How digital helps businesses serve ice cream and smiles 24/7
Published:
Thanks to smart tech and smart thinking, Unilever’s ice cream retailers can replenish stock 24/7, ensure bestsellers are always in their freezers and enjoy discounts based on real-time data-driven insights.
Think ice cream sales are just a warm weather treat? Think again.
According to insight from Bestway Wholesale, who serve business-to-business retail stores, 50% of ice cream sales are made outside the summer months. And while its research finds good weather remains the most popular reason for purchase, at 63% of sales, having products visible for consumers to see in-store is a strong second.
Making sure that every retail freezer cabinet in every location is stocked with Unilever ice cream brands –so that shopkeepers get their sale and consumers get their Unilever ice cream – is the job of Unilever’s Out of Home Ice Cream sales teams.
Developing a new business model for out-of-home sales
Until recently, the way ice creams were sold to retailers had seen little change in 60 years.
Orders were generated through visits from distributor sales reps or telesales and stock was delivered a few days later. And even when this system worked well, it had its flaws.
The success of visits was often at the mercy of the store’s relationship with the rep. Sometimes sales were lost because store-owners didn’t have the cash at hand to make the order. And it was up to the distributor whether data was shared with Unilever or not – often leading to low-value orders and offering little room for generating new ones.
In a retail world where e- and quick commerce are a given, this route to market was ripe for disruption. And with the help of smart sales teams and smart tech, change has happened – and fast.
Our Wall’s brand is known for delivering smiles through ice cream, with this new digital route to market we can deliver smiles and sales 24/7.
Emma Carrera, Director, Digital Selling, Out of Home
A digital route to market enabling seamless, frictionless sales
Unilever’s new business model for serving out-of-home customers is smart, seamless and digital.
‘Ice cream electronic route to market’ (Ice cream ERTM) is an e-commerce app that offers every retailer stocking Unilever ice cream the ability to place an order whenever and wherever they see fit.
“That’s the app’s big unlock,” says Emma Carrera, Director, Digital Selling, Out of Home. “It’s 24/7. Our Wall’s brand is known for ‘delivering smiles’ through ice cream. With this new digital route-to-market we can deliver smiles and sales 24/7,” she says.
“For Unilever’s out-of-home’s sales team, data also means we are able to manage our category better,” add Emma. “We can talk to our customers directly and send reminders that keep us top of mind.”
This can range from a WhatsApp chatbot message with a timely prompt to restock core products to a recommendation for appropriate stock levels of products that can help maximise sales.
“As well as real-time data insights on transactions and sales, we can also see what products our consumers have shown an interest in and act to serve them,” says Emma. “And that data can be used to serve the customer tailored offers or product recommendations that might led to new orders for us and new sales for them.”
Smart freezer cabinets are currently being piloted. These can capture products that are out of stock in the cabinet and send a push message to the store that suggests a quantity that can be ordered and sent automatically, drastically reducing the chance of their running out of stock.
Smart solutions that deliver smiles and sales for retailers
Having the ability to order electronically when it suits their business’s needs is proving to be popular with the small supermarkets, restaurants and convenience stores that make up the team’s business-to-business customer base.
Retailers can order stock from the app at a time that suits them, transfer the payment electronically, stay on top of stock that sells, and browse new offers and discounts. “We’re seeing order values and frequency of purchase increase,” says Emma. “This is because retailers can purchase 24/7. And there is also a reduction in stores running out of stock. That reduction of out of stock, plus the possibility of pushing our core products more effectively, is seeing the average order value increase.”
To date, almost 40% of Unilever’s total out-of-home customer base are equipped with the ice cream ERTM app.
“If you compare our digital stores using the app with our non-digital stores, we are growing much faster in digital channels where we can sell and engage with customers directly,” she says. “It’s why we are working hard to have more than 30 markets and 80% of our customers globally on board on the platforms by 2025.”
Piloting solutions to keep the freezers full
And while the app’s roll-out continues apace, the team’s search for more agile, intuitive and automated routes to market continues.
Smart freezer cabinets are currently being piloted. These can capture products that are out of stock in the cabinet and send a push message to the store that suggests a quantity that can be ordered and sent automatically, drastically reducing the chance of their running out of stock.
While in Mexico the sales team have worked to provide business customers with the same express delivery that our Ice Cream Now teams deliver to consumers.
Estefania Lupercio, Digital Transformation Director, LATAM, and her team used location data to see which customers they could reach within a set distance of a warehouse distribution point.
The pilot saw 1,200 trade customers offered the opportunity to make orders through a virtual sales rep via WhatsApp at any time of the day. Once the order was placed, a team at the distribution hub got it prepared in an average of 60 minutes. It was then delivered in backpacks with special cooling zones in less than four hours – a system that guaranteed product stability.
An intrinsic part of disruption relies on listening and understanding customers so we can provide something they might not know they want yet. Our customers were not specifically asking for express delivery, but they were asking for new ways to help them maximise their revenue. And that’s exactly what we did.
Estefania Lupercio, Digital Transformation Director, LATAM
Express delivery trial sees sales 25%
By the end of the trial period, sales had risen more than 25%, thanks to increased frequency of delivery and drop size.
“An intrinsic part of disruption relies on listening and understanding customers so we can provide something they might not know they want yet,” says Estefania. “Our customers were not specifically asking for express delivery, but they were asking for new ways to help them maximise their revenue. And that’s exactly what we did.”
Incremental sales for us and incremental revenues for our customers is growth for both. And, in the language of the Wall’s brand mission, that means a delivery of smiles for everyone.
Using data to trigger, capture and fulfill demand
A pilot that looks to use data to digitise the entire value chain is also under way in Turkey.
“The journey begins with consumer apps and social media channels which serve customised offers to the mobile phone user with the aim of triggering an impulse purchase of ice cream,” explains Ibrahim Gulec, Head of Data Driven Execution. Devices such as in-store smart freezers can then track the success of the offer for the consumer and remind the store-owner to replenish stock.
Data can also assess which offers and products are the most attractive to store customers and provide more targeted points of sale to increase the chance of an impulse for ice cream turning into a sale. And last but not least, when retailers re-order, their deliveries are fully optimised and tracked by AI and live devices to ensure a smooth service without disruption.
“This new business model means that we not only help our retailers understand their sales trends better,” says Ibrahim. “We can also help them increase sales by delivering more smiles to their shoppers.”
Fulfilling a craving for ice cream used to require being in-store or near an ice cream van. Unilever’s Ice Cream Now (ICNOW) teams are working to change that. Whether you’re online, in transit, in a virtual world or exploring earth’s atmosphere, they’ll find a way to deliver.
When it comes to ice cream sales, Wall’s has got it licked. It has two brands in the global top ten ice cream rankings, sells 40 brands under the Heartbrand logo and delivers happiness in form of ice cream in 52 countries around the world.