PepsiCo tackles supply chain with data (2024)

by Thor Olavsrud

Feature

30 Nov 20215 mins

Supply Chain

The food and beverage multinational is transforming its ecommerce sales and field sales teams with predictive analytics that help it know when a retailer is about to be out of stock.

PepsiCo tackles supply chain with data (1)

Credit: Thinkstock

The global supply chain has been struggling of late, but for most enterprises, supply chain operations has been in the spotlight since the COVID-19 pandemic began, with analytics rising as a key palliative for major fluctuations in supply and demand.

Food and beverage company PepsiCo encountered anomalous supply chain signals early in the pandemic, as consumers began filling their pantries with staples amid lockdowns that rolled across the globe.

“Certain products were flying off the shelves for various reasons early in the pandemic,” says Jason Fertel, ecommerce engineering head at PepsiCo. “Folks wanted to get as much oatmeal as possible, for example.”

To respond, PepsiCo turned to analytics and machine learning to predict out-of-stocks and alert retailers to reorder. The insights also helped the company optimize its marketing campaigns.

“Using some of our intelligence and the technology and products we built, as products were going out of stock, we were able to very easily turn off ad campaigns automatically,” Fertel says.

Platform helps PepsiCo predict out-of-stocks

PepsiCo’s portfolio includes Frito-Lay, Gatorade, Pepsi-Cola, Quaker, Tropicana, and SodaStream. Years before the pandemic, Fertel and his engineering organization within PepsiCo eCommerce started working on providing workflow automation for managing search marketing operations. Today, that work has led to the Sales Intelligence Platform, which gives salespeople across PepsiCo insights to help them sell the company’s products more effectively. It combines retailer data with PepsiCo’s supply chain data to predict when an item will go out of stock and prompt users to make purchases to replenish the item.

PepsiCo tackles supply chain with data (2)

“We’ve definitely helped and enabled our field teams to take direct action and have been able to increase sales and seen a measurable decrease in out-of-stocks,” Fertel says.

PepsiCo’s Sales Intelligence Platform is a cross-channel, cross-functional insights, workflow, and automation application intended to simplify digital sales and operations. It’s built on the Elixir programming language, which is designed for building scalable, maintainable web applications. The data engineering team collects data shared by some retailers and internal supply chain data in a Snowflake Data Cloud, where it gets processed into PostgreSQL or Apache Druid databases, based on data characteristics. An application built on the Phoenix web framework delivers the data via third-party APIs.

The initial version of the application, released in fall 2020, was about marketing automation and was designed for the internal PepsiCo eCommerce sales team. That alone has helped the team automate processes and increase purchase orders.

Fertel’s team then started to deliver in 2021 real-time out-of-stock information to the field teams that go into stores. That opened eyes to the possibilities of pairing analytics with field sales and supply chain operations.

The partnership with the field sales team is still in relatively early days, but Fertel says it’s already showing positive results.

“On the field side, we’re starting to see folks change the way they operate in some ways, push for certain things with store managers that they might not have before,” he says.

Early adopters, focus on value are the keys to success

Fertel believes that finding early adopters who were excited to test the platform’s capabilities has been key to the project’s success. In addition, he says, PepsiCo’s success has come from staying laser-focused on a particular business problem.

“We want to do a lot of things, but we very much focused early on out-of-stocks,” he says. “There’s a whole slew of different verticals and sales intelligence that we go into, but we’ve been highly focused initially on out-of-stocks and I think that’s helped us find success.”

Fertel says that focus and close interaction with end users has helped his team understand the field teams and their needs, what works, what doesn’t, and then deliver actual value.

Fertel also notes that it’s been essential to just get started and take the concept of minimum viable product (MVP) to heart. Focus on value rather than full automation, at least to start.

“You have to be okay with not having the fully featured version out,” he says. “Some of the early ML [machine learning] stuff that we’ve done has been, ‘Let’s just upload a text file with the models and make changes,’ right? That’s the start and it works. Then you iterate and productize it to the point where it goes beyond that. Nothing needs to be perfect. I think that’s the big key: You’re better off delivering value, even if it’s just somebody uploading a file every day, rather than waiting until you have something that’s fully automated.”

More on supply chain:

  • How CIOs can help reduce supply chain anxieties
  • What is supply chain management? Mastering logistics end to end
  • Supply chain woes? Analytics may be the answer

Related content

  • featureIT leaders’ AI talent needs hinge on reskilling Most organizations see the need to revamp their training programs to address AI skills shortages — an approach that delivers intangibles hiring can’t provide.ByGrant Gross31 May 20247 minsHiringGenerative AIIT Skills
  • featureSkills the Irish Government CIO uses to advance digital transformation In his eight-year tenure as CIO at Ireland’s Department of Public Expenditure and Reform, Barry Lowry always had a vision of what digital government could look like. Here, he details how an approach built on transparency and innovation is contiByIan Campbell31 May 20248 minsCIOGovernment ITCloud Management
  • brandpostSponsored by Cisco3 reasons you should adopt cloud monitoring Cloud network management offers increased security, operational efficiencies, and more.ByD Matthew Landry30 May 20244 minsMachine Learning
  • opinionFaultless with serverless: Cloud best practices for optimized returns What does a well-defined serverless approach look like? Let's learn some of the best modern approaches to handling Enterprises and SMEs growing serverless computing needs.ByYash Mehta30 May 20245 minsServerless Computing

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

From our editors straight to your inbox

Get started by entering your email address below.

PepsiCo tackles supply chain with data (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rev. Porsche Oberbrunner

Last Updated:

Views: 6181

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (53 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rev. Porsche Oberbrunner

Birthday: 1994-06-25

Address: Suite 153 582 Lubowitz Walks, Port Alfredoborough, IN 72879-2838

Phone: +128413562823324

Job: IT Strategist

Hobby: Video gaming, Basketball, Web surfing, Book restoration, Jogging, Shooting, Fishing

Introduction: My name is Rev. Porsche Oberbrunner, I am a zany, graceful, talented, witty, determined, shiny, enchanting person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.