Title: Balancing Supply and Demand
1Balancing Supply and Demand
2Supply and Demand Influencers - Historical
- Weather
- Seasonality
- Promotional Activity
- Acres Planted
- Transportation Availability
- Export Demand
- Consumption Growth Trends
3Supply and Demand Influencers Contemporary
Additions
- Contracts
- Food and Diet Fads
- Alternatives
- Consumer Food Safety Concerns
4Historical Perspective
High
Demand
Low
Low
High
Supply
5The Perfect World
- ? Promotion increases demand
- Higher Prices reduces demand
- Supply and Demand in balance
6Product Demand Characteristics
7Consumer Expectations
8Demand Perspective
USDA Shipment Data
9Demand Perspective - Lettuce
1,800,000
1,700,000
1,600,000
1,500,000
Cartons
1,400,000
1,300,000
1,200,000
1,100,000
1,000,000
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Week
Weekly Average Volume
2000-2006 Average Volume
USDA Shipment Data
10Demand Perspective - Celery
1,000,000
900,000
800,000
700,000
600,000
Cartons
500,000
400,000
300,000
200,000
100,000
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Week
Weekly Average Volume
2000-2006 Average Volume
USDA Shipment Data
11Demand Perspective - Strawberries
USDA Shipment Data
12Implications and Strategies
13Implications for Constant Demand Products
- Price reductions do not increase volume to
maintain total Retail Gross Margin dollars - Display size and multiple displays lift sales
- Promotions lift sales
14Strategies for Constant Demand Products
- Becoming heavily contracted
- Little promotional activity
- Contracts increase price volatility
1540 Contracted Example
Volume contracted and pricing strategy must
consider the volatility of supply in order to be
profitable.
16Implications for Seasonal Demand Products
- Price influences demand only at extreme highs or
lows. - Key to sales is having sufficient volume to
satisfy demand.
17Strategies for Seasonal Demand Products
- Consumption based demand Growers must be
cautious of their ability to overproduce. - Seasonality based demand Growers and Retailers
must create sufficient demand for the crop.
18Implications for Promotable Demand Products
- Price reductions generally do not increase volume
sufficiently to maintain total Retail Gross
Margin dollars - Increased supply generally occurs with lower
production costs providing opportunities to
increase portion size - Maintaining the retail price with a larger
portion provides consumer value and retailer
margin parity
19Strategies for Promotable Demand Products
- Price is constant
- Opportunity is consumer value
20Opportunity is Consumer Value
21What is Tanimura Antle Doing?
22Contracts
- Contract commitments are balanced with total
sales needs - Contract pricing must reflect actual costs, not
the optimum projected costs - Contract management
- TAs broad line production supports
one-stop-shopping and contracts generally require
purchasing support beyond the contracted items
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24Fathers Day Promotion
- Historically no holiday has been associated with
iceberg lettuce - Strawberries for Mothers Day
- Avocados for Super Bowl
- Cabbage for St. Patricks Day
- Asparagus for Easter
- Celery for Thanksgiving
25Fathers Day Promotion
- TA is starting a Fathers Day promotion with 10
US and Canadian retailers to promote iceberg
lettuce, barbeque and baseball
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27Fathers Day Promotion Details
- TA is providing aggressive prices and ad
materials - Printing wrap film with baseball threads and
iceberg wedge salad recipe - Retailers are promoting iceberg in weekly ad
circulars and with in-store displays - Contests for best ads and display designs
28Thank You