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Retail Brew // Morning Brew // Update
‘Execution mode’ for in-store retail media.

Hello, it’s Thursday, and we wondered, have you ever had a pizza emergency? Well, worry not, because as part of its “Emergency Pizza” program, Domino’s is handing out a free medium, two-topping pizza to anyone distressed by the absence of pizza. We already foresee multiple such emergencies in our near future.

In today’s edition:

—Vidhi Choudhary, Andrew Adam Newman, Alex Vuocolo

RETAIL MEDIA

Cooler Screens customer browsing

Cooler Screens

There has been a steady drumbeat of in-store retail media investments by major retailers in recent years.

Kroger, for instance, signed a deal with Cooler Screens (a company that turns refrigerated doors into interactive advertising displays) for 500 stores in May 2023. Regional grocer HyVee closed a deal with Samsung to introduce 10,000 screens over its footprint of stores across aisles, deli, meat, and seafood counters. Over the last few years, these in-store retail media investments have begun to happen in a much more concrete way.

So Retail Brew sat down with Andrew Lipsman, independent analyst at Media, Ads + Commerce, to talk about the evolution of in-store retail media and why it should matter to CPGs.

Keep reading here.—VC

from The Crew

DTC

Counterfeit bags arranged on a table.

Nurphoto/Getty Images

When it says Gucci but looks sketchy, or says Dior but looks dicey, it could be a fake, and the number of products failing authentication tests in the US is on the rise.

The rate of products that were “unidentified,” industry parlance for not passing muster with authenticators, rose to 8.8% in 2023, up from 7.2% in 2022, an increase of 20%.

Better news for Uncle Sam’s neighbors to the north and south for the same years, with Canada seeing the rates of products deemed fake fall from 6.3% to 5.2%, and Mexico from 7.6% to 6.3%.

That’s according to “State of the Fake,” the annual report from Entrupy, the New York-based AI authentication solutions company.

Keep reading here.—AAN

STORES

Ikea storefront

Olrat/Getty Images

Ingka Group, which owns the majority of Ikea’s franchise locations, said its annual sales declined 5% in fiscal year 2024, even as price cuts helped boost store traffic and online orders.

The company invested more than $2.0 billion in lowering the prices on thousands of products across its markets, which it said helped drive a 3.3% increase in store visits, a 28% increase in online visits, and a 9% jump in online orders.

Keep reading here.—AV

SWAPPING SKUS

Today’s top retail reads.

Sales beat: Retail sales ticked up 0.4% in September, which is higher than many economists expected. (CNBC)

Holiday enthusiasm: Major retailers such as Walmart and Costco are embracing Diwali with deals and decor. (Quartz)

New Nestlé: The food and bev company has announced that it’s revamping its leadership and operating structure after a disappointing sales forecast. (Reuters)

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