Thursday 4 December 2014

Changes in Nespresso's marketing environment

The marketing environment is changing for Nespresso. A division of Nestlé, Nespresso pioneered the high-quality, single-serve coffee/espresso machine in 1986 and remains a market leader.

In recent years, however, Nespresso has faced increased competition as well as regulatory pressure in many markets. One reason is the high profitability of replacement single-serve coffee capsules. The way razors require replacement blades, Nespresso machines require replacement coffee capsules. That means opportunity for Nespresso and for rivals, who have been making capsules to fit Nespresso machines.

Following a legal battle in France, Nespresso will now share technical information about its machines so rivals can make completely compatible replacement capsules. It won't threaten to invalidate warranties if customers use rivals' capsules, either.

Thanks to years of carefully-crafted marketing, Nespresso has successfully encouraged millions of espresso-lovers to visit its boutiques or order online when they need replacement capsules. Price-conscious buyers are most likely to switch to rival capsules. The changes in its marketing environment are unlikely to woo away the most brand-loyal customers, "club" members who enjoy the coffee and the entire buying/consumption experience.

Nespresso says that half of its new club members are introduced to the brand by friends and family--among the most trusted word-of-mouth sources. Having George Clooney as the brand's spokesperson is another competitive advantage. In Japan, however, Nespresso has a new marketing gimmick: friendly robots equipped to converse with customers about their java preferences. Not only will the robots engage customers and prospects, they'll capture conversational content that Nespresso can analyse for clues to needs, behaviours and buying intentions.