Learning from Recession, the Japanese
Way<http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/apr2009/gb20090415_185492.htm?campaign_id=rss_as>
Some
companies in Japan have managed to thrive during the downturn by studying
changing consumer habits and anticipating trends

By Hiroshi Makioka<http://www.businessweek.com/print/bios/Hiroshi_Makioka.htm>,
Jean-Philippe 
Biragnet<http://www.businessweek.com/print/bios/Jean-Philippe_Biragnet.htm>and
Mike
Booker <http://www.businessweek.com/print/bios/Mike_Booker.htm>

Even before the rough economic times started, the Japanese consumer market
was viewed as one of the world's most advanced. Driven by sophisticated and
demanding consumers, Japanese companies are highly evolved as innovators in
the areas of product, packaging, channels, and services. And they've been
dealing with downturns since Japan's financial crisis began in the early
1990s. The combination of demanding consumers and prolonged economic hard
times has taught Japanese companies how to adapt, and some are emerging as
perennial winners.

That's why executives from the rest of the world are looking to Japan to see
how it's possible not only to ride out the turbulence but also to increase
profits and fuel growth despite the downturn. By understanding how consumer
habits are changing, and by anticipating trends, winning Japanese companies
have created new products, shifted distribution channels, redefined the
basis of competition, and learned where they can—and can't—trim costs. In
other words, they ferreted out opportunities presented by a downturn and
emerged as even stronger competitors.

Who's still buying what in Japan? The country is one place where older
shoppers have the greatest buying power. Our analysis of data between 2000
and 2006 finds that the nation's most influential consumers are families
whose heads of households are over 50 years old. They account for 80% of
consumers' financial assets and income, and that segment has continued to
grow as Japan is one of the most rapidly aging countries.
Purchases Reinforce a Lifestyle

Increasingly, Japanese consumers are spending money on purchases that once
might have been viewed as indulgent but now are rationalized as purchases
that reinforce a lifestyle or image. In 2000, when the Nomura Research
Institute asked consumers about the factors governing their purchasing
decisions, 23% cited promoting their lifestyle as a factor. In 2006 that
figure rose to 32%. Meanwhile, price consciousness actually appears to be
dropping: 50% of consumers polled in 2000 cited price as the major deciding
factor, but in 2006 that number dropped to 45%.

Dr.Ci:Labo 
(4924.T<http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?symbol=4924.T>),
the maker of high-end skin-care products, is one company that has learned
how to generate consumer insights to lead to new products that increase
sales. Traditionally, companies invest in call centers with the aim of
reducing costs for customer service or up-selling. But Dr.Ci:Labo wanted to
make the most of its investment by finding another purpose. Instead of
urging its call-center employees to resolve customer issues quickly or sell
products, it encouraged them to use the interaction as an opportunity to
learn more about the people who use its products, particularly those who
would purchase the higher-end goods that deliver Dr.Ci:Labo the highest
margins. By giving customer-service representatives time for long
conversations with targeted customers, the company tuned into customer
needs, boosted loyalty, and successfully promoted its more expensive
skin-care products. Dr.Ci:Labo's call-center strategy helped deliver steady
sales growth and wider margins. Sales grew 14% annually (compounded) between
2004 and 2008, with margins ranging from 15% to 20%.

We've identified four major ways companies like Dr.Ci:Labo are able to spur
growth—despite the downturn.
Channels: Following the Customers

In January alone, Japanese department-store sales plunged 9% year-on-year,
the biggest drop in monthly sales since record keeping began in 1965, and
following a steady 11-month decline. Downturn leaders reduce their
dependence on such traditional channels and create new outlets. Uniqlo (
9983.T<http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?symbol=9983.T>),
the casual-wear maker and retailer, has improved sales by opening shops in
railroad stations with a customized product lineup. For example, the Tokyo
station targets business travelers with a "one-day pack," complete with
underwear and socks. These midsize shops outperform Uniqlo's larger stores,
with four times more in average sales. In fact the outlet in Shinjuku
station now ranks sixth in sales among all 770 Uniqlo stores.

Aigle<http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?capId=131463>,
the French apparel maker, has had profit growth since 2004 by following
shoppers to popular Japanese discount outlet malls. These days, families
head to malls in search of both good deals and an inexpensive form of
entertainment—as an alternative to hot springs or Disneyland. Aigle has
capitalized on this trend, pricing some products specifically for outlet
stores. The result: While other apparel makers' profits have vaporized,
Aigle has seen its margins rise by as much as 11% since 2004.
Costs: Getting the Price Right

Megane Top 
(7541.T<http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?symbol=7541.T>)
upended the optical industry when it introduced Japan to a new way of buying
glasses. Instead of taking nearly a week to deliver a new pair, Megane
pledged to turn around orders in just 25 minutes. And instead of a wide
range of prices for frames and lenses, customers can choose among 1,200
frames and 20 lenses for a flat fee of 18,900 yen ($194). As customers
embraced the concept, Megane's sales soared, growing from $287 million in
2006, when the new business model was introduced, to $368 million in fiscal
2007.

How could Megane afford to offer fast, inexpensive glasses? For starters,
the company carries a lens inventory at each store, but it hedges the
inventory risk to the lens manufacturer by paying a premium above the
wholesale price. Megane also developed and installed in-store machines that
insert the lenses in frames. While each store offers a wide variety of frame
designs, the lenses themselves are standard. That eliminates the complexity
of individually cutting lenses at the store. By unbundling functions that
were previously handled by lens or frame manufacturers, by relying on
lower-cost store employees to perform those functions, and by using
standard-size lenses, the company is able to sell its eyeglasses at an
affordable price, speed the delivery process—and still maintain its margins.

Consumers: Selling What People Want

Market leaders carefully track consumer behavior and respond. With
budget-conscious consumers spending more time at home and eating out less,
Sanyo 
(6764.T<http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?symbol=6764.T>),
the electronics maker, tapped into a desire for tastier home-cooked meals.
Sales of high-quality rice steamers were so strong that Sanyo needed to
increase production of its top-of-the-line steamer by 30% in its domestic
plant to satisfy increased demand. McDonald's Japan
(MCD<http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?symbol=MCD>)
achieved record revenues and profits last year by offering its 100-yen menu:
The company traded some margin for volume, and it worked.

For its part, Uniqlo has developed products specifically to meet the needs
of customers looking for value. It spent more than three years working with
suppliers to develop long underwear—which competitors sold on average for
around 3,000 yen ($30)—that could be priced at around 1,000 yen ($10).
Competitors: Using Consumer Insights

Winning companies know how to change the rules of the game when an old
business model no longer works for today's consumers.

Confectioner Morinaga & Co.
(2201.T<http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?symbol=2201.T>)
spotted the trend of harried consumers forgoing traditional sit-down meals.
It introduced a convenient and nutritional substitute: gel in an aluminum
foil packet that's touted as a "meal in 10 seconds." Sales of the product,
Weider in Jelly, have grown at an annual compounded rate of 21% since its
introduction in 1995.

And women's lingerie maker Wacoal
(3591.T<http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?symbol=3591.T>)
gave underwear a whole new meaning when it broke into the men's market in
March 2008. It introduced a stretchy, stomach-flattening underwear garment
that's billed as capable of reducing body fat simply by wearing and walking
in it. The product is targeted to middle-aged Japanese men who worry about
health risks associated with being overweight. In the first 10 months the
company sold 820,000 pairs.

If Japanese consumer-product companies have learned anything from almost two
decades of nonstop economic turbulence, it's that they can find a way to win
if they change with their customers, develop new channels for selling, price
their products right—even passing along cost declines to consumers—and
redefine the basis for competition. Their lesson to the rest of the world:
Waiting for a turnaround isn't an option.

Hiroshi Makioka and Jean-Philippe Biragnet are partners in Bain & Co.'s
Tokyo office and members of the firm's Consumer Products & Retail practice.
Mike Booker, a partner based in Singapore, leads Bain's Asia-Pacific
Consumer Products & Retail practice.

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