Untitled - Clark Brands, LLC
Transcription
Untitled - Clark Brands, LLC
Breaking Down the Brands Valero Energy Big Quote: “An area of opportunity for Headquarters: San Antonio us to unlock even more value out of our Brand Network: More than 4,000 real estate is by changing our mindset branded retail sites in 40 states, with from a fuels retailer that also sells some an expanding branded presence in convenience items to a convenience south central Mississippi. Valero offers retailer that retails fuels.” assistance with signage as well as a pro- Big Move: As it looks to sell off its strug- prietary credit card, point-of-sale incen- gling refining arm, Sunoco intends to tives and other marketing programs. focus on its profitable logistics and retail Big Quote: “Valero has been success- businesses, particularly in Pennsylvania, ful in rebranding stations that had been Delaware and New Jersey. branded with major integrated companies and with picking up new sites.” Hess Corp. Big Move: New growth markets include Headquarters: Woodbridge, N.J. the Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic and Brand Network: 1,360 Hess-branded Southeast, after starting in the South- locations (as of Dec. 21, 2011) across 16 west, West and Midwest. East Coast states, from New Hampshire to Florida. Marathon Petroleum Big Quote: “We are pursuing targeted Headquarters: Enon, Ohio growth opportunities for company- Brand Network: More than 5,000 loca- operated locations, both new builds tions across 18 Midwest and Southeast and rebuilds, in our key markets.” states, a 9% increase since 2009. Big Move: “We have a comprehensive Big Quote: “It may seem obvious, but strategy that includes new-product our success as a brand is tied directly to offerings, new store layouts, new pro- our jobbers’ success.” motions and use of social media.” Big Move: Marathon supplies nearly 700 of The Pantry’s 1,600-store net- CITGO work across the Southeast; it has Headquarters: Houston targeted this region for growth with Brand Network: 400 CITGO-branded the addition of several jobbers whose marketers with approximately 6,000 footprints span regional to multistate retail locations in 27 states east of the presences. New initiatives to build the Rockies, and District of Columbia. brand include the Marathon Spirit Big Quote: “Our strategy is to continue Fund, which offers co-investment our focus on the distributor class of opportunities for imaging or technol- trade, just as we always have, and dif- ogy; a new co-brand card; and a loyalty ferentiate the CITGO brand through program. flexibility, strong marketing programs and exceptional customer service.” Sunoco Inc. Big Move: Expects to increase branded Headquarters: Philadelphia locations by 8% in 2012. Rolled out Brand Network: 3,349 distributor- new Centennial image, enhanced operated, 507 dealer-operated and mystery shop, new loyalty program 542 franchisee-owned and -operated and new Good Rewards consumer locations in 24 states. promotion. 48 CSP Ma y 2 0 1 2 O n the weight scale of market strength, Clark Brands LLC is the puny kid on the beach, overwhelmed by musclebound giants such as ExxonMobil, BP and Shell. But on a bodybuilding program that would make Charles Atlas proud, the Naperville, Ill.-based company is looking to double its footprint, stretching into new markets from the Dakotas to Texas, New Mexico to Michigan. “We grow in areas where the majors have vacated because of supply or we grow with our partner marketers by providing an alternative offer to the majors,” says Gregory Mauro, Clark’s communications and marketing manager. “There are [retailers] who just don’t want to brand with the majors. They don’t want to sign a long-term agreement.” “Big Oil would rather pick and choose where they do business—and with whom they want to do business.” Alon Brands Gulf Oil Headquarters: Odessa, Texas Headquarters: Framingham, Mass. Brand Network: 900 wholesale and Brand Network: 2,500 branded loca- company-owned sites in Texas and tions and 1,000 private-branded loca- New Mexico. tions across 27 states. Big Quote: “We bring distributors the Big Quote: “To say that Gulf is merely best of both worlds, by being atten- in a ‘growth mode’ would be an under- tive to delivering attractive, innovative statement. We have tripled our field services at the retail level, while main- presence in expansion markets and taining strong, dependable supply lines have joined virtually every regional uniquely available through our parent petroleum trade organization available company.” to us in these new markets.” Big Move: Aiming to grow beyond the Big Move: Targeting a minimum of 150 Southwest; expanding Clean TEAM ini- new sites per year for each of the next tiative across entire Alon network; con- five years. verting all FINA sites to ALON fuel brand. Hear more about Alon’s wholesale initiatives at www.cspnet.com/Alongrows12. Tesoro Energy Headquarters: San Antonio Brand Network: Nearly 1,200 branded retail locations across 18 states in the Clark isn’t alone. A small group of regional brands—a mix of mid-tier suppliers and marketers—are ramping up a slew of enticements aimed at persuading fuel distributors and c-store operators to embrace their flag. The incentives include marketing enhancements and revamped branded images and payment offerings, all in the hopes of winning a multiyear, exclusive forecourt contract. A two-month review by CSP involving interviews with about 20 companies and experts reveals the following: ▶ Plastic Power: Several regional oil marketer/refiners are expanding branded credit-card offerings, check-processing programs and even gift-card options. ▶ Coast to Coast: Some brands, notably Valero Energy and Gulf Oil, are expanding from regional to national. Valero, for instance, recently unveiled its teal-and-yellow moniker at several Clark Brands West and Midwest, of which more than Headquarters: Naperville, Ill. 375 are company-operated under the Brand Network: 950 branded and Tesoro, Shell and USA Gasoline brands. unbranded sites in 29 states and the Big Quote: “There are some real oppor- District of Columbia. tunities for us where we operate, both Big Quote: ”We grow in areas where the because of where the refineries are majors have vacated because of supply, located along the Pacific Rim and in the or we grow with our partner market- Great Plains/Upper Midwest area. … ers by providing an alternative offer to For lack of a better term, we’re bullish the majors. There are [retailers] who just on America.” don’t want to brand with the majors.” Big Move: Last fall, Tesoro announced Big Move: Expanding in New Mexico deals with Eden Prairie, Minn.-based and Texas. ”The goal is to saturate as Supervalu Inc. and Santa Fe Springs, much of the Clark brand as we can Calif.-based Thrifty Oil Co. that added and to spread out within the states 292 locations to its network. The deal where we are. That’s the point behind “strengthens our refining and market- the Western expansion: establish a ing integration by about 12%,” Tesoro firm foothold, open several flagship president and CEO Greg Goff said at the sites, grow the brand in those states, time. In January, it announced plans to and then move westward, and maybe sell its 94,000 bpd Kapolei refinery and northwest as time goes on.” associated 32 stations in Hawaii. CSP M ay 2012 49 new outlets, including in central Mississippi with Kelley Oil Inc. “As the Valero brand continues to grow, especially in the Southeast, we look forward to being part of that growth,” Terry Kelley says of the deal. ▶ Revitalizaton: After taking a hit during the Bush-Chavez tete-a-tete, Venezuela-based CITGO is bounding with newfound optimism—and for good reason. The company earlier this year rolled out a platform of improvements, including its new Centennial station image and partnership with loyalty companies such as Outsite Networks and Centego. Stepped-up services, coupled with a ready fuel supply and lower-cost alternative, have helped CITGO add 450 locations in each of the past two years, according to the company. ▶ Positive Transitioning: In Texas, Alon is swapping out the legacy FINA fuel brand with its ALON brand. Already fielding a network of 900 wholesale and company-owned sites, Odessa-based Alon is pursuing a national brand strategy. “We literally could double our size within our current boundaries,” president and CEO Kyle McKeen tells CSP. ▶ New Landscape: Higher fuel economy (CAFE) standards on cars, coupled with steep prices at the pump and declining fuel margins, have prompted major oil companies to exit several markets where they are not top players, giving way to new opportunities for regional and local brands. Shifting Landscape It would be simple-minded to dismiss major oil or discount the slew of initiatives the companies have initiated in recent years, from anti-drive-off security at the fuel island to effective cents-off branded credit cards. 50 CSP Ma y 2 0 1 2 Top 25 Brands by Station Count see as many majors and, A glance at banner 1. Unbranded: 17,840 in some cases, you won’t presence easily favors Big 2. Shell: 14,491 find them at all. Oil. According to OPIS, 3. BP: 9,466 “Instead,” he continfor example, Shell’s flag 4. CITGO: 6,952 ues, “you’re going to see waves at nearly 14,500 5. Chevron: 6,473 more independents take stations across the United 6. Exxon: 5,780 on a greater share of the States. Marathon, the 7. Marathon: 5,368 markets because they largest regional banner, 8. Valero: 4,915 can afford to operate at stands at less than 40% of 9. Sunoco: 4,843 a lower margin. And at that total, with 5,368. (See 10. Mobil: 3,999 the same time, they’re chart at right.) 11. Phillips 66: 3,048 improving on image Simply put, Big Oil’s 12. 7-Eleven: 2,571 standards, credit cards retail presence is alive and 13. Conoco: 2,553 and other services.” well—just not as big or 14. Gulf: 2,184 It’s no secret that most alive as a decade ago. 15. Texaco: 2,015 of the majors—notably “If you think Big Oil is 16. 76: 1,936 BP, ExxonMobil, Chevgoing away, think again,” 17. Casey’s: 1,722 ron, ConocoPhillips says Cathy Duncan, exec18. Sinclair: 1,647 and Shell—have shifted utive director of marketer 19. Cenex: 1,612 attention to lucrative solutions for Omaha, 20. Hess: 1,359 upstream opportuniNeb.-based Telvent DTN. 21. Speedway: 1,318 ties. As part of the move, “Big Oil is doing what 22. Arco: 1,274 they have culled directthey want to be doing. 23. Circle K: 1,267 operated retail networks, They’re not losing busi24. Murphy USA: selling off much of their ness where they choose 1,012 downstream oversight to not to lose business. 25. Kroger: 770 independent fuel mar“That said, Big Oil Source: OPIS keters and midsized to would rather pick and large retail chains such as choose where they do business, and with whom they want to Alimentation Couche-Tard and 7-Eleven, do business,” she continues. “If they’re not maintaining fuel-supply agreements No. 1 or 2 or 3 in a market, they’re pulling when possible. Additionally, they have out. And that is giving more opportunity gradually increased volume benchmarks to many of these regional brands to come and overall performance standards, driving out many smaller operators with two in and scoop up some volume.” Ken Shriber, managing director of to four multi-pump dispensers (MPDs). In this wake, a mélange of mid-tier consultancy Petroleum Equity Group in Chappaqua, N.Y., observes the same trend: brands—some with their own fuel supmajor oil pulling out of markets where it plies, others without—has arisen to satisfy is either not a brand leader or where the retailer tastes with a blend of fresh canopy cost of doing business loses out to sliding imaging, margin improvements and better one-on-one customer relations. profit margins. Just recently, Framingham, Mass.“It wasn’t so long ago where you had majors in every city,” Shriber says. “You’ll based Gulf Oil LP inked a deal with Satstill find them in most, but you won’t terfield Oil Co. of central Arkansas to “What you’re seeing today is a courtship between these fuel brands and the jobbers and retailers.” rebrand up to seven sites in 2012. Albeit modest in scope, the deal is exactly what Gulf CEO Joe Petrowski and senior vice president Rick Dery promised just a few years ago. Dery, who also wears the hat of chief sales and marketing officer, called the Arkansas move “an important milestone for Gulf as we continue our national downstream expansion.” Better known as an East Coast operation with flags stretching along the Atlantic, Gulf is rapidly moving into the South and as far west as Minnesota and Texas; it boasts a retail presence of more than 2,500 stations. “To say that Gulf is merely in a ‘growth mode’ would be an understatement,” Dery tells CSP. “We have tripled our field presence in expansion markets and have joined virtually every regional petroleum trade organization available to us in these new markets. “Our primary focus is to identify and work with great distributor partners in every market. While our focus has been initially on PADD1 and PADD2, we have branding opportunities in both PADD 3 and 4, as well as a new partner in Puerto Rico.” And Gulf is hardly alone in this competitive landscape. Houston-based CITGO is another example. Swirling in a political maelstrom that saw it pull out of 10 Midwestern states only six years ago, the company is targeting 8% overall growth in 2012 and recently bolstered its forecourt and backcourt program to its distributor class of trade. (CITGO does not own or operate any retail sites.) The company, according to Gustavo Velazquez, CITGO vice president of supply and marketing, is seeking to differentiate itself through “flexibility, strong marketing programs and exceptional service, reinforcing our brand position as the most human, caring oil company.” While CITGO declined to identify growth targets, it is publicizing many new programs that are not only aimed at expanding its network but also strengthening the quality of its sites through more stringent mystery shops that carry both rewards and penalties for strong- and weak-performing outlets. “Programs such as our new Centennial image, enhanced mystery shop, new loyalty program, new Good Rewards consumer promotion and Fueling Good are crucial to support our marketers and retailers in the current business environment,” Velazquez says. The company detailed these programs, which seek to strengthen operations and profitability, during 18 marketer roundtable meetings recently concluded, he says. “The new Centennial image has contributed to the addition of nearly 450 new locations in each of the last two years and we anticipate this positive growth trend to continue in 2012,” he says. Retailer Opportunities Think of the old-school traveling sales- men or the Avon lady—only here we have a row of fuel brands knocking on the doors of fuel marketers, c-store chains and independent operators. Some of the deals have, frankly, been eye-popping. The biggest is Marathon Petroleum’s exclusive agreement signed in July 2010 to supply 600 of The Pantry’s 1,600-store network across the Southeast. (The alliance has since grown to nearly 700 sites.) As part of the deal, the Enon, Ohiobased oil company agreed to something extraordinarily rare in fuel-retail relationships: It took the unusual step of launching a customized ad campaign jointly promoting its brand and The Pantry’s Kangaroo Express stores. (Visit www. cspnet.com/PantryMarathon for more.) “The deal was a coup for The Pantry and made good sense for Marathon,” a source familiar with the deal tells CSP on condition of anonymity. “The Pantry got a fabulous pricing deal. And in return, Marathon got a long-term deal with huge volumes. When you’re willing to commit that kind of volume for a long time, it’s a give-and-take in which both companies win.” Such grandiose pacts, however, are the anomaly. More common are agreements inked with operators of 20 or fewer locations—a rich terrain when considering that single-store operators make up 58% of all convenience stores. “This is good for the retailers and the jobbers,” consultant Shriber says of the rise of regional fuel players. “Many of these companies are putting out very compelling offerings into the marketplace, including dollars for image upgrades, for advertising, for in-store services. “Their marketing is more focused on the individual retailer, whereas the majors were more focused about their brand,” he continues. “What you’re seeing today is a CSP M ay 2012 53 courtship between these fuel brands and the jobbers and retailers.” Regional Opportunities Traveling through the Deep South, it was commonplace a few years ago to find BP or Shell or, for the price-conscious, CITGO. But today, Gulf, Valero, Marathon and others are chipping away at that share and capturing a niche presence. Kelley, of Kelley Oil in Waynesboro, Miss., echoes the sentiment of many when, of his deal with Valero, he says, “Although the Valero name is new to many motorists in these parts, it is well known in the industry as one of America’s largest refiners and suppliers of quality fuels to thousands of independently owned gasoline stations like ours.” This scene is playing out across the 54 CSP Ma y 2 0 1 2 “A convenience store could see 44,486 fewer customer visits per year by 2025.” country, with small and moderate-size jobbers and retailers signing with brands that either didn’t exist in their markets just a few years ago, or whose offerings failed to measure up against the majors. “When smaller stations are competing against the bigger independent chains, they need a brand [value] to help them,” says Fred Rozell, director of retail pricing for OPIS, Wall, N.J. “And the mid-tier brands are coming in to help. They see an opportunity to partner with many of the smaller retailers.” This is precisely the strategy of Clark Brands. “For the marketer, we’re a utility tool to help retain or acquire those dealers that don’t want to sign with the majors,” says Mauro of Clark. “And we’re also the go-to folks when you’ve got a new location or a single-store offering that has a special need that the majors may not address.” And like the independent c-stores, smaller and midsize jobbers are also working with more regional fuel brands. “Four thousand of our members are in fuel marketing, and I would say all of them have relationships with at least two to three brand options,” says PMAA president Dan Gilligan. “They’re looking for the brand options. None of them are solely wedded to major brands, because they want to give their retailer networks the best options. “We have members who have converted some of their sites from major oil to Valero or Gulf or Clark. As the major brands’ standards get more difficult, I think what you’re seeing are jobbers who are adding more local brands to give their dealers more flexibility to have a brand that has programs and an image.” A Difficult Decision Deciding which fuel brand to partner with is increasingly complicated. Historically, retailers hitched their store on the reputation of a prominent flag. Align with a major and your business instantly won credibility. This scene has dramatically changed over the past 15 years. Indeed, the recently released 2012 NACS Consumer Fuels Report suggests that primacy of the gasoline brand continues to decline. When consumers were asked which factor was the most important in their buying decision, brand finished third, falling from 10% in 2008 to 8% in 2012, according to John Eichberger, NACS’ vice president of government relations. Not surprisingly, price dominated and location finished second. However, brand name remains an important attribute, Eichberger and others are quick to underscore. But other elements have come to the fore, especially for retailers. Among those factors: guaranteed supply, pricing and pricing flexibility, loyalty and credit-card programs, image and security incentives, and customer service. “It’s about the value and perceived value to the customer,” Eichberger says. “How is the brand viewed? If it’s a strong private brand, it can compete quite well head to head against a major oil brand.” “There is no one-size-fits-all when it comes to choosing a brand,” says Mark Hawtin, senior vice president of strategy and business development for KSS Fuels, Florham Park, N.J. “We see the decision is becoming more complex to the retailer.” And it’s about to become more complex. Miles to Go? As a battle royale brews among the brands, another story is taking place that could radically alter the industry’s forecourt. U.S. motorists drove 1.2% fewer miles in 2011, the lowest level measured since 2003, according to the Federal Highway Administration. And the distance covered has continued 56 CSP Ma y 2 0 1 2 to drop since 2008, due to the weak economy and high prices at the pump. And now there’s another piece to consider. The Obama administration fast-tracked by four years new CAFE standards established as part of the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act. Instead of 2020, automakers must by 2016 deliver fleets that meet a minimum 35.5 miles per gallon. (Standards currently are determined by the 1985 requirement of 27.5 mpg.) The CAFE changes could have a dramatic effect on retailers, Eichberger wrote recently in NACS magazine: “For a convenience store that services 277 fuel customers each day, the number of fuelbuying customers could drop to 155. … A convenience store could see 44,486 fewer customer visits per year by 2025.” The issue, he says, is more involved than how it appears. Some automakers say better mileage may also mean smaller, more efficient engines, thereby resulting in only a modest drop in fill-ups. “There’s a lot of uncertainty now,” Eichberger tells CSP. “But if vehicles are able to get 600 miles on a full tank [twice the current average], the attractiveness of the fuel island as a destination will become significantly less.” In such a scenario, two competing visions emerge. The first: Major oil brands will become even more valuable. If I’m filling up less frequently, the logic goes, then I’m willing to pay a few more cents to get the gasoline with the best additives to protect my engine. Then there’s the other view: Fuel brands will be defined almost exclusively by consumer incentives and the c-store brand. In other words, gas becomes strictly a commodity. And in such a case, mid-tier and private-label brands win the day. Thus, it’s not surprising that compa- nies such as Clark, CITGO, Marathon and others are increasingly investing in the consumer loyalty package. “Our survey showed that in gas sta- tions that offered a loyalty discount, 84% of consumers shopped at those locations,” Eichberger says. “It’s a big deal and it will probably get bigger.” n CSP M ay 2012 57