Formulating a Winning Growth Strategy for Dairy

BOSTON, MA--(Marketwired - Aug 15, 2016) - With $500 billion in global sales, dairy was the biggest, fastest revenue-generating category in the food and beverage sector in 2015. But in value creation, the industry lags. Its inherent supply chain, market, and regulatory complexities, along with intense competitive pressures, mean there is no simple formula for profitable growth, according to a just-released report from The Boston Consulting Group (BCG).

Annual profit growth of dairy companies was almost half that of food and beverage companies overall (5% versus 9%) from 2009 through 2014, as Four Strategies for Creating and Sustaining Value in Dairy notes. Although revenue projections are rosy -- analysts expect sales of $800 billion by 2020 -- no company can expect to win on rising demand alone. The sector's many regional idiosyncrasies (such as fragmented supply and radically different retail channels) make competing on a broad scale a particular challenge.

"Dairy is still a two-speed world," said Marc Gilbert, a BCG partner and coauthor of the report. "In mature markets, overall growth is anemic (though certain subcategories are gaining ground). But in developing markets, consumption is growing faster than GDP." China, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia will account for 75% of the 10% annual volume growth projected over the next five years.

Yet as promising as emerging markets may be, many lack a so-called cold chain to ensure freshness and safety in the supply. Many also lack fully developed retail channels and have a hard-to-reach rural consumer base.

For any dairy company -- whether a global entity, regional cooperative, or niche upstart -- creating value today calls for a two-pronged approach. Companies must have in place the "table stakes" -- fine-tuned, optimized operations and efficiencies across the entire value chain. In addition, they need to choose the right value-creating strategy that will put them on a course to sustainable growth.

Master the Table Stakes
The report cites three table stakes essential to success. First, companies must nail upstream supply management. Whether it's ensuring quality feed for dairy cows, importing powder, or instituting rigorous quality controls, quality supply is critically important. Lack of it can hurt consumers and brands, as the 2008 melamine contamination did in China.

Because margins in dairy are thin, cost controls and other efficiencies are also essential. Companies can streamline operations in any number of ways, such as by improving plant operations, reducing business complexity, and using digital technologies (robotics and warehouse automation systems, for example) to increase supply chain efficiencies.