Micro-Retailing Will Jolt Packaged Goods
Thursday, March 18th, 2010In Japan, Europe and, increasingly, North America the mobile phone has morphed into an on-site transaction device - choose your soft drink, bagel, or grade of gasoline and pay by pushing a key on the phone.
Most consumers carry a phone, and the small size of each transaction persuades vendors that potential profits dwarf the potential cost of fraud in such micro-retailing.
“Micro” drives the explosion of mobile phone transactions in more ways than one - micro time per sale, micro labor input, and, as mobile phone transactions cause vending machines to proliferate, micro footprint per sales site.
For the consumer, phone-pay micro-retailing is convenience, pure and simple.
We think that micro-retailing will cause a revolution in packaged goods. Just about everything will be offered in unit-packs - 150 ml of tea, 3 cookies, 4 carrot sticks, ½ ounce of cornflakes with 50ml of shelf-stable milk in an eat-out-of container - or maybe the container will be a cube-shaped edible flake containing the milk.
Toothpaste, cheese, soap bars - all resized for micro retailing and (if you think about it) to fit in the consumer’s pocket or cupholder.
With handy micro-retailing sites on the road, at work and eventually on residential street corners, buying smaller packages more often won’t be much of a disincentive.
Micro-retailing cost-savings from such effects as reducing the number of conventional stores and cheaper, light-duty packaging may well offset the higher manufacturing cost of three 1-oz packets versus one 3-oz packet from the supermarket. Even if it doesn’t, today’s consumers have proven willing to pay for convenience.
We think phone-enabled micro-retailing will be a lynchpin of a time- conserving, express lifestyle of this new decade. Us packaged-goods marketers better get ahead of that onrushing train.









