• ESSEN - Cooking is Good for You

    In March 2016, Wilder Jr., CMO at ESSEN, Argentina's leading aluminum cookware manufacturer, with a direct selling scheme and a 70% household penetration, faced a dilemma: the company needed to choose whether to launch the online DTC channel. As the CMO, and the founder's son, he wanted to start with specific initiatives to revamp ESSEN's distribution system, shifting from a single-channel to a multi- or omni-channel scheme. To this end, he needed to carefully consider the arguments made at the latest family-business Board meeting, chaired by his father and ESSEN's founder, Mr. Wilder Sr., to delve deeper in the analysis prepared by his team. To make matters worse, Maria Perez, the company's leading sales rep (the most active freelance entrepreneur and Network leader), whose sales organization accounted for over 15% of ESSEN's overall sales, had clearly stated that she would walk out if she "saw a shopping cart in the company's website." Meanwhile, sales reps were already using multiple channels (including online channels) to reach consumers (who largely belonged to low-income segments), even though the company did not support these methods. The time had come for a new change, but how should it unfold, and how should the company roll it out across its 13,000-member sales reps network, composed mostly by women who depend on the sale of ESSEN products to make ends meet? The "going online" decision involved both a channel conflict and a huge social responsibility concern. This was because it could affect its foundational commercial pivot, its sales force, made up of freelance entrepreneurs, mostly women. After analyzing all data and perspectives, Wilder Jr. had identified four possible alternatives. It was necessary to evaluate these alternatives and the way in which possible channel conflicts could be handled, this before making a final decision and presenting it at the next monthly meeting.
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  • Elgourmet.com

    Growing was critical to ensure the survival of PRAMER, a cable TV producer and distributor of regional content in Latin America (except Brazil). Growth paths were numerous, and so were restrictions on resources. Thus, deciding where and how to grow was essential for the future of the company. A possible alternative was to continue expanding in Latin America, focusing the marketing team on its development. Another option was to venture into the Hispanic market in the United States, a community with a rapid high growth rate that was beginning to gain influence in the American market. Both options would involve leveraging its flagship channel Elgourmet.com (EG.C), not only because it was the company's most successful channel, but also to profit from the current global gastronomic boom.
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