The shift
in policy will heighten the rivalry between M&S and its closest
competitor Waitrose, which already sells the big brands alongside
its own-label foods.
This week
the store has run a series of aggressive advertisements demonstrating
lower prices than Waitrose on a broad range of foods.
The big brand
products will start arriving in M&S stores over the next year,
starting this month with additional stores in the trial areas
of the South-East and North-East.
Each M&S
store will offer an edited selection of the range chosen according
to its size, starting from around 50 products in smaller stores
up to the full range of around 400 products in the largest outlets.
All of the
branded products have been price matched to ensure they are on
a par with the major supermarkets. M&S has also produced figures
showing it is cheaper where it has a product that is similar to
a big brand.
For example,
Nescafe Original 200g is £4.44 against £3.49 for the
same size of M&S Café Granules, while a box of 80 PG
Tips teabags is £1.79 compared with £1.30 for the
equivalent M&S Red Label bags.
M&S insisted
the brands will not replace any of its existing products so as
not to disappoint loyal customers.
The range
will focus on brand-dominated categories where M&S would typically
have a low market share such as soft drinks, confectionery, beer,
laundry, personal care, and pet food.
The brands
will also fill gaps where M&S has no own brand equivalent.
Executive chairman, Sir Stuart Rose, said: 'Our trials have shown
us that an edited selection of branded grocery and household products
has a place at Marks & Spencer. Our customers are at the heart
of this decision – they lead increasingly busy lives so
buying those essential, must-have branded products at M&S
will help save them time.
'It will be
so much more for convenient for our customers to get what they
need from M&S rather than having to go elsewhere.'
Executive
director of food, John Dixon, said: 'My team and I are focused
on delivering the best that M&S Food can offer - innovative
products that provide unbeatable quality and great value.
'But there
are some products that we could simply never compete with, like
Marmite and KitKat, and other areas where, whilst we have a great
M&S equivalent, the leading brand dominates the market.'
Today's figures
reveal sales were up 2.8 per cent to £4.3billion over the
half-year period, buoyed by 12 per cent growth abroad.
Revenues in
the UK were 1.8 per cent higher but down 0.9 per cent when changes
to store space were excluded.
Overall, it
is a huge recovery from earlier this year, when the firm unveiled
a massive 40 per cent drop in full-year profits sto £604.4million.
Source from Dailymail.co.uk