Case Study: Sauve
By: Mike • Essay • 360 Words • January 17, 2010 • 1,944 Views
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The shampoo market was a $1.2 billion industry that was at a maturity point in its life cycle. Unit sales within the industry had only been growing at a compound rate of 2% since 1978. Market share was extremely valuable; 1 point market share was worth roughly $10 million in sales and produced 40% gross margins. The Suave brand, a product under the largest division of Helen Curtis Industries, was “at a watershed”, thought Bob Thomas, the VP of marketing. With unit sales shares and operating margin percentages on the decline, as well as the competition for shelf space, the Suave brand faced a critical threshold. Fortunately, there were two proposals that could turn around the brand. Ellen Vallera, seven year brand manager for Suave, wanted to increase the ad budget by 30% to $7.8 million. Her plan was to use $7.1 million divided between daytime and primetime television with the remaining $700,000 spent on the brand’s first print campaign. Tom Kuykendall, newly hired brand manager for Suave, proposed a $10.2 million plan which placed all the television advertising in primetime. The success of Suave in the shampoo industry would depend on one of these plans.
The Suave brand, though having declined in unit