Welcome to the Sentrana Blog. Our mission is to provide insight and engage with those who struggle with complexity and uncertainty in their business decisions each and every day.
Katrina Lamb | September 30th, 2010
Filed under: Managers View | Tags: 4-Cs, complexity, coordination, cost-to-serve, demand signals, enterprise resource planning, matching the right customer with the right product at the right price, optimization, overcome the silo mentality, price rules, pricing, scientific marketing | No Comments »
In large organizations pricing is everybody’s problem, but everybody looks at the problem in a different way. Salespeople earn a livelihood by offering their customers prices that result in completed sales. Account managers have to keep track of tens of thousands of price rules governing products, brands and customers. Bean counters in the finance department are concerned about the relationship between prices and costs. C-suite executives are motivated by how price contributes to the market share, revenue growth and profitability numbers they have to report to their shareholders every quarter. And somewhere in the organization somebody is clamoring for a “just this once!” exception to some pricing policy in order to achieve an immediately pressing milestone.
These are all valid concerns. The problem is that the decision makers are sitting in different parts of the organization, their objectives are often in conflict with each other (or at the very least require trade-offs and compromises), and they are not armed with sufficient information to understand the broader impact of each price decision on firmwide performance. Read the rest of this entry »
Katrina Lamb | August 30th, 2010
Filed under: Managers View | Tags: 4-Cs, applying science to its campaign marketing process, campaign marketing, complexity, consumer segments and product types, hypercube, multiple dimensions, predictive models, promotions, Rubik's Cube, scientific marketing, targeted messages for specific geographic markets | No Comments »
Veteran marketing managers can tell war stories of battles fought to secure marketing budgets – the pitches and cajoling to focus C-suite attention on the strategic and the tactical importance of effective marketing campaigns. Getting something close to the budget you want may be just cause for heaving a big sigh of relief, but these days few marketing managers will be found clinking glasses of Veuve Clicquot in celebration. Once the budget is in hand the real work begins. The economic downturn has put constraints on the total number of dollars you have to spread among competing projects, but it has done nothing to constrain the nearly limitless ways those dollars can be allocated. “Do more with less” is the mantra of the day. To make those scarcer dollars go further means relying on more than traditional finger-in-the-wind gut instincts to tell you what campaigns will work and what campaigns won’t work. Campaign marketing – the art of pulling together targeted messages for specific geographic markets, consumer segments and product types – is in need of a healthy dose of scientific rigor. Read the rest of this entry »
Katrina Lamb | July 30th, 2010
Filed under: Managers View | Tags: 4-Cs, complexity, consumer pacakge goods, data sparsity, demand, demand optimization, foodservices, information age, micromarketing, retail | 2 Comments »
Solving the micromarketing challenges of the Information Age
We live in the Age of Information, so we are told. Never before has so much raw data existed bearing testament to every pulsebeat of human commerce, every touchpoint between a customer and a good or service. The problem for decision-makers, according to the conventional wisdom, is Information Overload – volumes more data to analyze than the human brain can easily digest. But it is not that simple – there are deeper challenges below the surface.

Information is not always where you need it
While the conventional wisdom is right in the aggregate, the lush and dense information rainforest starts to turn remarkably arid and sparse as you drill down into the nuanced segments of your demand environment. At the micromarket level, infrequent transactional activity in the long tail of customers and SKUs yields little insight to inform decision making. Managers thus face challenges that go well beyond the simplistic construct of TMI (too much information). They need tools for managing the real information problems in their micromarkets. These tools need to address head-on the challenges posed by what we call the 4-Cs: Read the rest of this entry »
Katrina Lamb | June 18th, 2010
Filed under: Managers View | Tags: active ways to turn trade spend into trade investment, applies analytical methods in order to better align and optimize trade decisions with pricing and other key marketing levers, business intelligence, distribution, Facebook Generation, foodservice manufacturers, foodservice value chain, optimization, predictive analytics, pricing, quantitative analysis in the trade spend practices, scientific pricing, sentrana, trade spend, win-win programs with trade partners | 1 Comment »
A New Approach to Trade Spend for Foodservice Manufacturers
There is no shortage of quantitative analysis in the trade spend practices of foodservice manufacturers. Unfortunately, very little of this analysis helps give decision-makers insights about the effectiveness of their trade spend programs. The numbers being crunched do not relate to signals about actual downstream demand, but rather to the formidable mountain of claims from their distributors. These claims come in all manner of data formats and accounting entries and it typically takes armies of brokers, salespeople and financial staff to figure them out. After all the cumbersome and error-prone line-by-line calculations to validate claims are said and done, you are no more informed about the profitability or the potential risks associated with any given program. No wonder there is widespread dissatisfaction with the effectiveness of these programs. Over 75% of manufacturers in this sector consider their trade spend initiatives to be inefficient, according to the 2010 MarketIntelligence Foodservice Trade Survey. Read the rest of this entry »
Katrina Lamb | March 25th, 2010
Filed under: Managers View | Tags: advanced scientific methods, advertising, brand loyalty, brand management, Brand success depends on both walletshare and mindshare, brand value optimization, complexity, computational power, demand chain, established beauty products brands, facial cleanser, fleetingness of brand loyalty in the age of marketing message saturation, holistic quantitative marketing solutions, Mad Men, neutrogena, product proliferation | 1 Comment »
The other day I conducted a little thought exercise, and it brought me back to a question that often comes up in my line of work: the fleetingness of brand loyalty in the age of marketing message saturation and the daunting challenge for brand managers and other decision-makers whose livelihoods depend on the existence of such loyalty among their customers. Happily for those who walk the brand beat, there is a ray of hope in this otherwise cautionary tale.
Olay, Nivea, Neutrogena and L’Oreal are all established beauty products brands with a broad array of medium-priced product lines and multiple product offerings in each. More to the point, for purposes of this thought exercise of mine, is that each of them offers a range of good quality facial cleansers, a product I buy on average about once every two months. The exercise was to determine what, if any, brand loyalty existed in my facial cleanser purchases over the last 2 years. The answer appeared to be: none. Nada. At some point over those past 24 months and (give or take) 12 purchases, my domestic shelf space has been occupied by at least one representative facial cleanser SKU from each of those brands. I wondered why this was the case. And then I remembered that it was not always thus. Long ago (more years than I care to disclose) there was a rather splendid product by Neutrogena called the Facial Cleansing Bar. Read the rest of this entry »
Katrina Lamb | December 23rd, 2009
Filed under: Managers View | Tags: Harvard Business Review, management tools, michael porter, performance measurement, price optimization, red beads experiment, statistical process control, strategic advantage, supply chain management, w. edwards deming | No Comments »
Management tools do not automatically confer strategic advantage. In principle any commercially available modern management tool from Total Quality Management to Lean Six Sigma, from Supply Chain Management to Price Optimization Models, is available to any and all paying customers on equal terms. Two competitors in the same industry space may employ the exact same suite of management tools, but it is a good bet that their relative performance will vary considerably over time. I don’t find this particularly surprising: generally speaking I subscribe to the view of competitive strategy vis a vis productivity enhancement tools eloquently expressed by Michael Porter in his 1996 Harvard Business Review article “What is Strategy?” To wit: “Competitive strategy is about being different. It means deliberately choosing a different set of activities to deliver a unique mix of value”. That is to say, the act of hiring a Process Re-engineering implementation team or reinventing oneself overnight as a Learning Corporation will not automatically confer sustainable advantage. Rather it is how (and if) those tools are integrated into a portfolio of aligned, mutually reinforcing organizational activities distinctive from those of competitors that will most likely make the advantage difference.
This makes sense to me. Nonetheless I am often astonished by the frequent tendency among many corporate decision-makers to conflate the application of some management tool with a fabulous consultant-ese moniker into a “magic bullet” that will effortlessly change the organization overnight from a laggard to a market driving leader. Then, as egregiously as they confer magic powers on the tools, after a few fiscal quarters the decision-makers realize they are not getting sustainable performance improvement, decide in their infinite wisdom that the inherent inadequacy of the tools is at fault, and consign them to the trash heap of unrealized expectations. Read the rest of this entry »
Katrina Lamb | October 27th, 2009
Filed under: Managers View | Tags: actively managing the price lever, Adam Smith, Adam Smith's classsical economics, aristotle, B2C, blaise pascal, decision making under uncertainty, demand management, dining out, fair price economics, fair pricing, manage uncertainty toward a more profitable outcome, micromarketing, paul krugman, pierre de fermat, price optimization, pricing under uncertainty, product mix for fairprice, revenue optimization, risk and return, thomas aquinas, uncertainty, What is a fair price? | 5 Comments »
Businesses seek to maximize the value they can obtain from their revenue models. Price is the key lever decision-makers can operate to influence revenue, and in recent years a growing number of businesses have sought to implement strategies for actively managing the price lever – strategies such as demand management and revenue optimization. However businesses are also highly sensitive to the perception by individual consumers and the society at large that their prices are fair, in other words that they do not violate widely held individual or societal norms. Fair pricing matters – it matters to me, and to you, and perhaps ever more so in a climate characterized by economic uncertainty, downward pressure on demand and a perceptible decrease in the citizenry’s trust of public and private institutions.
Fortunately for business decision-makers, fair pricing and optimal pricing are not at odds with each other but can comfortably coexist. Over the course of the coming weeks my colleagues at Sentrana and I will be approaching the rich topic of fair pricing in a series of exchanges on this blog.

debating the age-old question of fair price
What is a fair price? This question has perplexed humanity throughout history. Leading thought output of the ages, from Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics to the Summa Theologicae of Thomas Aquinas, Pierre de Fermat’s probability proofs and Adam Smith’s classsical economics, have all weighed in with considered opinions on the fairness and justness of alternative ways to price economic goods and services, and the debate continues today. A series of letters exchanged between Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat in 1654 is often regarded as a primal cause of the development of modern probability theory: this exchange was actually an attempt to establish a scientific basis for the notion of fair price. In his paper “The Unity and Diversity of Probability” Rutgers professor Glenn Shafer shows how these letters created hypothetical games of value that we today can recognize as the application of probability methods to defend a price as ‘fair’ under conditions of uncertainty. Read the rest of this entry »
Christian Bonilla | September 21st, 2009
Filed under: Managers View | Tags: business transformation, competitive strategy, highly price conscious, marketing science, micromarketing, model built to predict my behavior, price dispersion, price optimization, pricing, pricing is a continuous process of discovery, Pricing is a corporate discipline, pricing software, response model | 1 Comment »
At some point, every homeowner learns an important lesson about how to save money on air conditioning during the hottest part of the summer. Generally speaking, it costs less to keep your house at a relatively even, tolerable temperature, then to turn off the unit entirely during the day and blast the A/C in the evening when you are home. The process of re-cooling the entire house each time wastes a lot of energy to get to a comfortable temperature again.

Multiple optimal prices can exist for a product, even in transparent markets. Note that all of the prices in this image apply to the exact same HP printer.
The lessons of efficiently cooling a home can be applied to many scenarios. In business, having a system in place for tweaking procedures continuously is easier to manage over time than are prolonged periods of stasis followed by dramatic transformations. Transformations are complicated. They are often expensive. If too much time passes between transformations, the organization’s inertia coefficient (a 100% made-up term) passes a critical threshold. After that point, two outcomes are the most likely, with a few shades of gray in between: (1) transformation projects mushroom from merely “expensive” to “expensive and painful”, or (2) the company is too lethargic to change, effectively dooming the business to eventual defeat or absorption by more innovative rivals. For the sake of comprehensiveness, I have to acknowledge that for a fortunate few, “federal bailout” must now be added to this list as a third possible outcome. However, in a few years we will see if my suspicion that outcome three eventually finds its way back to outcome two turns out to be correct. Read the rest of this entry »
Joe Smiley | September 2nd, 2009
Filed under: Managers View | Tags: accurate picture of demand down to the single customer-level, discriminatory pricing, dynamic pricing, enable organizations to truly understand the needs, fixed resource, game variables, major league baseball, marketing science, mlb, more efficient secondary market, preferences and spending propensities of each and every customer they serve, pricing, pricing software, pricing systems, revenue optimization, ricky henderson, san francisco giants, tailored pricing, targeted pricing, ticket scalpers, yield management | No Comments »
The National Baseball Hall of Fame recently inducted Ricky Henderson, one of baseball’s most prolific base stealers with a record 1,406 bases stolen in his career – yet, Major League Baseball has failed to deal with scalpers who steal millions in profits from their franchises every year. Scalpers have seized the lost opportunity where Baseball franchises lock in their ticket prices months before the season starts and choose not to adjust prices throughout the season. A more efficient secondary market thrives due to the scalpers’ ability to factor in several game
variables (e.g. strength of opponent, seat type, starting lineup, weather conditions, etc.), as well as buyer-specific factors (e.g. age, attitude, clothing, jewelry, etc.) to determine the maximum (and therefore optimal from the seller’s perspective) price that each person is willing to pay. Another advantage for scalpers is their ability to immediately negotiate if the buyer doesn’t accept the first price, carefully moving the price down until both the buyer and seller agree upon a satisfactory price. To help reclaim these lost profits, the San Francisco Giants are now testing dynamic pricing software to help adjust ticket prices based on the expected consumer demand for each game. So what exactly is dynamic pricing, and is it powerful enough to replace the individualized pricing, negotiation, and sales effectiveness of ticket scalpers? Read the rest of this entry »
Christian Bonilla | July 7th, 2009
Filed under: Managers View, Tech Trends | Tags: BI, business analytics, business intelligence, decision process, decision support, forward looking analysis, IBM, IBM System S, itemset detection, link detection, making better business decisions, predict the highest price at which a customer would be willing to buy a product, predicting the effect an advertisement will have in a market, predictive analytics, stream computing | 2 Comments »
As part of its perpetual quest to reinvent and perfect its business model, IBM has made an aggressive push into the analytics market in the last half-dozen or so years. The company’s slick, though occasionally confusing ad campaigns (remember those ads with the mysterious red box being unveiled?) often announce its new initiatives, though it is not always clear that a new announcement is indeed a major one. In the analytics space, however, Big Blue does mean business. The announcement of its sizable new business analytics and optimization division is clearly intended to prove as much. Shortly after its announcement, IBM also unveiled a new stream computing platform called “System S” to much fanfare. The breathless enthusiasm of business journalists, technology bloggers and investment analysts has been palpable. But what exactly does this technological advancement do, and what does it mean for your business?
To answer this question, let’s begin briefly by dissecting what IBM has introduced. Imagine that you are receiving a continuous stream of data, such as stock prices on the Nasdaq. These figures must be quickly analyzed so that the proper buy and sell orders can be placed. Suppose that you also need to base your decisions not just on the Nasdaq prices but also the numbers figures coming in from dozens of other exchanges. Read the rest of this entry »