FMCG Visual Merchandising That
Drives Secondary Sales —
Not Just Shelf Presence
Shelf space won't sell itself. Across Indian general trade and modern trade, the gap between a brand's distribution footprint and its actual in-store execution is where revenue walks out the door. TopHawks closes that gap — outlet by outlet, beat by beat, planogram by planogram.
The Execution Gap in Indian FMCG
Distribution Is Not the Same as Visibility
India's FMCG market runs on approximately 12–13 million retail outlets — the vast majority of them single-owner kiranas, chemists, paan shops, and general stores spread across geographies that no ERP system has ever cleanly mapped. Modern trade accounts for roughly 10–13% of FMCG sales nationally, but demands a completely different set of execution mechanics than the GT universe it sits alongside.
Most brands have invested heavily in sales force deployment and distributor infrastructure. What remains chronically underfunded is the last ten feet — the moment a consumer stands in front of a shelf and makes a purchase decision. At that moment, what matters is not the brand's distribution agreement with a super-stockist three levels up. What matters is whether the product is visible, correctly priced, shelved at eye level, and supported by a promotion mechanic the retailer has actually put up.
The GT reality is especially brutal. A distributor's salesperson visits a kirana twice a week, takes the order, and moves on. Nobody is systematically verifying that the brand's planogram is intact, that the shelf-talker hasn't been pulled down by the retailer to make room for a competitor's standy, or that the new SKU launched last month is even visible on the shelf rather than sitting in the stockroom waiting to be pulled out when a customer specifically asks for it.
Visual merchandising in Indian FMCG is not a cosmetic function. It is a revenue protection mechanism — and when executed with operational discipline, it is one of the fastest-returning investments a brand can make in secondary sales growth.
The seasonal amplifier: During festival periods — Diwali, summer peak, back-to-school — GT retail footfall spikes 30–50% above baseline. Brands that have their displays in order during these windows capture disproportionate volume. Those that don't lose ground that takes months of distributor effort to recover.
Channel retail audit data from TopHawks' field teams consistently shows that POSM compliance drops to under 30% within 45 days of any campaign deployment in markets without active merchandising supervision — regardless of how well the initial placement was executed.
How the Service Works
Visual Merchandising Execution, Built for Indian Retail Realities
Every engagement is configured to the brand's category, channel mix, and outlet universe — not a templated field program applied uniformly across markets.
Beat & Territory Configuration
Before any merchandiser goes to field, we map the brand's outlet universe against distributor beat plans. We identify priority tier outlets — the top 20% driving ~65% of secondary volume — and design visit frequency around them. Kirana clusters, wholesale markets, and chemist lanes are treated as distinct sub-universes with different planogram standards and POSM requirements.
Category-Specific Merchandiser Briefing
Merchandising teams are trained on the specific category mechanics — beverages don't behave like biscuits, and personal care planograms differ structurally from packaged food. Training covers brand blocking rules, secondary display placement norms, POSM installation standards, and competitor capture protocols. Teams working MT outlets receive additional training on planogram software outputs and space management principles.
Outlet-Level Compliance Capture
At each visit, merchandisers complete structured digital checklists: shelf position, facing count per SKU, POSM presence and condition, cooler or rack share (where applicable), out-of-stock status, and competitor adjacency. Geo-tagged photos are uploaded in real time. Any deviation from planogram triggers an exception flag visible to the area supervisor within 15 minutes of field submission.
Material Deployment & Wastage Control
POSM deployment cycles begin at the distributor or warehouse level with inventory reconciliation. Material is allocated by beat route. Installation is documented outlet-by-outlet. Uninstalled, damaged, or competitor-displaced material is reported with reason codes. End-of-cycle reports include POSM utilisation rates and wastage summaries — feeding directly into the brand's trade marketing planning for the next cycle.
Area Coordinator Field Governance
Each cluster of 8–12 merchandisers has a dedicated area coordinator responsible for daily beat verification, exception resolution, and retailer escalation. In Tier 2 and Tier 3 markets, coordinators operate a hub-and-spoke model covering 4–6 sub-towns. Supervisor visits are unannounced at a minimum of 20% frequency — ensuring field data integrity rather than compliance theatre.
Real-Time Dashboards & Weekly Reviews
Compliance scores roll up from outlet to beat to territory to region in real time. Weekly review packs cover coverage achievement, planogram compliance by SKU, POSM status, top exception outlets, and competitor intelligence summaries. Monthly reports include trend analysis, outlet scoring migration, and recommendations for beat plan or planogram adjustments. Data exports integrate with most brand-side analytics platforms.
Standard SLA & KPI Benchmarks
Engagement Process
From Brief to Outlet — The Deployment Workflow
A structured onboarding process ensures that the first day of field execution is operationally ready — not a learning phase billed to the client.
Category & Brand Brief
Engagement starts with a structured brief covering the brand's distribution geography, channel split (GT/MT/e-commerce-adjacent), SKU priority matrix, current planogram standards, POSM design and material inventory, seasonal calendar, and execution history. Where a prior VM programme exists, TopHawks conducts a gap audit before configuring the new programme — identifying which outlet tiers are underserviced and which beat routes carry execution risk.
Outlet Universe & Beat Design
TopHawks's mapping team overlays the brand's distributor territory structure against our own outlet database — covering kiranas, chemists, supermarkets, convenience stores, and institutional channels. Outlets are tier-classified by sales potential and visit frequency is assigned accordingly. Beat routes are optimised for coverage efficiency while respecting distributor visit day patterns to enable secondary sales conversations during merchandising visits.
Team Recruitment, Training & Certification
Merchandisers are recruited locally in each market — ensuring language fluency and retailer familiarity. Training covers category-specific planogram standards, POSM installation protocols, digital app usage, and competitor capture methodology. Teams serving MT accounts are separately briefed on the retailer's space management expectations and store operations protocols. No merchandiser goes to field without certification on brand and category standards.
Field Execution — Structured Visit Cycles
Merchandisers execute beat routes on a defined frequency — daily for high-priority GT clusters, weekly or fortnightly for standard outlets. Each visit follows a structured sequence: retailer greeting and relationship maintenance, shelf audit against planogram, corrective stocking and display arrangement, POSM check and reinstallation where required, competitor facing capture, and digital checklist submission with geo-tagged photos. Visit duration targets are set by outlet tier.
Supervisory Audits & Exception Management
Area coordinators review field submissions daily, flagging outlets where compliance scores fall below threshold for same-day or next-visit corrective action. Monthly mystery audits — where a separate audit team visits a sample of outlets unannounced to validate merchandiser-reported data — provide a second layer of field data integrity. Any systematic data discrepancy triggers a merchandiser performance review. Read more about our retail audit and mystery audit services.
Reporting & Strategic Feedback
Weekly compliance dashboards, monthly executive summaries, and quarterly territory reviews are standard deliverables. TopHawks's reporting team also provides interpretive commentary — flagging patterns like consistently low compliance in specific distributor territories (often an indicator of stockist relationship issues rather than purely a VM execution problem), or SKU-specific visibility problems that may point to a packaging or planogram design issue worth escalating to the brand's trade marketing team.
Real-World Execution Scenarios
How FMCG Brands Deploy Visual Merchandising with TopHawks
Each scenario below reflects actual field execution challenges that TopHawks has structured programmes around — not hypothetical illustrations.
New SKU Launch — Forced Distribution Into Visibility
A packaged food brand launches a new snacking SKU across 15 markets simultaneously. Primary offtake from the factory to distributor looks strong on paper. The real challenge: getting the SKU off the stockroom floor and onto the shelf at eye level within 60 days. TopHawks deploys a launch merchandising team aligned to distributor beat plans — checking SKU availability at the outlet level, ensuring it's shelved in the correct category position rather than blocked by older stock, and placing price talkers and introductory offer cards. Launch visibility reports go to the brand's RSM team weekly.
Modern Trade Planogram Compliance — Retail Account Management
A personal care brand negotiates strong shelf bays at a national modern trade chain across 120 stores. The agreement specifies a 6-facing planogram with a defined secondary display at checkout. Three months post-launch, compliance visits reveal that 38% of stores have deviated from the agreed planogram — competitor facings have encroached, and the checkout secondary has been de-allocated without formal notice. TopHawks's MT merchandising team restores compliance, documents repeat violations for the brand's key account team to raise in the next JBP review, and implements a bi-weekly compliance verification cadence for the 30 highest-volume stores.
Diwali Activation — Seasonal Display Surge Across GT
A beverage brand runs a Diwali gifting campaign with specially designed display units for 3,000 GT priority outlets across UP, Maharashtra, and Gujarat. The campaign window is 4 weeks. Display unit placement, in-store branding, and price board installation must happen across all markets in a single coordinated push, with daily compliance tracking and mid-campaign corrective visits for non-compliant outlets. TopHawks mobilises the surge team from its active field infrastructure across these states — briefed, equipped, and in-market within 72 hours of campaign confirmation. Learn more about our BTL activation and promoter services.
Tier 2 Market Expansion — Building GT Visibility from Zero
A personal care brand expanding into Tier 2 towns in MP and Rajasthan faces a classic problem: distributors have been appointed, stocks are moving, but the brand has zero in-store presence despite technical distribution. No planogram, no POSM, no relationship between the brand and the retailer. TopHawks deploys a ground-up GT merchandising programme — retailer identification and mapping, baseline audit, planogram installation, branded rack or unit placement where viable, and retailer engagement to explain the brand's trade offer. Within 90 days, the brand has a structured shelf presence in over 2,400 outlets across 18 towns that previously had stock but no visibility.
Cooler Share Capture — Beverage Channel Execution
For a beverage brand operating in both single-serve and take-home categories, chilled display share is as important as shelf share. TopHawks's field teams conduct structured cooler audits at priority outlets — capturing brand share within shared coolers, checking for FIFO compliance, identifying outlets where the cooler is functional but competitor-dominated. Findings feed a cooler share improvement programme with targeted retailer conversations and, where warranted, a case for the brand's distributor team to deploy a dedicated branded cooler.
Competitor Shelf Intelligence — Category War Rooms
During a category competitive event — a competitor's price-cut or new product launch — a brand needs real-time ground intelligence, not data that arrives in a monthly report. TopHawks can configure merchandising visit protocols to capture competitor facing counts, promotional mechanic visibility, shelf adjacency changes, and retailer sentiment on a daily or alternate-day basis across a defined outlet universe. This intelligence feeds the brand's trade marketing and sales leadership within 24 hours of each visit cycle — enabling rapid tactical responses rather than reactive decisions made weeks after market conditions have already shifted.
Execution Challenges — and How They're Solved
What Makes FMCG Merchandising Hard in India
Generic field agencies fail at FMCG merchandising because they don't understand the structural mechanics. These are the real challenges — and how TopHawks's programme design addresses them.
| Challenge | What Actually Happens | TopHawks Resolution Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Outlet fragmentation at scale | GT India has over 12 million outlets with no standardised address system, no consistent operating hours, and widely varying retailer receptiveness to brand execution norms. Mapping and coverage planning is genuinely hard. | Proprietary outlet database + local merchandiser knowledge. Beat plans are built on actual outlet behaviour, not theoretical geography. |
| POSM displacement within weeks | Price talkers, shelf-wobblers, and standees are routinely removed by retailers who find them inconvenient, or displaced by competitors' sales reps. In GT, installed material has an average visibility half-life of 18–22 days without active maintenance. | Structured POSM maintenance visits, condition reporting per outlet, and retailer education during visits to increase buy-in for material retention. |
| Merchandiser attendance and productivity | In many markets, field attendance issues and productivity gaps mean that a roster of 20 merchandisers is effectively delivering 14-equivalent beats — without the brand or agency knowing. | Geo-tagged check-in/check-out at every outlet. Beat completion reports against planned universe. Supervisor shadow visits at 20%+ frequency. Transparent daily productivity dashboards. |
| SKU-level visibility buried by stock placement | The right SKU is in the outlet but sitting in the back. Retailers stock by habit — pulling forward what they're comfortable selling rather than what the brand has prioritised. New SKUs are especially vulnerable. | Merchandiser visit protocols include active shelf pull-forward and facing correction per SKU priority matrix. New SKU placement is tracked separately from overall planogram compliance. |
| GT vs MT data gap | Brands have reasonable MT sales data but near-zero visibility into GT outlet-level stock movement. Secondary sales data from distributors is delayed, aggregated, and often inaccurate. | Field intelligence reports capture outlet-level stock depth alongside compliance data — giving brands a proxy indicator of secondary offtake patterns within GT. Feeds our FMCG data collection service. |
| Tier 2 / Tier 3 supervision gaps | In smaller markets, field teams operate with minimal oversight. Brand representatives may visit once a quarter. Without supervision, execution standards decay rapidly. | Hub-and-spoke supervisor model in smaller markets. Unannounced spot checks. Monthly compliance scoring by town, not just by region — making underperformance visible at the right level of granularity. |
| Retailer resistance to brand planograms | Kirana owners prioritise margin, familiarity, and display convenience — not the brand's ideal shelf positioning. Demanding compliance without retailer relationship investment creates friction and reduces cooperation. | Merchandiser protocols include relationship-building elements — retailer education on brand trade offers, communication of promotional mechanics, and active stocking support. Compliance follows relationship, not vice versa. |
Why TopHawks
Field Execution Depth Across Indian Retail
The difference between a capable merchandising agency and an operationally mature one shows up at month three — when the initial energy has worn off and the daily discipline of outlet-level execution determines whether the programme is actually delivering.
PAN-India Active Field Infrastructure
Existing field presence across 500+ towns means deployment begins from an active base — not a hiring drive. This matters enormously for fast-turnaround campaign activations.
FMCG Category-Specific Execution Protocols
Beverages, packaged food, personal care, and homecare each have distinct planogram mechanics, POSM norms, and retailer engagement approaches. We don't apply the same protocol across categories.
Technology-Backed Compliance Tracking
Real-time geo-tagged photo submissions, automated compliance scoring, exception alert systems, and client-accessible dashboards — not end-of-month PowerPoint reports based on what the field team remembers.
Integrated Service Capability
Merchandising programmes work better alongside FMCG staffing solutions, retail audit, and BTL activation — and TopHawks offers all within a single operational framework.
Commercial Outcome Orientation
Compliance percentages are intermediate metrics. The ultimate measurement framework ties VM execution to secondary sales movement at the outlet tier level — keeping the field programme commercially accountable.
What the Engagement Delivers — Month by Month
- ✓ Month 1: Outlet mapping, team deployment, baseline compliance audit — understanding the real starting point
- ✓ Month 2: Active planogram correction across priority outlets; POSM deployment and documentation; supervisor cadence established
- ✓ Month 3: Compliance scores stabilising; first secondary sales correlation data available; exception outlet list for targeted intervention
- ✓ Month 4–6: Programme optimisation — beat route refinement, outlet tiering review, POSM design feedback to trade marketing
- ✓ Ongoing: Quarterly territory reviews, seasonal surge planning, campaign-specific deployment bursts alongside the core programme
- ✓ SLA reporting in client-compatible formats — weekly, monthly, and quarterly decks with outlet-level data exportable for brand's own analytics
- ✓ Dedicated account manager with FMCG category background — not an operations generalist managing multiple verticals
Geographic Coverage
Built for Indian Retail Across Every Distribution Tier
India's retail landscape does not behave uniformly across geographies. TopHawks's execution protocols are market-calibrated — not a single national template applied everywhere.
Metro & Large Urban Markets
In Mumbai, Delhi NCR, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Chennai, Kolkata, and Pune, the GT universe is dense and competitive. MT penetration is highest, and retailer sophistication around planograms and trade offers is relatively stronger. Execution here requires MT-integrated teams and high-frequency GT coverage in commercial districts and residential retail clusters.
- MT planogram compliance teams
- GT cluster-beat coverage
- Wholesale market visibility
- E-commerce dark store adjacency
State Capitals & Secondary Markets
Markets like Lucknow, Nagpur, Coimbatore, Jaipur, Surat, and Visakhapatnam represent the fastest-growing FMCG consumption tier in India. GT dominates; modern trade is present but limited. Brand execution here is often the weakest link — distributors are strong, but in-store visibility programmes rarely reach this geography systematically.
- GT-dominant execution model
- Distributor-aligned beat plans
- Regional language retailer engagement
- Emerging MT account coverage
Rural & Semi-Urban Expansion
Rural FMCG growth is structurally driven by increasing rural consumption and distribution deepening. In markets like rural UP, MP, Bihar, Odisha, and the smaller towns of Maharashtra and Rajasthan, retailer engagement requires local-language capability, deep kirana-level relationship building, and an understanding of wholesale market influence on retail stocking behaviour.
- Wholesale market intelligence
- Rural beat plan execution
- Haats and weekly market activations
- Sub-distributor territory coverage
Key States with Active Merchandising Infrastructure
Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Bihar, Odisha, Jharkhand, Assam, and Kerala — with further reach through partner networks in the Northeast and smaller Union Territories. Contact us to confirm coverage availability in your specific target geographies before any engagement decision.
Running a new product launch or seasonal campaign?
TopHawks can configure and deploy a campaign-specific visual merchandising programme within 7–21 days — aligned to your outlet universe, channel mix, and campaign timing. Let's talk about what execution looks like for your specific market situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
FMCG Visual Merchandising — Answered
Questions sourced from FMCG trade marketing managers, sales heads, and regional operations leads evaluating structured merchandising programmes.
What is FMCG visual merchandising and why does it matter for secondary sales? +
How does TopHawks execute planogram compliance across general trade outlets in India? +
What is the difference between general trade and modern trade visual merchandising for FMCG brands? +
How quickly can TopHawks deploy a visual merchandising team for an FMCG campaign across multiple cities? +
What KPIs should FMCG brands track to measure visual merchandising programme effectiveness? +
How does visual merchandising connect to secondary sales improvement for FMCG brands? +
Can TopHawks handle POSM deployment and tracking as part of a visual merchandising engagement? +
How does TopHawks manage visual merchandising in Tier 2 and Tier 3 towns where supervision is harder? +
How do I calculate the ROI of a visual merchandising programme for my FMCG brand? +
What technology platforms does TopHawks use for visual merchandising field reporting? +
Can TopHawks's merchandising teams capture competitor shelf intelligence during outlet visits? +
How does visual merchandising differ across FMCG categories like beverages, personal care, and packaged food? +
Your Products Are in the Market.
Are They Actually Visible?
A structured merchandising audit tells you where your in-store execution stands today — before the next season, the next launch, or the next competitor move.
