What makes resellers different from supermarkets and hypermarkets?
‘The Traders’ businesses have a high degree of convenience compared to supermarkets and hypermarkets,’ explains Quest. This means that convenience and speed are a priority for end customers when shopping. Instead of 20 types of pasta sauce on long shelves, there may only be two – but exactly the ones that most customers want. To do this, you need to know and continuously evaluate what the end customers want. Experience shows that their shopping baskets tend to be rather small, with only three to five items. But if things go well, customers will come more often. And above all, they will keep coming back. What exactly ends up in the shopping basket varies from region to region, however.
However different the purchases may be, they have one thing in common: ‘Price and brand are key factors,’ says Quest. There are no individual products in the Trader business, such as menus in gastronomy; the range of competitors is relatively comparable. So, in order not to compete entirely on price, unique selling points are needed. ‘There are basically four key aspects that determine a Trader's success,’ says Quest. “First, the personal touch; second, the right and well-positioned assortment; third, the location; and fourth, additional services such as lottery or a parcel drop-off point.” The bottom line: anything that makes the end customer's life easier. And that applies worldwide.