- Circana

- 1 day ago
- 4 min read
By Scott Fulton, VP, Retail Analytics, Circana, and Scott Love, SVP, CPG Analytics, Circana
Retailers understand all too well the stubborn volatility affecting their operating environment. While they recognize the influence of macroeconomic challenges and shifting shopper behaviors, many don’t know how and why, exactly, their market share changed.
Because forces that move share now sit outside the walls that most teams are watching, it’s become harder to gauge. Retailers can get readouts that show up as a score, but may not see plays in the bigger game that affect whether they win or lose.
The Tendency to Look Inward
It’s a familiar scenario: A retail leader checks same-store sales, glances at loyalty numbers, sees both holding up, and concludes that share must be healthy too. That's a reasonable instinct. It is also frequently the wrong play.
Internal metrics describe how you are performing against yourself, but they don’t show how you are performing against others competing for the same shopper. You can run a flawless quarter inside your four walls and still lose share, because today’s consumer has additional places to spend and is more fickle.
The opposite scenario is common, too. When share slips, the team meets to pinpoint a cause. Someone notices that the price moved up in a division where share fell, and the group settles on price as a factor. While that’s a possibility, it might be correlation instead of causation or an explanation.
In both scenarios, share pulls away. When retailers pursue the wrong fix, defend competing theories, and spend weeks acting on a story the data never actually told, they risk silently but significantly losing ground.
External Forces That Shape Share
Today, a large part of share movement originates outside the business. Macroeconomic pressure is the clearest example, and it does not land evenly, especially in the current environment marked by bifurcations in behavior.
A premium retailer operating in a market under economic strain can execute its strategy perfectly and still lose ground, simply because shoppers are feeling squeezed and trading down. It is a signal that the environment has shifted and the plan needs to move with it.
Besides overarching headwinds, consumers have changed over the last several years. Shoppers can compare prices on their devices in seconds and tend to be less loyal than previous generations. The competitive field in nearly every market has widened, with more players across different channels chasing the same trips and the same occasions.
In addition to sweeping market pressures and shifting shopping habits, foodservice competition is another external force that might go unnoticed. When a shopper eats out, that meal occasion leaves your store, and it rarely shows up as a clean line item in your data. For a food retailer, a few extra restaurant visits in a week can be the difference between a hundred-dollar basket and a fifty-dollar one. Reading share without accounting for where the rest of a consumer's spending goes leaves a real blind spot.
Simply put, when a shopper is in front of you, you have to win that moment because you can no longer assume they will be back.
Valuable Internal Levers to Pull
While external forces swirl and shift, retailers can still control many important aspects of their business that impact their market share. Price, promotion, assortment, and availability still move share in measurable ways.
Private label is another indicator. If a store brand falls behind the market, that drag shows up in share even while total sales look perfectly fine.
The key is watching these internal, controllable forces in tandem. Any dashboard can show you that promotions ran or that out-of-stocks crept up. The question that matters is how much each one actually contributed to the share you won or lost, relative to everything else moving at the same time. That is the difference between monitoring activity and understanding cause, and it is where execution finally connects to accountability.
Separating the Signal from the Noise
Keeping in mind both controllable levers and outside forces such as economic conditions and consumer shifts helps retailers get the full picture of their share. To get to the cause of any share drift, they can leverage modeling that holds competitive conditions steady, isolates the residual effect of competitor behavior, and attributes movement to the right driver with real statistical grounding.
When looking at a combination of data, patterns over time are more valuable than a single read that merely tells you where you stand. Small movements in market drivers often arrive early, behaving like a bellwether for shifts that have not fully surfaced yet. They also let you check your own work: When you change course, tracking the drivers month over month shows whether the change produced the result you intended.
Seasonality adds another layer, since the drivers behind share in a given category typically look different in March than they do in November. Reading those rhythms turns planning for peak periods from guesswork into something closer to foresight.
What Changes When the Cause is Clear
There is another benefit to getting clarity about what’s contributing to market share changes. From an organizational standpoint, when corporate leaders and store operators are looking at the same explanation of why share shifted, teams start working from shared facts.
From there, action gets specific in a way that broad metrics don’t allow. For example, instead of trying to fix everything, you can see that you are losing meat department trips to a club competitor, identify the actual shoppers walking away, and build offers aimed squarely at winning them back. Recovering that defined group has a direct, measurable effect on share.
Learn Why and Take Action with Circana’s Market Share Drivers
External forces may change in the short- and long-term future, but they won’t be going away. In fact, stressors are likely to continue to build as the operating environment becomes more competitive across the omnichannel.
The retailers who stay ahead will be the ones who pursue and use evidence instead of assumptions or guesswork. Circana's new Market Share Drivers solution provides that diagnostic view by quantifying how outside pressures and the traditional considerations of pricing, promotion, distribution, and assortment each contribute to market share change. After quickly determining what happened and why, retailers can focus on what to do next to regain the share that is so precious.
Learn more and request a demo: Market Share Drivers | Retail Analytics | Circana




























