Every Lidl helps? German discounters rattling UK’s big four supermarkets
Consumers turning to ‘upstarts’ for larger slice of weekly shop
partly because of changing perceptions, says retailer’s UK boss
• Aldi and Lidl poised to win holiday season – again
• Aldi and Lidl poised to win holiday season – again
Ronny
Gottschlich says Lidl will stick to its tight selection of 1,550-1,650 products
because that is the best way to keep prices low. Photograph: Jenny Goodall/Solo
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18 December 2014 13.50 EST
‘I like the idea of
pushing the boundaries,” says Ronny Gottschlich, the 40-year-old managing
director of the UK arm of Lidl. But the German discounter is not just testing
out a few new shopping ideas: together with compatriot chain Aldiit
is changing the way we shop and threatening to end the big supermarkets’
stranglehold on Britain’s £175bn-a-year grocery market.
Figures out this week showed takings through the Lidl tills
over the last three months are up 18% on last year. Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury’s
and Morrisons, meanwhile, have all seen sales suffer as shoppers realise they
can buy very similar products at far lower prices in the discounters’ aisles.
At this time of the year discount store shoppers have
traditionally traded up to the main chains to treat themselves to more
expensive food: but in 2013 that pattern changed. Tesco and Morrisons in
particular took a hammering last Christmas as customers decided there was
little to be gained, other than a lighter wallet. Gottschlich thinks the same
is happening this year.
Sales at established Lidl stores, he says, were up by about 20%
in the first week of December. “We have an increasing number of shoppers coming
through our doors and they are going to keep doing exactly the same thing to do
their Christmas shopping with us.” The number of Lidl visits in early December
was up 12%-15% and each time customers spent an average 8% more.
The 612-store chain, which is expected to hit sales of £4bn this
year – up from £3.3bn in 2013 – has already sold 413,000 bottles of its cut
price champagne, twice as many as last Christmas. Double the number of lobsters
have flown out of the freezers, while sales of sliced smoked reindeer meat are
also going well with 7,000 boxes going through the checkouts so far.
Such delicacies are designed to grab attention and persuade more
middle-class shoppers to pop in and give the store a try. And it appears to be
working, with nearly a quarter of Lidl’s shoppers coming from the wealthier
demographics – a couple of percentage points higher than last year.
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But as Gottschlich points out, most growth is coming from
everyday items such as fresh fruit and vegetables and from people just buying
more of their weekly goods in Lidl rather than just nipping in for a few items
– what grocery executives call a “top-up shop”.“People are doing more and more
of their weekly shop with us,” he says.
Morrisons boss Dalton Philips reckons that unless the big
supermarkets cut prices and accept lower profits, the rout of the big four will
continue – and that the £8 of every £100 spent on UK groceries that goes to
Lidl and Aldi will soon become £25.
He sees their arrival on the supermarket scene as similar to the
emergence of low-cost airlines in the 1990s. Now nearly 50% of UK air
passengers choose the no-frills operators “because the legacy airlines don’t
react fast enough”.
Gottschlich, who grew up in East Germany, credits Lidl’s runaway
growth to a sustained effort to become much more British – stocking more fresh
fruit, vegetables and meat from Britain and introducing bakeries and more
chilled foods which cater to UK tastes.
He said perceptions of the company have changed not just because
it has adapted its product range, but because it has made a big effort to
explain that by stocking a limited number of items in very similar stores it is
able to work extremely efficiently and keep prices low. “One thing people have
realised is that with too much choice, someone is charging you for
that ... We have let people know there isn’t anything happening behind the
scenes we couldn’t explain. We are just a simply organised business trying to
save on all the things the customer can’t eat or taste.”
Aldi is growing even faster than Lidl and expanding the range of
products it sells – from 900 to more than 2,500 in the past few years – but
Gottschlich says his business will stick to its tight selection of 1,550-1,650
products because that is the best way to keep prices low. The big four, stock
30,000-40,000 lines.
Gottschlich’s aim is to continually tweak the Lidl range,
depending on the time of year and consumer trends, so shoppers gradually
increase the proportion of their weekly shop they buy in Lidl.
“We were previously known as a price-aggressive German
discounter and we are becoming known for fresh food and quality. We are now a
British family supermarket,” he insisted.
Others may challenge that assertion and not all the reviews of
its foods are flattering, but the idea of the privately owned German business
as a British consumer champion has sufficiently taken hold to enable Lidl to
launch an inventive marketing campaign, using customer recommendations picked
from Twitter. Its Christmas TV ad, only its second in the UK, is based around a
free Christmas dinner for locals in Hertfordshire who ponder whether the food
is from Marks & Spencer or Waitrose before being told they’ve be dining on Lidl.
The same idea is behind a pop-up restaurant in London’s trendy
Brick Lane this month where a Michelin-starred chef has created a menu based on
Lidl ingredients. Diners only find that out when they get the bill. The hope is
that local trendies will be so impressed they’ll take to social media to talk
about it and help to raise Lidl’s profile further.
Clearly the social media-led campaign has gained some traction
because Gottschlich has dumped Lidl’s traditional house-to-house promotional
leaflet drop without any negative impact on sales. The flyers, he says, are not
coming back.
It was a change in tactics viewed as controversial at the head
office of the Schwarz Group – Lidl’s parent group – in Neckarsulm, south west
Germany: “Quite a few people from the international headquarters asked whether
we had done the right thing,” says Gottschlich. “We started the campaign at the
start of September and the feedback, if you look at Twitter and Facebook, has
been incredibly positive. It’s going to continue, as we really believe that the
strongest voice and advocate for us is our customers.”
But holding on to those new Lidl customers in the year ahead may
not be easy. The battle with the big four has been going Lidl’s and Aldi’s way
in the past two years. Lidl is aiming to open up to 50 new stores a year and
Gottschlich says he gets up to 50 emails a week from people asking Lidl to open
in their town. But new sites are not easy to find and the big four supermarkets
are beginning to get their fightback organised.
Asda, Morrisons, Tesco and Sainsbury’s have all cut prices on
basics such as bread, milk and eggs to make themselves more competitive with
the discounters while Morrisons has launched a loyalty card that claims to
match the discounters on price.
Next year Tesco is widely expected to use its position as
Britain’s biggest grocer – despite its recent problems it is still almost twice
the size of its closest rivals Asda and Sainsbury’s – to seriously slash
prices. Analysts believe the discounters’ easy ride may be coming to an
end.Gottschlich insisted: “We won’t be beaten on price.” He said Lidl had
already cut prices on some items to maintain the differential with traditional
supermarkets and he will cut again if he has to.
He is thinking even further ahead: as we chatted in early
December he had just come from a meeting to discuss what Lidl will be selling
in Christmas 2015.
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