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5 Myths Worth Debunking About the Spaza Market

Johannesburg, 7 November 2018: Informal trade and distribution data specialists, 5M2T (5 Minutes 2 Town) sets five common myths about the spaza market straight – and the facts could change your entire brand to market strategy.

 

By its very nature, the informal trade is geared around guessing. The lack of definitive data and market research means that once your formalized sales and distribution data reaches the wholesale level, the rest remains a total mystery. The informal trade can fundamentally alter the fortunes of brands in South Africa, and yet market research remains limited to anecdotal evidence and assumptions which couldn’t be further from the actual truth happening on the ground.

 

“We’ve sat around many boardroom tables listening to brand owners, sales managers and even executive level management suggest what they believe or know their informal market penetration to be; what brands they compete with and which areas they are strongest in,” says Stuart Smith, Operations Director at 5M2T. “Once we deploy on the ground, we discover huge gaps and some incredibly rich insights.”

 

These insights include a major correction on commonly misunderstood aspects of the spaza market:

 

  1. Spaza store owners do not do their own restocking.

90% of stock replenishing is done by runners, buying groups, bulk breakers etc. Runners’ lists are prescriptive and buying groups and bulk-breakers buy only what they know they can on sell and earn their commissions on. So what’s the point of running wholesale promotions as an avenue to reach spazas?

 

  1. Spaza stores are often not the cheapest place to buy your product.

In fact, a product can cost more at a spaza than it does at your favourite high-end retailer in Hyde Park. This is because that product has changed hands up to 5 times before reaching a spaza shelf… each iteration adding on an additional margin. Everyone on the route-to-market is profiteering and brands have absolutely no control or idea of the level that is happening on the ground.

 

  1. Spaza store owners are just looking for the cheapest option.

In fact, spaza owners are highly reliant on consumer demand. Price isn’t everything and brand loyalty is critically important. If the customers don’t want it, the spaza will not stock it. Dumping stock into wholesale will not land up on a shelf unless there is a consumer demand and regular purchase of it. The informal channel is not immune to the basic principles of supply and demand.

 

  1. What works in Soweto, will not work in Soshanguve.

The truth is there is no ‘one size fits all ‘approach. Even within huge categories like carbonated soft drinks, the purchasing, consumption and brand-loyalty behaviors differ hugely from one area to another and are amplified even greater when you look regionally. You cannot assume that what works in Soweto, will work in Diepsloot or Mamelodi. The patterns are incredibly diverse.

 

  1. The spaza market is too unpredictable to execute a long-term distribution strategy. On the contrary, political upheaval and acts-of-God aside, the spaza network is highly reliable and stable and many outlets have been open for decades and a part of the very fibre of the communities they service, even offering informal credit opportunities to regular customers.

 

5M2T’s app-based in-market audit platform offers brands unique and highly detailed data on informal trade within a fraction of the time and with far greater reach and penetration than any other market research offering. This platform provides commercial brands with valuable data on informal trade outlets such as their purchase frequencies, stock replenishment cycles, buying habits and the most brand-loyal product categories.

 

The 5M2T mobile app delivers this information instantly providing a level of access to market data in real time that has not been offered before. The app provides accurate and extensive reporting on sales alongside market research monthly, quarterly or yearly across over 60,000 spaza outlets, as well as neighbouring businesses such as salons, kota establishments and barbers.

 

The 5M2T Audit capability is available nationally, as well as in neighbouring SADC territories and soon further afield into key markets on the continent. For more information on how to access the 5M2T audit capability for your brand/s, visit www.5m2t.com or email

in**@5m**.com











 

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