CPG Before CPG | The Bengal Bite đŻ
Consumer packaged goods (CPG) are fast-moving products that consumers use frequently. Packaged foods, toothbrushes, and even alcohol all fall into this category. Itâs also a term you hear thrown around a lot in cannabis, usually as a kind of shorthand for how the industry works and whatâs important to look at when analyzing it.
And, usually, that leads to a discussion about how âbrands win.â Do you REALLY think Crest is better than... whatever Crest competes with that I canât even think of as Iâm writing this right now? Probably not, so you intuitively recognize the power of a brand - the power of loyalty, the power of consistency, and ultimately the power of winning your hard-earned dollars. So, the reasoning goes, since cannabis is CPG, then brands win, and so now, to win in cannabis, all you have to do is find the best brands.
So, put it all together and you get the âcommon wisdomâ that investors should:Â
Look at CPG companies with the best brands,
Find cannabis companies that look like these CPG companies - with great-looking packaging and maybe a few former CPG executives;Â
Sit back and wait for the profits to fill in. Â
But the analogy doesnât work, and why it doesnât work reveals something about CPG and cannabis.
CPG wasnât always CPG. When Coca-Cola started to grow in the early 20th century, it wasnât through selling bottles at convenience stores - refrigeration didnât even exist yet. It was sold in pharmacies at soda fountains, and getting the right mix of ingredients to all of these far-flung pharmacies was likely a logistical nightmare. One that Coca-Cola solved, as it likely did many other problems when it put soda into glass bottles, then cans, and then really hit it out of the park with Slushies. Coca-Cola even needed to figure out how to remove some of their key ingredients and still maintain its hold on consumers (cocaine first, and then sugar to create another juggernaut in Diet Coke).
But at some point, the ability to reliably create delicious, consistent carbonated sodas for pennies was no longer a competitive advantage for Coca-Cola - it was just table stakes, what you needed to just play the game.
The CPG can of Coke you see today on a store shelf is the last little bit of an over 100 year old huge research, marketing, production, and distribution machine. The ephemeral brand of Coca-Cola is what is valuable now - but that value was very likely in large part created by the ability of Coke to make, sell, and distribute its product so well at the start. That operations expertise did yeoman's work in building the brand, and, while itâs nowhere near as valuable today because the knowledge has democratized and become commonplace, itâs the now-invisible trestle that supported Cokeâs rise.
All of that is a long way of saying that the CPG industry looks like what it does now after 100 years of development. Â When CPG started, you couldnât deploy new products into the market with anywhere near the ease that you can now. Branding is always essential, but especially in CPG, where costs of goods sold (COGS) are relative pennies, and there isnât much to be gained by further cost savings versus convincing one more person to buy. So, the fight in CPG naturally goes to marketing, branding, and a host of other important but ephemeral things - the other stuff has been largely figured out.
Cannabis is only starting as an industry - there is still much to figure out. The underlying knowledge isnât democratized yet - because much of it hasnât yet been created. The underlying processes to grow, dry, extract, market, sell, distribute, etc., for cannabis is different from state to state, and different companies can have wildly different capabilities. Cannabis strains arenât standardized, and they are nowhere near as hearty as the crops other farmers grow, (which have had thousands of years of natural and artificial selection in order to create the even non-GMO crops that we know today).
Even cannabis edibles and extracts arenât truly yet CPG products because they donât have nearly as consistent of an underlying supply chain. You canât call up Sysco and get 1 kilo of 90% distillate delivered to finish the brownies if you run out. Â
To bring it home: Kellogs doesnât generally worry about whether theyâll have enough wheat to make the flakes or that it wonât be of the right grade or have pests. They know they can count on those amber waves being delivered to their doorstep right when they need them at some price that they can lock in by hedging agricultural futures contracts. That is far from cannabis today and likely for a number of years.
But itâs in growing cannabis flower, that the CPG analogy really falls apart because of just how significant the differences between operators can be. Good old-fashioned dried cannabis flower isnât going away, (flower sales comprise a solid 50%+ of sales in even mature markets) despite confident predictions to the contrary.Â
So cannabis is absolutely like CPG - but like CPG before it was really CPG.
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This Week's Bite:
Here are the Full Details of the New Federal Marijuana Legalization Discussion Draft from Chuck Schumer and Senate Colleagues (Marijuana Moment)
ÂLegal US cannabis sales could top $30 billion by 2022 thanks to continued growth, new markets (MJ Biz Daily)Â

Canadian Producers Destroyed Over 500 Tons of Cannabis Since 2018 (MJ Biz Daily)

Not Very Nice: Sasha Baron Cohen Sues Massachusetts Cannabis Dispensary Over Use of Borat Image (AP News)
ÂPrivate MSO Holistic Industries Ponders Transformative M&A (New Cannabis Ventures)