• Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Supplier Directory
  • SCB YouTube
  • About Us
  • Login
  • Subscribe
  • Logout
  • My Profile
  • LOGISTICS
    • Air Cargo
    • All Logistics
    • Facility Location Planning
    • Freight Forwarding/Customs Brokerage
    • Global Gateways
    • Global Logistics
    • Last Mile Delivery
    • Logistics Outsourcing
    • LTL/Truckload Services
    • Ocean Transportation
    • Parcel & Express
    • Rail & Intermodal
    • Reverse Logistics
    • Service Parts Management
    • Transportation & Distribution
  • TECHNOLOGY
    • All Technology
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cloud & On-Demand Systems
    • Data Management (Big Data/IoT/Blockchain)
    • ERP & Enterprise Systems
    • Forecasting & Demand Planning
    • Global Trade Management
    • Inventory Planning/ Optimization
    • Product Lifecycle Management
    • Robotics
    • Sales & Operations Planning
    • SC Finance & Revenue Management
    • SC Planning & Optimization
    • Supply Chain Visibility
    • Transportation Management
  • GENERAL SCM
    • Business Strategy Alignment
    • Customer Relationship Management
    • Education & Professional Development
    • Global Supply Chain Management
    • Global Trade & Economics
    • Green Energy
    • HR & Labor Management
    • Quality & Metrics
    • Regulation & Compliance
    • Sourcing/Procurement/SRM
    • SC Security & Risk Mgmt
    • Supply Chains in Crisis
    • Sustainability & Corporate Social Responsibility
  • WAREHOUSING
    • All Warehouse Services
    • Conveyors & Sortation
    • Lift Trucks & AGVs
    • Order Management & Fulfillment
    • Packaging
    • RFID, Barcode, Mobility & Voice
    • Warehouse Automation
    • Warehouse Management Systems
  • INDUSTRIES
    • Aerospace & Defense
    • Apparel
    • Automotive
    • Chemicals & Energy
    • Consumer Packaged Goods
    • E-Commerce/Omni-Channel
    • Food & Beverage
    • Healthcare
    • High-Tech/Electronics
    • Industrial Manufacturing
    • Pharmaceutical/Biotech
    • Retail
  • THINK TANK
  • WEBINARS
    • On-Demand Webinars
    • Upcoming Webinars
    • Webinar Library
  • PODCASTS
  • WHITEPAPERS
  • VIDEOS
Home » The Collaboration Game

The Collaboration Game

November 26, 2008
From Strategy+Business/Simon Harper, Amit Kapoor, Marco Kesteloo

Retailers have historically maintained an adversarial relationship with consumer packaged goods (CPG) companies, their primary suppliers. Negotiations over price, promotional support, and marketing budgets, among other areas of persistent disagreement, often end in damaged relationships and minor gains--only to be renegotiated again the following year. For some buyers, this annual wrangling is seen as an important part of the job--and even as fun. To them, facing down suppliers is a kind of sport.

But if their goal is to work off their competitive juices by mixing it up with suppliers, buyers would be wise to take up tennis instead. As satisfying as old-fashioned haggling may feel, it generally results in very little good as retailers and suppliers overlook the many ways that they could gain from their partnership.

Changing these old habits is not a particularly new aspiration. For more than a decade, retailers and suppliers have tried to learn to collaborate more and to move beyond the old zero-sum games. These initiatives have included assigning "captains" from each side to work with one another on driving category growth and forming industry groups that seek supply chain optimization, such as Efficient Consumer Response or Collaborative Planning, Forecasting and Replenishment. Yet despite all the hard work, only partial success has been achieved. A recent Booz & Company survey of European retailers and manufacturers found that fewer than 20 percent of respondents were "very satisfied" with the results from their current collaborative initiatives.

Retailer-supplier partnerships have failed primarily because buyers tend to view their value in a limited way: purely as a means to extract lower prices or extra promotional dollars from CPG suppliers in their yearly negotiations. All too often, buyers walk away from a negotiation feeling successful, unaware that their victory may well have been compromised by their failure to address issues that could have much more impact on retailer and supplier profits, such as in-store availability. The shelves still won't be fully stocked and what seemed like a highly profitable day's work is actually only a slightly larger share of a smaller pie.

By contrast, building holistic relationships with selected suppliers across the value chain that can drive both higher revenue and lower costs than the old haggling habits requires collaboration and cross-functional participation. This can be as simple as linking the supplier's consumer insight to the retailer's promotional capabilities. For example, Migros Türk Ticaret AS, one of Turkey's largest supermarket chains, worked with Unilever PLC to use consumer response and store layout data to increase sales of hair conditioner. Beginning with a survey conducted at an interactive in-store coupon kiosk, Unilever and Migros Türk discovered that shoppers were not buying conditioner for a variety of reasons, for example, because they simply felt they didn't need to (18 percent) or they believed that it was too expensive (12 percent). With that knowledge in hand, Migros Türk and Unilever tweaked their sales program, increasing price promotions and reallocating shelf space so that conditioner and shampoo were sold together in hopes that conditioner would be established as a necessity in the shoppers' minds. As a result of this campaign, Migros Türk's overall conditioner revenue increased by 25 percent and the chain's sales of Unilever conditioner grew by 36 percent.

In addition, there is a wide range of supplier-related processes that can be improved by more collaborative retailer-supplier relationships, including the way promotions are planned and executed, demand forecasting, and stock replenishment. One of the best sources of information for improving these processes is the retailer's point of sale (POS) data. For instance, by examining POS data to identify purchasing patterns at certain Tesco PLC supermarkets, Kellogg Company found that most of its out-of-stocks at the U.K. retailer occurred midweek, in the afternoon. Consequently, Kellogg adjusted its shipping schedules and, in the process, helped Tesco to recapture more than £2 million (US$3.4 million) in lost sales and to improve customer satisfaction. In a similar initiative, Kraft Foods Inc. used U.K. food retailer Sainsbury's Supermarkets Ltd.'s POS data to improve in-store availability of cheeses during promotional periods. The accuracy of forecasted returns from promotions increased by 20 percent, reducing the risk of both under- and overstocking.

Finally, significant cost reduction is also possible through collaboration primarily from more efficient distribution, streamlined inventory, increased product availability, and improved merchandising operations. For example, Alliance Boots PLC, a large U.K. cosmetics chain, working with a leading supplier of hair accessories, came up with a system to simultaneously cut labor costs and improve the supplier's displays. By designing an intuitive, color-coded product display system, the retailer cut set-up times to about 15 minutes from an hour and reduced overall store rebuilds from eight weeks to two weeks; this faster path to installing and changing promotional campaigns helped Boots boost sales of the supplier's hair accessories by double digits in the first year alone.

Despite the promise of collaboration, few retailers have succeeded in creating such partnerships with their suppliers. It is not difficult to find pockets of excellence within a given retailer-supplier relationship, such as buyers who work diligently on promotional planning, but these tend to be isolated successes--more like pilot programs than ongoing, established partnerships. Most retailers have found it difficult to expand successful pilot programs into a broader, strategic agenda for deeper supplier collaboration, largely because of the challenge involved in learning to work cross-functionally.

Nevertheless, this challenge can be met, and broad-based, holistic collaboration between retailers and suppliers is possible if careful attention is paid to how the relationship is structured. The following key guidelines can make all the difference in undertaking this task:


1.Generate a full basket of possibilities, but focus on a few prioritized opportunities that are most important to both businesses. Think holistically about revenue and cost, and challenge current ways of working and operating procedures in order to produce as many potential avenues to improvement as possible.
2. Establish an open dialogue, but make sure that the terms of all agreements on targets, responsibilities, and accountability are established up front and explicitly defined.
3. Create transparency by openly sharing information about benefits and costs, but build in appropriate confidentiality measures based on a clear understanding of the areas each party wants to keep off limits.
4. Retailers should set both short- and long-term agendas with partnering suppliers to capture value quickly, but still pursue the big ideas.
5.Gain top-level support, but stay focused on execution. Collaboration is less a matter of what is agreed in the boardroom than what is actually done in the warehouse and at the shelf.


Although it is valuable to be more open with all suppliers, buyers should choose collaboration partners wisely. Given that a collaborative approach is more resource intensive and requires more cross-functional engagement than traditional relationships, supplier partners should be selected based on criteria that reflect the retailers' strategic aspirations and demonstrate a serious interest in building a deeper relationship.


After many false starts, it's tempting to dismiss retailer-supplier collaboration as an idea that looks good on paper but that is nearly impossible in practice. Nonetheless, both sides should look beyond this common misconception. Trust is a key ingredient: Once suppliers feel certain that it isn't just another negotiating trick, many of them are keen to drive such strategic partnerships forward. As with any successful commercial partnership, it all comes down to ensuring that both sides gain from the venture.


This article is excerpted from Jeffrey Rothfeder and Georgina Grenon, eds., Sourcing Reloaded: Targeting Procurement's New Strategic Agenda (strategy+business Books, 2008).

Author Profiles: Simon Harperis a partner in Booz & Company's London office. He advises clients in the retail, consumer, and telecommunications industries on operations strategy, procurement, and supply chain transformation.Amit Kapooris a senior associate in Booz & Company's London office. He specializes in the optimization of sourcing, supply chain, and value chain collaboration strategies for retail and consumer packaged goods companies.Marco Kesteloois a partner with Booz & Company based in Amsterdam. He focuses on assignments in the areas of strategy, operations, and organizational management, and has extensive value chain experience with companies in the retail, consumer goods, and automotive industries in Europe and North America.Strategy+Business

    RELATED CONTENT

    RELATED VIDEOS

    Automotive Consumer Packaged Goods Retail
    KEYWORDS Automotive consumer packaged goods Retail
    • Related Articles

      The Collaboration Conundrum

      The World of Warcraft and the Art of Collaboration

      Social, Mobile and Traditional Collaboration Applications Converge on the Platform

    • Related Directories

      Tecsys, Inc.

    From Strategy+Business/Simon Harper, Amit Kapoor, Marco Kesteloo

    More from this author

    Subscribe to our Daily Newsletter!

    Timely, incisive articles delivered directly to your inbox.

    Featured Product

    Popular Stories

    • GIST-webinar-DecisionPoint.png

      From Fragmented Tools to Unified Workflows: How to Transform Field Operations

    • A LARGE AIRCRAFT BEARING THE LUFTHANSA LOG FLIES ABOVE FLUFFLY CLOUDS

      787-9 Dreamliner’s Nose Collapses on Runway

      Air Cargo
    • Close-up hands of unrecognizable man holding and using smartphone standing on city street.

      Five Supply Chain Security Risks Hiding Inside Your Mobile Apps

      Supply Chain Visibility
    • A MAP SHOWING KHARG ISLAND AND THE COAST OF IRAN

      First Oil Supertanker Moors at Kharg Island in Almost a Month

      Global Gateways
    • AN ARCHED STONE BUILDING FACES A CONCRETE AND GLASS SKYSCRAPER ACROSS A VERY NARROW STREET

      NY Fed: War-Stricken Supply Chain Woes Mean More Inflation

      Global Supply Chain Management

    Digital Edition

    2026 esg cover main scb q2 2026 cover

    SupplyChainBrain 2026 ESG Guide: ESG — The Supply Chain’s Biggest Secret

    VIEW THE LATEST ISSUE

    Case Studies

    • Recycled Tagging Fasteners: Small Changes Make a Big Impact

    • A GRAPHIC SHOWING MULTIPLE FORMS OF SHIPPING, WITH A HUMAN STANDING AT THE CENTER, TOUCHING A SYMBOLIC MAP OF THE WORLD

      Enhancing High-Value Electronics Shipment Security with Tive's Real-Time Tracking

    • A GRAPHIC OF INTERLACING HONEYCOMBED ELEMENTS REPRESENTING GLOBAL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS

      Moving Robots Site-to-Site

    • JLL Finds Perfect Warehouse Location, Leading to $15M Grant for Startup

    • Robots Speed Fulfillment to Help Apparel Company Scale for Growth

    Visit Our Sponsors

    4flow Arkieva Blue Yonder
    Carton Cloud CoEnterprise Dassault
    Duravant E2Open General Logistics Systems
    Hy-Tek iGPS Korber
    Lyngsoe Procurability Quinyx
    SAP Sikick Systech
    S&P Global Mobility TADA TransImpact
    US Bank Werner Enterprises WSI
    • More From SCB
      • Featured Content
      • Video Library
      • Think Tank Blog
      • SupplyChainBrain Podcast
      • Whitepapers
      • On-Demand Webinars
      • Upcoming Webinars
    • Digital Offerings
      • Digital Issue
      • Subscribe
      • Manage Email Preferences
      • Newsletters
    • Resources
      • Events Calendar
      • 2026 Event Coverage
      • SCB's Great Supply Chain Partners
      • Supplier Directory
      • Case Study Showcase
      • Supply Chain Innovation Awards
      • 100 Great Partners Form
    • SCB Corporate
      • Advertise on SCB.COM
      • About Us
      • Privacy Policy
      • Contact Us
      • Data Sharing Opt-Out

    All content copyright ©2026 Keller International Publishing Corp All rights reserved. No reproduction, transmission or display is permitted without the written permissions of Keller International Publishing Corp

    Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing