already have
    relationships and/or contracts with the most
    viable vending locations, whereas it may be
    difficult for a processor to secure milk vending
    locations
  • Additionally, independent operators are generally
    servicing multiple vending machines per
    stop/location thus, unlike processors, who may
    require additional drive-time and higher costs
    for new milk vending accounts, servicing one
    additional vender for an independent operator
    adds negligible cost

27
Contents
  • Introduction/Background
  • Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • Key Findings and Conclusions
  • Test Results
  • Financial Analysis
  • Milks Vending Opportunity

28
Average Weekly Volume Over Time
Test Results
  • Across all venders and locations, weekly sales
    averaged 78 units per vender
  • As expected, sales volumes were highest just
    following vender installation and declined over
    time

Average Weekly Sales Per Vender By Period
Average All Weeks 77.6
Unit/Dollars Per Vender
All machine types all weeks
Decline from weeks 1-4 -- -19 -23
29
Comparative Volume Retention Levels
Test Results
  • However, post-installation sales retention levels
    were relatively high nearly 80 across all
    venders
  • In the School Milk Vending Test by comparison,
    base line period sales were 64 of installation
    period sales, also better than the estimated
    industry average of 50 to 60

Share of Installation Period Sales
Retained Multi-Channel vs. School Test
All machine types all weeks
30
Alternative Channel Volumes
Test Results
  • Vender unit sales were highest at Business
    Industry locations 96 units across all weeks
  • CU and Public locations sold 10 and 20 less,
    respectively

Average Weekly Unit Sales Per Location/Machine By
Channel
Units Per Week Per Vender
Glass front venders only All weeks
31
Range of Vender Sales
Test Results
  • As with any test design that forces location
    distribution, some locations performed at
    significantly below-average levels, while others
    delivered very high unit sales volumes

Range of Weekly Sales Per Vender By Channel
Highest
Median
Lowest
Glass front venders only All weeks
32
Volume Less Poor Performers
Test Results
  • Based on operator estimated sales requirements
    for retaining a vender location, when poor
    performing venders are eliminated from the mix
    (as would occur in real life situation) sales
    are significantly more robust

Average Weekly Sales Per Vender Excluding Poor
Performing Venders(1)
All Venders
Units Per Week Per Vender
Excluding Poor Performing Venders
(1) Venders with sales lower than the estimated
requirement for profitability (14 of 22 public,
10 of 29 CU, 14 of 22 BI) Glass front venders
only
33
Full-Line Milk Product Offerings
Test Results
  • Venders that carried broader product offerings
    significantly outsold those that offered only
    limited milk products

Average Weekly Unit Sales and Per Caps Full vs.
Limited Product Lines
Units Per Week Per Vender
Weekly Per Capita Sales
(7 varieties)
(4 varieties)
(7 varieties)
(4 varieties)
BI Glass front venders only
34
Flavor Variety Analysis
Test Results
  • Flavored milk accounted for 73 of unit sales
    across channels
  • Chocolate was the most popular flavor, with 47
    of sales volume
  • The significant 11 from other comprised just 4
    flavors

Flavor Unit Sales(1) Shares
Flavor Totals White 27 Chocolate 47 Strawberry
15 Other 11 Total 100
Significantly higher than 9 in school test
(1) All Locations all markets (2) Other flavors
included Cookies n Cream, Vanilla, Banana, Mocha
35
Brand Variety Analysis
Test Results
  • Among the full product set venders,
    local/regional processor brands outsold national
    brands by slightly more than 2 to 1
  • In BI, the ratio was closer to 3 to 1

Processor vs. National Brand Unit Sales Shares By
Location
Share of Vender Sales
Glass front venders only All weeks
36
Alternative Vender Type Analysis
Test Results
  • Glass front venders significantly outsold both
    closed front and live display equipment at BI
    locations

Relative Sales Volume by Vender Type Average
Units Per Week Per Vender
Performance Relative to Glass Front
-33 -33 ---
Baseline weeks 5-12 BI locations only
37
Alternative Vender Type Analysis
Test Results
  • Removing any volume variability associated with
    location population levels, glass front venders
    still outperformed the other test venders

Relative Per Capita Volume(1) by Vender
Type Average Units Per Week Per Vender
Performance Relative to Glass Front -22 -24 ---
Baseline weeks 5-12 BI locations only
38
BI Channel Analysis
Test Results
  • Within the BI channel (69 reporting blue collar
    and white collar locations) there were some
    variations in performance by market
  • The same trend occurred with per capita
    consumption per vender

BI Weekly Unit Sales Per Vender By Market
Units Per Week Per Vender
Per Capita Consumption 0.32 0.19 0.26
All machine types all weeks
39
BI Per Capita Consumption
Test Results
  • Baseline per capita consumption at BI locations
    was a healthy 0.25 units/week
  • Significantly higher than per caps realized in
    the school milk vending test

BI Per Capita Consumption
Units Per Employee Per Week
Per Capita Consumption in School Test
0.20 0.25 0.18
Glass front venders only
40
Blue Collar vs. White Collar BI
Test Results
  • Per capita vended milk consumption was slightly
    higher in blue collar vs. white collar locations

BI Per Capita Consumption Blue Collar vs. White
Collar
Units Per Employee Per Week
Glass front venders only Baseline Weeks 5-12 only
41
BI Location Analysis
Test Results
  • In larger BI locations with employee cafeterias,
    per capita vended milk sales were substantially
    lower than at locations without cafeterias
  • The larger populations at locations with
    cafeterias, however, drove higher total vended
    milk sales

BI Baseline Period Vender Sales Cafeteria vs.
Non-Cafeteria Locations
Weekly Sales Per Vender
All machine types All weeks
42
Mixed Beverage Venders Sales
Test Results
  • In the extended mixed-vender test, test venders
    with both milk and non-milk beverages outsold
    milk dedicated venders by 40
  • Milk sales did decline, but much less than the
    reduced share of facings for milk (-33)

Mixed Beverage Vender Sales Change in Revenues
with Addition of Non-Milk Products
40
Change in Sales with Non-Milk Addition
-14
-21
-27
Note Small sample size results are directional
only
43
Mixed Beverage Venders Retention Rates
Test Results
  • Milks retention rate in mixed venders was high
    in fact milk sales recovered over time
  • This finding validates the notion that milk
    demand is resident, not just a reaction to new
    product availability

Share of Installation Period Sales Retained Mixed
Vender Test
105
45-50
44
Vend Operators Response to Test
Test Results
  • The participating vend operators, interviewed
    post-test, were quite positive
  • All of the vend operators were eager to evaluate
    this new vending opportunity they expected to
    have mixed results between the various test
    channels
  • Each believes that milk is a viable product in
    the vend industry and will likely become a
    profitable component of their vending business at
    selected locations
  • In general, machine profitability is expected to
    increase by adding other non-milk products to the
    machines

45
Vend Operator Sell-In Issues
Test Results
  • The vend operators cited some issues/hurdles
    related to selling-in milk vending in the various
    channels
  • Business/Industry
  • Availability of electrical outlets/adequate space
  • Moderate response by management to dedicated milk
    venders
  • College/University
  • Multiple levels of approvals required
  • Commissions expected
  • Exclusive soft drink company contracts in some
    locations
  • Public Locations
  • Security of equipment
  • Electrical outlets/adequate space availability

46
Best Practices
Test Results
  • Full variety of milk product offerings
  • Placed next to snack and/or food machine(s)
  • No competitive milk nearby in same package (e.g.
    in cafeteria)
  • Prefer glass front vender (but site economics
    will dictate)
  • Milk and non-milk products, if possible

Operator Perspective on Best Practices
  • Public locations with extended hours of access/
    operation
  • e.g. retail, transportation, healthcare, etc.
  • BI with 300 population
  • Combination blue and white collar
  • Prefer location with limited access to lunch
    alternative within the immediate area
  • C/U locations with heavy foot traffic

Operator Perspective on Key Locations
47
Contents
  • Introduction/Background
  • Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • Key Findings and Conclusions
  • Test Results
  • Financial Analysis
  • Milks Vending Opportunity

48
Financial Analysis
Vender Procurement Options
  • There are a number of options for procuring milk
    vending machines, including purchase, lease and
    subsidized use

Own
Lease
Subsidized Ownership
  • Owns and operates
  • From processor, brand owner, or machine
    manufacturer
  • Monthly payments to owner, or if processor-owned,
    lease cost can be amortized over COGS
  • Subsidized by brand owner
  • Subsidized by dairy industry association

Operator
  • Owns and self-operates
  • Leases to operator
  • Supplies vender to operator to use free of charge
  • From brand owner
  • From machine manufacturer
  • Long-term lease or lease-to-own
  • Subsidized by brand owner
  • Subsidized by dairy industry association

Processor
  • Leases to operator
  • Leases to processor to self-operate
  • Supplies vender to operator or processor to use
    free of charge
  • From machine manufacturer
  • Long-term lease or lease-to-own
  • n/a

Brand Owner
49
Financial Analysis
Hypothetical Milk Vending Economics
  • Hypothetical milk vending economics models have
    been derived for a number of possible milk
    vending scenarios, based on findings from the
    Multi-channel Milk Vending Test
  • The models also considered the type of vending
    machine (glass front vs. closed front), due to
    the differences in cost and sales velocity during
    the test

Method of Vender Procurement
Vender Operator
Processor Self-Op
Lease Vender
Independent Operator
Hypothetical Milk Vending Economics Models
Processor Self-Op
Purchase Vender
Independent Operator
50
Financial Analysis
Important Qualifications
  • Milk vending is emerging as a new channel for
    selling milk and is an additional means for milk
    to compete with other beverage types for
    away-from-home sales and consumption occasions
  • Because vending is not a traditional channel for
    milk, there are currently no well-established
    business models for the industry to follow or use
    to evaluate the vending opportunity
  • The hypothetical models presented here are
    derived from Multi-Channel Vend Test data and
    working with vend operators, processors and
    vending machine manufacturers to understand
    typical costs
  • Each processors and each operators costs will
    differ, perhaps significantly, depending on its
    capabilities/ competencies, product portfolio,
    local market dynamics, competitive circumstances,
    accounting practices, etc.

51
Financial Analysis
Important Qualifications (contd)
  • The financial analyses that follow consider only
    the incremental costs of operating a milk vender,
    and do not take into account overhead allocation
    or capital requirements, which may be significant
    (e.g. truck purchase, additional personnel, added
    routes, etc.)
  • Generally, incremental costs of operation for
    independent vend operators will be significantly
    less than for processor self-operation

52
Financial Analysis
Financial Analyses Defined
  • The various business models were analyzed for
    three different financial results IRR, pay-back
    and break-even

Definition
Financial Analysis
  • The time it takes to recoup the purchase cost of
    the vender, based on gross profit

Pay-Back Period
Break-Even Requirement
  • The level of sales required to break-even at the
    operating profit level
  • Return on initial investment (vender purchase or
    lease) across 10 years of annual cash flow
  • Utilized for evaluating and ranking investment
    opportunities in capital strategy/planning

IRR (Internal Rate of Return)
53
Financial Analysis
Pay-Back Summary
  • Based on gross profits, the pay-back periods in
    all cases are shorter than or well within the
    range of the 1-1/2 to 2 years generally sought in
    the vending business in many cases less than
    one year
  • Processor self-op scenarios have shorter pay-back
    periods for both vender purchase and lease,
    because combined manufacturing and operating
    profits are realized

Pay-back Periods for Milk Dedicated Vending
Machines(1) Based on Gross Profit (in Years)
Vender Purchased by Operator
(1) Pay-back for purchase of vending machine
only does not include other potential capital
costs
54
Financial Analysis
Break-Even Summary
  • Break-even requirements for operator-owned
    venders are relatively low, ranging from 40 to
    52 per week for the first 7 years, with
    variances among the channels
  • Under the leasing scenarios, break-even
    requirements are significantly higher during the
    leasing period

Break-Even Sales Requirements for Milk Dedicated
Vending Machines(1) Based on Operating Profit
Across all Channels (Weekly Per Vender Sales)
Vender Leased by Operator
Vender Purchased by Operator
(1) In this hypothetical model, Venders are
leased over 3 year period, with 15 interest
rate for purchased venders, depreciation is over
7 years Note For vender purchased by operator
scenario, capital expense of the vending machines
is considered as depreciation in operating expense
55
Financial Analysis
Return on Investment Summary
  • Return on investment levels, as measured by IRR,
    are attractive across all four scenarios and
    across all channels
  • Vender purchase yields a higher IRR, due to the
    relatively lower cost, which does not include any
    interest expense
  • Processor self-operation realizes the highest
    rates of return, but in these models the capital
    costs associated with setting up a vending
    business are not included

Return on Investment(1) for Milk Dedicated
Vending Machines Based on 10 Years of After Tax
Cash Flow
Vender Leased by Operator(2)
Vender Purchased by Operator
(1) As measured by IRR (2) In this hypothetical
model, Venders are leased over 3 year period,
with 15 interest rate
56
Contents
  • Introduction/Background
  • Multi-Channel Vend Test Overview
  • Key Findings and Conclusions
  • Test Results
  • Financial Analysis
  • Milks Vending Opportunity

57
Milk Vending Volumetric Opportunity
Milk Vending Opportunity
  • Based on fairly conservative assumptions, BMC
    believes that the opportunity for milk vending
    can approach 100 million gallons per year

Preliminary Estimated Vended Milk Opportunity
All Channels
Annual Sales/Vender (units)
Incremental Sales/Year
Channel
of Venders
(mil units)
(mil gallons)
BI Blue Collar(1) 45,500 6,536 271.3 33.9
White Collar(2) 23,500 6,536 153.6 19.2 Colleges/U
niversities 16,000 3,762 60.2 7.5 Public(4) 45,000
6,063 272.8 34.1 Secondary Schools(5) 16,500 7,92
0 130.7 16.3 Total 142,500 888.6 111.0
(3)
(1) 25 of plant/factory vending locations (2)
5 of offices with venders (3) 36 weeks assume
no operation during summer months/holidays (4)
10 of public locations with vending (5) From
School Milk Vending Test analysis 2001 Source
Beverage Marketing Corp.
58
Industry Opportunity
Milk Vending Opportunity
  • Based on these preliminary estimates, vending
    alone could generate incremental sales to grow
    the total milk category volume by 1.7

Preliminary Estimate of the Impact of Milk
Vending Total Milk Category
Millions of Gallons
Source Beverage Marketing Corp.
59
Key Considerations for Implementation
Milk Vending Opportunity
Implementation Issues
Key Considerations
Capital Cost Requirements
  • Purchasing 142,000 milk venders will cost
    400-500 million
  • Could take the industry 10 years to realize full
    potential
  • Vender prices will likely come down due to
    technology advances and increasing competition

Vend Operator Capabilities
  • Implementation will also be dependent on vend
    operators ability to secure and service
    significant number of accounts for milk, and
    place many new venders
  • Servicing accounts should not be a problem since
    operators already have significant fresh food
    business in these channels
  • A key focus should be educating vend operators as
    to the milk vending opportunity

60
Key Considerations for Implementation (contd)
Milk Vending Opportunity
Implementation Issues
Key Considerations
National Brand Owner Activities
  • The milk vending effort will likely be spurred by
    significant vending initiatives of key national
    brand owners (e.g. Nestlé)
  • These programs could speed milk vending to
    market, but may effect the opportunity for
    local/processor-owned brands to get best
    locations
  • Coke/Pepsi/Cadbury might enter the segment and
    commit significant resources to vending

Adoption of Aseptic/ ESL Milk
  • As aseptic plastic (shelf-stable) milk gains
    ground, could mean significantly lowered capital
    costs (less expensive venders) and lower
    operation costs (less frequent servicing, etc.)
  • If brand owners are waiting for broad scale
    aseptic adoption, may slow momentum behind
    vending in the short-term

61
Summary The Bottom Line
Milk Vending Opportunity
  • The Multi-Channel milk vending test reinforces
    that milk vending is a profitable and attractive
    opportunity for processors
  • Increases single-serve milk sales
  • Puts milk in the hands of consumers away from
    home
  • Builds consumer brand awareness
  • A full complement of locations will maximize the
    milk vending opportunity
  • Schools are a very important channel
  • But processors and vend operators should consider
    a total milk vending program, including schools,
    BI, C/U and public locations, to optimize value

The Milk Vending Opportunity for Processors
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