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Achieving High Performance 
in the Food and Non-alcoholic 
Beverage Industry
The US$2 trillion global market for food and non-
alcoholic beverages is complex and highly fragmented.  
Just four companies meet Accentures criteria as high-
performance businesses and only two of them have 
managed to outperform across all dimensions of our 
High Performance Business methodology.  Accenture 
research suggests that the businesses best positioned to 
take the lions share of future value will be characterized 
by a clear focus on a limited number of attractive, 
innovation-sensitive categories and niches.  High 
performers will seek to dominate these categories 
by being the rst to spot nascent consumer trends, 
rapidly and continuously innovating against them and 
rigorously focusing their marketing spend on their most 
successful products and brands.
Despite its maturity, the Food and 
Non-alcoholic Beverage industrys 
fragmentationcomprised of more 
than 30 distinct product categories 
inhibits consolidation.  Deal activity 
has picked up recently as more 
companies have sought focus by trying 
to unravel diverse and undifferentiated 
portfolios. However, the top 20 players 
still account for less than a quarter of 
a global market characterized by vast 
differences in local taste, perishability 
issues and varying food technologies. 
Moreover, most of these producers are 
struggling to sustain margins.
Rates of growth and protability, 
nevertheless, vary signicantly 
across individual food and beverage 
categories. Sales growth of bottled 
water far outstrips that of carbonates, 
for example. And ready-made meals 
sell almost twice as fast as pasta. 
Such differences reect rapidly 
evolving patterns of consumer demand 
a reection, in turn, of profound 
changes in demography and lifestyle. 
More women in the workforce and 
increased urbanization have fueled 
worldwide demand for convenience 
foods. At the same time, obesity rates 
and food-related diseases like diabetes 
have skyrocketed, powering a parallel 
desire for healthy and organic 
food. In fact, as consumers have 
become wealthier, more informed 
and thus more condent, eating 
for pleasure has caught on in many 
countries, cultivating more exotic, 
ethnic tastes. 
There are, to be sure, signicant 
differences globally in these 
megatrends. Interest in healthy 
nutrition rises in line with disposable 
income, while convenience 
consumption depends on both income 
and the sophistication of local retail 
networks. Emerging markets offer 
sizeable growth opportunities, if only 
because of their relatively low per 
capita consumption rates. However, 
the bulk of absolute future growth will 
come from North America, Western 
Europe and Asia Pacic where the 
three types of megatrend demands
convenience, health and indulgence
are strongest.
High-performance 
businesses position 
themselves to 
take advantage of 
megatrends shaping 
the competitive 
environment.  
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115
28
52
41
24
88
1366
295
124
474
362
334
1549
150
510
321
CAGR
2004-2009
World
Africa and
Middle East
Australasia
Asia Pacific
Latin America
North America
Eastern Europe
WesternEurope
1.5%
5.5%
2.4%
3.8%
2.5%
2.9%
4.8%
2.5%
CAGR
2004-2009
Forecast Sales Growth for Packaged Food, 2004-2009
Forecast Sales Growth for Non-alcoholic Beverages, 2004-2009
2004 (US$ billions) ) 2009 (US$ billions
33
9
44
35
8
25
593
139
57
179
174
174
720
76
210
149
5.0%
2.0%
4.6%
5.8%
3.0%
5.7%
3.2%
3.9%
t
World
Africa and
Middle East
Australasia
Asia Pacific
Latin America
North America
Eastern Europe
WesternEurope
Non-alcoholic Beverages
Packaged Food
Source:  Euromonitor, The World Market for Packaged Food, June 2005
Sources:  Euromonitor, The World Market for Soft Drinks, Nov 2005, The World Market for Hot Drinks, Feb 2006
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Each organization in our peer set of 
13 publicly quoted companies boasted 
global sales of more than US$5 billion 
annually.  In addition, these companies 
all derived at least 75 percent of their 
sales from food and non-alcoholic 
beverages and 30 percent of these 
sales were outside their home regions. 
All provided branded packaged 
products (rather than food or beverage 
ingredients).  The three companies that 
emerged from our analysis as high-
performance businesses all distinguish 
themselves on measures of revenue 
growth, protability, return on capital 
and working capital management.  
They also deliver superior economic 
prot, which has allowed them to 
deliver consistently superior returns 
to shareholdersmore than double 
the industry average over the past 
ve years. More importantly, their 
returns on invested capital consistently 
outstrip those of their competitors, 
thanks both to higher margins and a 
higher percentage of sales per invested 
capital in each of the last three years.
Indeed, high-performance businesses 
have grown nearly twice as fast as the 
industry average by focusing on high-
growth categories and implementing 
selective acquisitions to round out their 
portfolios and extend channel and 
geographic reach. However, only two 
companies have consistently delivered 
superior returns to shareholders over 
both long and short time frames, as 
well as superior revenue growth and 
protability, and high future value 
expectations. 
Strategic Market Domination
Rigorous portfolio management focused on winning in high value/high potential markets
Flexible and 
Low-cost Operations
Low-cost and exible
duplication enables 
seamless execution
Insight-driven 
Marketing
Spot it rst, renovate 
and innovate, faster 
and better execution
Customer and 
Channel Management
Laser-like focus on key 
customers/channels and 
ubiquitous product availability
Culture of Continuous Renewal
Highly exible organization that seamlessly executes and embraces operating change
Market Focus 
and Position
Performance 
Anatomy
Distinctive 
Capabilities
The Building Blocks  
of High Performance 
in the Food and  
Non-alcoholic 
Beverage Industry
Accenture denes a high-
performance business as one that 
consistently outperforms its peers 
through economic and industry 
cycles, and through changes in 
leadership.
Our extensive cross-industry 
research has identied three 
building blocks that underpin 
high performance in any industry 
and that all such businesses have 
mastered.
Our industry-specic research has 
identied the characteristics that 
high performers have in common 
across the three building blocks.
Key Trends
High performers have delivered 
consistently strong revenue growth.
Acquisitions have proven an important 
source of new revenues for many 
companies.
The weakest performers have 
underperformed due to large, diverse 
and undifferentiated portfolios.
5-Year Average 
Revenue Growth
Average 5.8%
8.7%
4.3%
2.1%
High
Performers
        High Performers
        Average Performers
        Weak Performers
Sources: S&P, Accenture Analysis
Average
Performers
Weaker
Performers
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The industrys complexity has led to the evolution of very different 
organizational models. Many food and beverage companies are still 
organized along local/regional lines, with a presence in only a limited 
number of categories, often with a short shelf life. Some have taken a 
global, multi-category approach, remaining highly diversied in many 
different categories but with a small number of truly global brands. 
Only the high-performance businesses have become successful 
category specialists, with a presence across most geographies but 
with a limited portfolio, tightly focused on a handful of categories 
and power brands. This strategic category domination is key to their 
status as high-performance businesses.  While their peers battle to 
build brand share and the struggle for shelf space intensies, 
high-performance businesses have successfully leveraged their key 
brands, targeting categories with low private-label penetration 
and the potential to increase both frequency of purchase and the 
amount consumed.   
Market Focus and Position
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Leading companies have consistently 
focused on building number 1 and 2 
positions in a limited number of high-
growth, high-margin categories or 
niches. Wrigley, for example, connes 
itself to the confectionery category. 
And although PepsiCo plays across 
numerous soft drink categories, its 
food presence is limited to a small 
global portfolio of snacks whose 
avors and packaging are adjusted to 
accommodate local tastesa natural t 
with its carbonates portfolio.
Such businesses achieve category 
domination with a selective approach 
to acquisitions, which concentrates  
on reducing portfolio complexity 
while increasing category domination, 
distribution power and geographic 
reach. Witness PepsiCos recent 
acquisitions of Quaker Oats and South 
Beach Beverages (SoBe), which sought 
to either gain entry into or reinforce 
the companys dominance in attractive 
fast-growing categories. The Quaker 
Oats acquisition, which included 
Gatorade, was designed to bolster a 
march on Coca-Cola in the energy 
drinks category, and SoBe reinforced 
PepsiCos position in premium specialty 
juices.  Both brands are fast-growing, 
high-margin categories in line with 
the health trend helping to counter-
balance Pepsis traditional carbonates 
portfolio.
Many companies, by contrast, still 
operate a global, multi-category 
model, which dramatically increases 
their exposure to business complexity 
and thus inhibits growth. One company 
has a presence across more than a 
dozen separate categories of food, 
soft and hot drinks; another has an 
even more diverse product portfolio 
that includes a large number of 
local, often non-scaleable and 
undifferentiated brands. 
The strategic category 
message, however, is 
clearly catching on. 
Danone, for example, 
has been systematically 
disposing of non-core 
businesses while 
refocusing its portfolio 
to concentrate on 
higher growth regional 
opportunities and on 
health-conscious 
products like pro-biotic 
yogurt, where it now 
leads the market.  Indeed, 
Danone now enjoys its 
strongest revenue growth 
in a decade. 
Pasta 3%
Sauces 5%
Glass Containers 7%
Beer 8%
Prepared Foods 9%
Italian Cheeses 9%
Water 10%
Biscuits 20%
Fresh Dairy 29%
Beverages 27%
Biscuits 18%
Fresh Dairy 55%
Sales Split by Category, 2005 Sales Split by Category, 1995
Ten years ago, Danone was an unfocused 
food conglomerate.
Danone now enjoys the strongest revenue 
growth in a decade.
Following a lengthy spell of portfolio consolidation and disposals, Danone is now 
posting the highest organic growth rates for a decade.
Sources:  Danone annual reports and Accenture analysis
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High-performance businesses in this industry display three 
distinctive capabilities that set them apart from their peers and 
are very difcult to replicate:
 Insight-driven marketing 
 Customer and channel management
 Flexible and low-cost operations
Distinctive Capabilities
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None of these capabilities would be 
as effective if they did not also rest on 
the exceptionally robust performance 
foundations that distinguish high-
performance businessesthe sales 
and marketing, supply chain, nance, 
IT and HR functions that comprise a 
t-for-purpose business infrastructure. 
Moreover, all three capabilities work 
together to make high performance 
possible. 
Insight-driven marketing, for 
example, supports superior customer 
and channel management, and both 
depend on the exible and low-cost 
operations that enable seamless 
execution. The industrys maturity, 
however, means that most leading 
companies operate pockets of 
excellence. Wrigleys success, for 
example, is partly due to being 
category-advantagedthe company 
is focused almost exclusively on 
confectionery, especially chewing gum.
Insight-driven marketing 
hinges on the ability 
to spot trends rst, 
before the competition. 
High-performance 
businesses can do this 
because of their superior 
understanding of both 
market dynamics and 
consumer needs. 
These companies relentlessly track 
key consumer trends in strategic 
geographies by means of exceptionally 
rigorous, sophisticated and fact-based 
business analytics that deliver relevant 
and insightful data. They then use the 
data to manage systematically the 
insights they have gainednot just to 
manage information. Whats more, 
they make these insights accessible 
right across the organization to 
facilitate rapid and well-informed 
decision-making.
There is no direct correlation in 
this industry between the size of 
R&D spend and high performance. 
Instead, high-performance businesses 
distinguish themselves by rapidly 
capitalizing on consumer insight to 
deliver a continuous ow of new 
products to market. Leading companies 
tend to have strong new product 
pipelines to continuously refresh their 
portfolios. They also derive a large 
proportion of sales from products 
launched in the last three years.
Innovations are often incremental, 
rather than spectacular, science-driven 
or breakthrough in nature. But the 
continuous refreshment of a companys 
product portfolio is absolutely vital 
to the retention of consumer interest 
and maintenance of retail shelf 
space. These refreshments include 
line extensions, repackaging and 
reformulations, as well as genuinely 
new products. Overall, incremental 
product innovation accounts for most 
of this mix and plays a critical role.
Wrigley, for example, launches fewer 
than 50 new products a year, but 
most of these are line extensions or 
new avors. However, by upgrading 
its R&D capabilities and restructuring 
its marketing team to focus on global 
brands and excellent local execution, 
the company has capitalized on its 
unied commercial operations and 
centralized supply chain to consistently 
deliver innovation rates above 15 
percent every year since 2000. 
Leading businesses support their 
innovation capabilities by spending a 
higher proportion of sales than their 
peers on clever, innovative marketing, 
and revitalizing brands through 
advertising and promotions. Take, 
for example, PepsiCos repositioning 
of its portfolio on a better-for-you 
platform through the Smart Spot
TM 
initiative.  (The campaign is currently 
conned to North America but 
is earmarked for global roll-out.) 
Smart Spot consolidated 100 of 
the companys healthier products, 
including the Tropicana range of fruit 
juices. Half of the companys media 
spend is now devoted to Smart Spot. 
Not all attempts to capitalize on the 
health and wellness trend have been 
successful. One food giants efforts to 
reformulate hundreds of products in 
nutritional terms was compromised by 
its product portfolio, which included 
too many diverse categories. 
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Performance Anatomy
Performance anatomy, like distinctive capabilities, rests on foundation functions, 
but it also describes a companys mindset. In the Food and Non-alcoholic Beverage 
industry, performance anatomy describes a unique adaptability. High-performance 
businesses in this industry are just much better at cooperating with their suppliers 
and customers than their competitors and their peers in related sectors such as 
alcoholic beverages and personal care.
Operating margins are lower than in related industriesa function of a relatively 
short product shelf life. So whether they like it or not, Food and Non-alcoholic 
Beverage companies are very dependent on external relationships and need to be 
tightly networked. High-performance businesses are especially good at third-party 
manufacturing, distribution and low-cost sourcing; their relative dependence 
on their retail customers also has led to close and highly successful working 
relationships.  Some actually have integrated their supply chains with those of 
their customers, who run Collaborative Planning Forecasting & Replenishment 
(CPFR) for them.
Packaged food and beverages 
companies must also contend 
with both the growing power of 
supermarkets and the private label 
penetration that this power reinforces. 
They also face the challenge of a 
multi-channel selling environment as 
the share of sales through alternative 
channels like kiosks and vending 
machines steadily increases. Indeed, 
customer and channel management 
is critically important. And leading 
companies exhibit a laser-like focus on 
key customers and channels.
Witness Kelloggs purchase of Keebler, 
whose cookies and crackers are 
available in vending machines across 
the United States. The acquisition not 
only gave Kelloggs critical mass in US 
snacks, it also allowed the company to 
distribute its own Pop-Tarts, Nutri-
Grain bars and packaged cereals 
through many more channels, greatly 
extending its customer reach.
Simply boosting expenditure on trade 
promotions does not guarantee better 
returns, so high-performance businesses 
go further. Not only do they employ 
integrated commercial planning to 
maximize the effectiveness of trade 
investments; they also use sophisticated 
analytics to evaluate the performance 
of past promotions and include the 
results in the next round of promotional 
planningall with an execution mindset 
worthy of a nancial fund manager.  
Of course, without exible and low-
cost operations high-performance 
businesses would not be able to 
sustain excellence in their other 
distinctive capabilities. High 
performance is getting harder to 
achieve as soaring commodity 
prices and other cost pressures 
squeeze margins, while the growth  
of emerging markets extends and  
globalizes supply chains. 
So leading businesses focus on 
streamlining and leveraging economies 
of scale in all key areas of their supply 
chain, from long-term commodity 
planning to outsourcing.  Thus, they 
create a global operations footprint, 
increase collaboration with both 
customers and suppliers, and seek to 
relentlessly drive out costs.  PepsiCo, 
for example, has cushioned itself from 
the impact of rising aluminum prices 
by halving the aluminum content in its 
packaging since 2001. PepsiCo, Wrigley 
and Kelloggs, moreover, use nancial 
hedging to try and manage the prices 
of their key commodities. And all three 
companies have dramatically upgraded 
their technology infrastructures (and 
thus their operational efciency) with 
global ERP roll-outs.
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High-performance businesses have 
turned category focus, incremental 
innovation, targeted marketing and 
R&D investment and ruthless cost 
control into a continuous cycle to 
deliver long-term shareholder value.  
They have achieved this advantageous 
position by means of rigorous portfolio 
management and by developing a 
highly exible organization with 
three distinctive capabilities that 
enable them to seamlessly embrace 
and execute. 
The Future
However, there are many challenges 
to the industrys future value. While 
consolidation continues, it is likely to 
be very gradual, as long as local taste 
and shelf-life issues limit economies 
of scale and most producers still juggle 
with the complexity of managing a 
diverse and often locally customized 
brand portfolio. 
Accenture research suggests that 
the key to capturing future growth 
opportunities will remain a relentless 
focus on premium product categories: 
foods and drinks that satisfy at least 
two of the three megatrend demands 
(convenience, health and indulgence) 
and ideally all of them. Indeed, the 
high-performance businesses of the 
future will stand above their peers as 
a result of their ability to exploit the 
megatrendsfor fast and efcient 
nutrition, guilt-free indulgence and  
quality convenience. 
Efcient Nutrition
(Fast but nutritious and healthy)
Health & Wellness
 More information & labeling
 More evidence for health claims
 More control through food plus
   food minus and natural/organic
   alternatives
The Time Factor
 More individual (portion) control
 More control over time and quality
   of preparation
 Convenient packaging/channels
Convenience Plus
(Convenience with from scratch
quality and entertainment)
The Sensory Experience
 More premium & indulgent
 More ethnic & exotic tastes
Guilt-free Indulgence
(Low & light without compromising)
Signicant growth opportunities for products that deliver against hot spots 
which satisfy two or more key consumer trends
Indulgence
Convenience
Health
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Copyright  2007 Accenture
All rights reserved.
Accenture, its logo, and 
High Performance Delivered 
are trademarks of Accenture. 
This document makes reference to 
trademarks that may be owned by 
others. The use of such trademarks 
herein is not an assertion of ownership 
of such trademarks by Accenture 
and is not intended to represent or 
imply the existence of an association 
between Accenture and the lawful 
owners of such trademarks.
To nd out more about how companies 
in the Food and Non-alcoholic 
Beverage industry can achieve high 
performance,  please contact:
Keith Barringer
Managing Director,
Consumer Goods and Services
+44 207 844 4600
c.keith.barringer@accenture.com 
John Jackson
Europe
+44 20 7844 2779
john.jackson@accenture.com 
Fabio Vacirca
Europe
+39 27 7758 483
fabio.vacirca@accenture.com  
Greg Supron
North America
+1 973 301 1681
gregory.j.supron@accenture.com
Apolonia Kersch
Asia Pacic
+61 29 005 5355
apolonia.kersch@accenture.com
Silvio Barboza
Latin America
+55 115 188 3185
silvio.l.barboza@accenture.com
About Accenture
Accenture is a global management 
consulting, technology services and 
outsourcing company. Committed to 
delivering innovation, Accenture col-
laborates with its clients to help them 
become high-performance businesses 
and governments. With deep industry 
and business process expertise, broad 
global resources and a proven track 
record, Accenture can mobilize the right 
people, skills and technologies to help 
clients improve their performance. With 
approximately 170,000 people in 49 
countries, the company generated net 
revenues of US$19.70 billion for the s-
cal year ended Aug. 31, 2007. Its home 
page is www.accenture.com.