The Nielsen Company, as a result of its successful P.R.I.S.M.
(Pioneering Research for an In-Store Metric) pilot, will release in
coming months a scalable tool that food, drug and general
merchandise retailers can use to understand which specific in-store
media types are most influential in driving incremental sales,
margin and lift. (Nielsen is the parent company of The Gourmet
Retailer.)
"Now, all of a sudden, the store is the marketing medium that
everybody's assuming it was," says George Wishart, global managing
director of Nielsen In-Store. "You know who's there, you know what
she's being exposed to while she was there, and that's when you can
really start painting the picture of what drives her behavior in
the store. And perhaps, most importantly, you can answer the
question: 'Did my in-store marketing campaign deliver incremental
sales, and what was the cost per consumer reached?'"
How it works: The tool uses a combination of technology, consumer
insights culled from multiple sources, transaction data and
in-person auditors to determine who shops a particular store, and
what marketing and merchandising activities drive their behavior in
the store.
Its key components are:
In-store audience: Nielsen installs infrared sensors at
entrances and exits of the sample audience measurement stores, to
provide a store traffic count at any given point in time for each
store.
In-store audits: Nielsen auditors conduct two types of sweeps.
One is a full store sweep, during which they walk through the whole
store six to eight times a day for seven consecutive days within an
eight-week period, counting audiences across each part of the
store. This is complemented by continuous store counts, where the
auditor stands in one store part and counts all traffic walking in
and out of that area.
Retailer transaction-level scan data: Nielsen identifies the
relationship between the audience data and the daily sales
transaction logs across all categories, across the participating
stores.
Homescan panel: The Homescan panel is used in two ways:
Homescan panelists are surveyed to determine the demographics (age
and gender) of all shoppers on the given shopping trip, and to
identify the time and day of that trip, and Homescan behavioral
data on cross-retail, cross-category, and cross-outlet shopping is
used to create a matrix of frequencies across the different
demographics and day parts.
Displays: Any display associated with the licensed category
is captured across all store parts. Items on display are captured
at the UPC level, and this UPC-level detail is coded to the
individual brand and category.
Shelf media: All shelf-centric media in the licensed
category's primary location is recorded, and Nielsen specialists
assign a vehicle to brand.
Signage: All signage throughout the store is captured. As
with shelf media, Nielsen specialists assign a vehicle to brand.
The system is applicable for large and smaller food, drug, and mass
retailers; and Nielsen is investing in a new, scaled technology to
support convenience stores' smaller footprint.




