vendredi 30 novembre 2012

Nespresso shop & consumer insights

Interviews of two Nespresso consumers at the Nespresso shop in Lille :


Is recycling a touchy topic about Nespresso’s and Lavazza’s coffee pads?


In the domain of recycling, the aim of Nespresso is to facilitate as much as possible the collect of used coffee pads. However, the firm had to establish different ways according to the country. In Germany and Sweden, pads are considerated as household wastes and thrown with this kind of wastes. On the contrary, in most of European countries (like France, Spain, Belgium), Nespresso tries to collect and get back used pads to recycle them through a special system. To set up this system, Nespresso consumers can bring their used pads in Nespresso shops since 2008.

Nespresso had also improved in the recycling of the pads, particularly in France because small aluminium wastes are not always recycled (and are burnt): they create a system of magnet which permits to gather aluminium coffee pads but also small aluminium wastes (like cans). This way, consumers don’t have to bring their coffee pads to shops and can throw them with household wastes. This technical is implemented in few departments of France.
When coffee pads are collected in shops or special place, recycling starts with the separation of aluminium and the coffee grounds. Then, the last one is used to make compost and the aluminium is reused after becoming aluminium again.

By this way, Nespresso directly implies consumer in the recycling of the pads. The firm testes new system less restricting for customers and innovates by making consumer able to throw the pads with household wastes. But by getting back the coffee pads, the firm can send the used aluminium to specialized firms and earns money. This money represents 5% of the cost of this recycling system. And in an environmental way, recycling aluminium is more sustainable than the production of primary aluminium.
The main objective for Nespresso is to recycle 75% of sold pads in 2013.

On the other side, Lavazza proposes pads composed of aluminum, polyester and polyethylene which are not recycled neither reused. Those pads are burnt in incenerators.

In both case, one of the main brake in consuming coffee by pads is the ecological impact: indeed, coffee bean is really less pollutant than coffee pads.

Nespresso in particular is accused of greenwashing about the recycling.

The Ethical Coffee Company explained that Nespresso insists on the fact that they recycle pads so they reuse aluminium. However, in a global way, it is more pollutant recycling pads than just throwing them with other wastes. The Ethical Coffee Company wants the consumer be conscious that recycling includes also transporting pads to the right place, separating coffee grounds from aluminium... all those steps produce more CO2  than just burning pads.

The firm accuses Nespresso of greenwashing and challenges Nespresso to submit the pads to a strict control about recycling. The Company asks Nespresso to get the ADEME label which takes into account all the steps of recycling to calculate the generated CO2 and which guarantees that technical used by Nespresso is really positive in an environmental way.

In fact, Nespresso built up a strong communication strategy (called ECOLABORATION) about recycling whereas it is not a topic in Lavazza website: Does Nespresso want to hid the reality about its environmental impact?

jeudi 29 novembre 2012

Press Articles

Two very interessting articles to read in CB News (January 2012) :

Le café noir du désir à la dosette, pourquoi la relation avec le café est passée d'une liaison corsée, sensuelle à grands coups de volutes et de velours, à...la quête du temps. (étude de cas)

Le café promu grand cru, la responsable de la com' Nespresso France revient sur la valeur émotionnelle du café. (interview)


jeudi 22 novembre 2012

Lavazza Vs Nespresso in TV ads


Since 1995, Lavazza has been using heaven as a theme for all its TV ads.  In 2009, its main competitor Nespresso launched a TV ads with the exact same theme. Lavazza asked for the ads to be removed and accused Nespresso of plagiarism. 

Then in 2010, Lavazza featured Julia Roberts in its ads to compete with the famous “What else?” of George Clooney. With George Clooney fronting Nespresso and now Julia Roberts endorsing Lavazza, one can expect more coffee companies to get high profile actors and actress to be their brand spokesperson ...

For sure, the image war between the two coffee brands  is declared on !

Coffee drinkers profile


mercredi 14 novembre 2012

Targeting the same premium segment... with different advertising strategies

Nespresso Print Campaign

Lavazza Print Campaign

The analysis of these two ads above will enable us to understand the different branding strategies of the two premium brands: Lavazza and Nespresso

First of all, what is striking in these two ads is that they seem to advert for a luxury good. Whether the black and sophisticated atmosphere of the Nespresso ad, or the historical and arty references of the Lavazza one, both ads tell us that we are dealing with a classy and prestigious product. This, could seem surprising, coffee is common, affordable and available everywhere which are the exact opposite values conveyed by luxury goods (beyond price, rare, reserved to selected places). So why choosing these specific codes? 

As we have seen in some part of our overall market analysis, the demand for coffee is evolving, more and more consumers want a coffee which is unique, tasty and of high quality. This trend has been well understood by premium brands : they have to target their segment with specific and new codes that are far from the common and down-to-earth image of coffee. 

However there are also striking differences in these two ads. Nespresso chooses a well-know and admired actor: Georges Clooney is staring at us with a cup of coffee. He seems at ease and natural, he embodies coolness and classiness and so does the coffee he is drinking. The baseline "what else?" is simple and short and is meant to tell the consumer "this coffee is unique, you do not need to go any further, to test any other product" . The global atmosphere of the ad is thus simple, classy and very efficient. The promise is easy to get and the consumer tends to believe it because of the celebrity endorsement strategy (which acts as a proof). 
Meanwhile Lavazza gives us a really different approach. The sophistication of the ad is not derived from a personnality or a catchy baseline but by a cultural universe that is strong enough to evocate values such as : italian quality, high-quality savoir-faire. Lavazza base his all its promise on the fact that they product italian coffee. As Leonard Da Vinci is great italian artist, worldwide recognized, Lavazza coffee is meant to be prestigious. Lavazza use a cultural endorsement strategy. 

It appears thus that we have too different strategies but delivering the same promise : "our coffee is unique". 


Coffee rituals... All around the world

         It has been said many times that coffee is a common beverage, drunk all over the world. In Western countries, coffee is mainly associated with the morning ritual : waking up, having breakfast and starting a new day. However we have no idea of all the different ways of drinking coffee all over the world.
Let us do a quick travel in the world of coffee!


        According to the website of the coffee brand "Illy", we can observe diverse ways of drinking coffee.
- In Italy, for instance coffe is part of the cultural legacy, coffee is taken seriously. In 1645, the first
"house of coffee" has been inaugurated in Venizia. Coffee is often taken at a "bar" (invented as well in Italy) in the morning. 
- Meanwhile in France, coffee is really appreciated in the morning at home, and softer than in Italy. 
- In the US, the context in which you drink coffee is less important: you can drink it whenever you want, wherever you want in paper cup or big mugs. 
- In Turkey, coffee play an important an important role in the social, political and religious spheres. For instance, women will be judgent before marriage to prepare a good coffee.
 - In Japan, coffee is considered for its physical virtues. Japanese people use to drink it cold in small cans.  
- In Sweden, coffee is associated to a relaxing and sharing moment called "fikka". During a fikka, either at school or at work, swedes have to drink coffee and to eat a piece of cake or "cannelbulla". It is a ritual of socialization and you cannot escape it unless you will be considered as rude by yours collegues. 

       All these histories and habits around coffee show us well that depending on the national or social background, coffee means differents things: energy, coolness, classiness, cosiness, moment of sharing. 
These associated words and ideas to coffee are important for a brand while implementing its strategy. Premium brands such as Nespresso or Lavazza tends for instance to regard coffee as a sacred and sophitiscated product, like it has been looked at, in the Italian tradition. 

Coffee, first worldwide commodity



Before taking a close look to our premium brands (Lavazza and Nespresso), we want to have an idea of the global framework in which these two brands evolve.

Coffee is present in our everyday life: while taking our breakfast, at work with colleagues, after having lunch, in the afternoon with friends etc.… In short, it is a common good that rhythms our day.
Despite all cultural habits and differences existing, coffee is massively consumed worldwide. Indeed it is the second consumed beverage after water: 2 out of 3 people in the world are coffee drinkers.
These simple facts and figures give us a good idea of the huge potential that coffee market can represent for brands.
However, this is not an easy market to enter. Prices are very volatile and coffee production is hard to forecast (due to climate change for instance).

Coffee Importation in 2005

Also the coffee consumption has evolved a lot since World War II.  Geographically speaking USA are still the biggest coffee consumers, however Europe has become the first continent in terms of consumption by inhabitants




Now that we have seen the major trends in terms of ‘quantitative’ consumption we are going to take a look at ‘qualitative’ consumption trends. Consumers are nowadays more demanding on new varieties and tasting. In order to get the best coffee, more and more consumers choose to invest in pod coffee machines, which insure a great quality. 

For coffee brands it is thus important to listen to these consumer’s desire, to keep on innovating and not to take coffee market as an ever-growing market (whatever the quality of the product delivered). 


How sensorial marketing is used by Nespresso and Lavazza?


Nespresso was really the first to experiment sensorial marketing in its strategy. When the brand decided to establish shops, the aim was also to give attraction to the coffee: the atmosphere can create a purchase behavior whereas the website couldn’t transmit all the senses that coffee can reflect.   
So, they implement “bar-shop” concept where all the senses are used for the customer experience: colors, smells, tastings, music... Coffee pads are integrated on the walls in order to create multicolored painting, even seats make customers think about pads. The atmosphere respects all the characteristics of Nespresso values: luxury, calm, design, excellence, style in particular.  Moreover, shops are only set up in some specific towns to create a feeling of rarity. They also are developed in the same way, they all have been planned by the same architect Francis Krempp. He created three different spaces in each shop: one with the machines, one for the coffee pads and one for the coffee bar.
When customers go in a Nespresso shop, they enter into the universe of Nespresso, they cannot deny they are in a Nespresso shop. Before selecting a new coffee, they can try it in the coffee-bar and share it with other consumers of Nespresso coffee. The aim is to match with the high positioning and the luxury image of the brand.
This sensorial marketing had positive effects on the sales: in 2010, there has been an increase of 22% of the sales.




Lavazza started the sensorial marketing later, but now the brand is also developing this concept and tries to work on coffee-bars. The firm does not want to copy on Nespresso so they set up coffee-bar instead of coffee shops. Those ones are nomad and ephemeral. That is to say the brand realizes a tour in shopping centers through different countries to meet espresso amateurs. In France for example, the tour took place from the beginning of September 2012 to the 13th of October 2012 in 6 shopping centers. The concept consists on improving consumers ‘knowledge about coffee (where it comes from, how to do coffee, how to recognize different types of coffee...) with a “barista”, coffee specialist. At the end of the learning route, customers can taste a Lavazza coffee.  This promotion has already been tried by Lavazza in 2011 with ephemeral bars in hypermarkets where clients could have had a break during their shopping to get a coffee.





Imane Bennis, marketing manager for Lavazza explained in an interview in April 2012, that Lavazza will develop those bars and be present in 175 shopping centers by the end of 2012.
The difference with Nespresso is important, indeed, Lavazza wants to be accessible for all espresso consumers and doesn’t want to give an image of exclusivity. Nespresso works on exclusive marketing with rare and specific shops whereas Lavazza plays the accessibility card.

THE GREAT POTENTIAL OF FRENCH MARKET

 




French people are crazy about coffee. According to a study run by Starbucks, 40% of French people drink coffee which is, from far, one of the highest rate in Europe.  For French people, drinking coffee is a lot more than a simple way to be “boosted” .

For 27% of them, drinking coffee is a social ritual, they enjoy the moment of sharing with friends, have a break. They enjoy the situation as well as (not to say more) than the coffee itself.
They drink coffee essentially in coffee places (61%) or at home (60%) and some of them at work (28%). That is probably why coffee drives are not spreading that much in France compared to America, Australia or all the Americanized countries. In the French life style, coffee is less a take-away associated with work than a good espresso associated with home comfort. We often read that the future of the coffee market is in take-away brands like McCafé or Starbucks and that the French consumer is becoming more and more a « go with » consumer. But France is not there yet and maybe never will. Marketers need to pay attention to rituals associated with coffee in the country they want to target.

Some brands, like Nespresso, succeeded in increasing their market share in France with the launch of espresso coffee machine and “dosettes”. This kind of coffee is really appreciated in France because it goes with the French vision of coffee : fancy, relaxing, associated with the home comfort …

According to the same study, 75% of French people would stop spending money on other things to keep on consuming coffee. They rank coffee before CD/DVD, concert, theatre, shopping, hair dresser spending. And, how crazy, they could do easier without facebook or twitter (72%), without desert (58%) or without wine (66%) than without coffee ! Sex is the only thing that still remain before their coffee addiction !


Such a product seems to be the easiest thing to market as regard as how much consumers love it but the real stake on this market is to increase market share. Why? Because 94% of the French population already drink coffee, this is the second more consume beverage after water. The coffee consumption has remained stable for years (300 000 tons per year) because the coffee market is a “close market” which means that everyone knows about coffee (it is not a matter of awareness) and consumers are not going to drink more coffee. 

Thus, brands have to be innovative and France remain a great market to launch new machines or new types of coffee. No need to convince French people to drink coffee, they already buy it and love it. What is important to do is to develop a offer which go with their consumption habits.