This resilience is reflected among retailers today. Despite economic uncertainty, expectations of recession have failed to materialize. While prices remain high, both inflation and interest rates have been falling. Economic growth forecasts may be modest, but they have stabilized. Geopolitics remains a concern, but it is one that retailers are growing accustomed to living with. Progress in 2025 could lay a strong foundation to build more meaningfully for the future.
This future view is reflected by retail leaders, 37% of whom see significant value in reshaping their portfolio to reflect a deeper understanding of longer-term trends (compared with 35% of their peers across sectors). In fact, 28% of retail leaders believe that portfolio reviews are not aggressive enough because of complacency about the future, a view that only 24% of other CEOs share. Retail is emerging from a period where the operating environment has been dominated by cost-cutting, price sensitivity and managing performance metrics on a quarterly basis. Looking forward into the next year and beyond these pressures may be easing to unlock new ways to create value.
3. Reasons to be cheerful
The optimism that retail leaders feel about tomorrow, ironically, may not lie in the way that they’ve done business for much of the last century. While the outlook for retail is less volatile than it has been over the last four years, sales will continue to reflect channel, category and supply chain trends that have been in place for decades. Typically this means slow, but steady, overall growth, with an underlying shift to digital and a continuous revision of assortment and operations. To unlock future value, retailers are scaling other opportunities.
Three things that retailers can look forward to for future success:
1. Building new growth capabilities from existing assets
Retail leaders have spent much of the last few years deconstructing their business for cost savings and efficiency gains. But they have also had time to reflect on new ways that they can create value.
Data from loyalty cards has driven a fresh wave of excitement and investment in retail media capabilities, but this is the just the beginning for a sector with such a large geographic and digital footprint. Physical store spaces, online platforms and established distribution networks all represent assets that retailers can utilize for new purposes. This is fueling growth in other B2B opportunities in areas such as logistics, marketplaces and branded pop ups.
Strategies in this space require an ecosystem of partners to deliver them. This means that while 51% of retail leaders are planning divestments in the coming year, 77% see themselves as already being proficient in building digital ecosystems that will move their business models from “competition” to “coopetition.” By taking a collaborative approach and driving new revenue streams from a variety of services retailers could see up to half of their profits come from alternative revenue sources such as advertising in the coming years.
2. Expanding the scope and scale of private label
The shift toward private label is moving from something consumers did out of necessity, to something they are actively choosing, and retailers have been quick to take advantage. A recent survey by Nielsen IQ saw that 54% of retailers expect private label to be their number one growth driver in 2024 and this is likely to persist into 2025. Data from the Future Consumer Index shows that 48% of consumers no longer see brands as important in shaping purchase decisions and 66% believe that private label meets their needs as well as brands. This is giving retailers more permission to play in expanding private label lines to accommodate more premium categories, and more crucially, develop private label products that can shape more agile assortments.
While the CEO confidence index pointed to 45% of consumer products leaders assessing their portfolio quarterly or monthly, the number rises to 66% of retail leaders. This agility in revisiting and reshaping assortments through more agile private label suppliers could give retail leaders an edge in developing and launching new products that can compete on price, innovation, sustainability and quality.