10 CapitalPress.com July 29, 2016 Marketer gives apples an edge Steve Lutz helps pioneer how grocery retailers sell fresh produce Steve Lutz Age: 60 Born and raised: Wenatchee, Wash. Family: Wife Jan, former executive director of Wenatchee Wine Country, community volunteer. Three sons. Education: Bachelor’s degree in advertising, Washington State University, 1979; master’s in business administration, City Universi- ty, Seattle, 1989. By DAN WHEAT Capital Press WENATCHEE, Wash. — When Steve Lutz built his home in the upscale Fancher Heights subdivision overlook- ing Wenatchee in 2004, he added a putting green on the edge of the bluff even though he isn’t a golfer. “I like to chip. But the real reason is someone — when we sell this house — some golf fanatic is going to see that and have to have it. In the mean- time, I like looking at it,” Lutz says. Always thinking about marketing, huh? “That’s what it is. Packag- ing, man,” Lutz replies. It’s not the only example of Lutz, former Washington Ap- ple Commission president, in- novative marketing consultant and avid triathlete, looking for a competitive edge in every- thing he does. Dan Wheat/Capital Press Steve Lutz, vice president of marketing at Columbia Market- ing International, Wenatchee, Wash., holds Kanzi apples on a Columbia Fruit Packers packing line. Lutz is an innovator in marketing fresh foods. Social skills Fresh out of Washington State University in 1979 with a bachelor’s degree in adver- tising, Lutz won a slot at the American Advertising Feder- ation Student College Com- petition in Washington, D.C. He wanted his presentation to stand out, so Lutz got a box of apples. “I was riding up the ele- vator with my box of apples and this girl from a Northern Illinois team said, ‘Those are Washington apples’ and that she once lived in Olympia,” Lutz recalled. His props helped him place ifth out of 14 in the compe- tition, but more importantly, they were a conversation start- er with Jan Zander, who three years later became Jan Lutz. “I gave him a hard time about brown-nosing the judg- es,” Jan Lutz says about the competition. “But his presen- tation was great. He was elo- quent, comfortable and witty, unlike me, when I get tongue- tied and nervous.” 2016 PIONEER 1000 EPS MSRP 15,199 SALE $ 14,599 $ 00* Stk#01109 Serving Farms & Ranches for 52 Years •••• 1964-2016 Work History: Washington Apple Commission, 1979-1985; Cole & Weber advertising, 1986-1991; Apple Commission, 1991-2000; The Perishables Group, 2000-2013; Columbia Marketing International, 2013 to present. 4x4 3-Seater 6 Spd. Paddle Shift Auto Trans. Liquid Cooled Fuel Injection 12 Month Warranty honda sports Your Authorized Full Service Dealer 2140 N. Pacific Hwy. 99E • Woodburn, OR • Open 8-6 Tues-Sat. 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PASSENGER MUST BE ABLE TO GRASP THE HAND HOLD WITH THE SEAT BELT ON AND WITH BOTH FEET ON THE FLOOR. RESPECT THE ENVIRONMENT WHEN DRIVING. Pioneer® is a registered trademark of Honda Motor Co., Ltd. 12/16 *MSRP does not include $750 in destination charges. Visit powersports.honda.com to view applicable destination charge amount. Steve Lutz says his parents instilled a good work ethic in him and that he determined — while helping his father devel- op orchards in East Wenatchee in the 1960s — that there must be an easier way to make a liv- ing. His Wenatchee High School debate coach, Sherry Schreck, remembers Lutz be- ing “blessed with a resonate, wonderfully persuasive voice” and that he knew how to use it. He had good social skills and was liked by students and faculty, she says. Lutz considered pre-law in college, but opted for broad- cast journalism and then ad- vertising and marketing at Washington State University. Upon graduation, Lutz be- came public relations manag- er for the Washington Apple Commission in Wenatchee. He became retail market- ing director for the commis- sion, then worked for Cole & Weber, a Seattle advertising agency. Lutz returned to the com- mission as director of domes- tic marketing in 1991 and was president from 1995 to 2000. Genesis of an idea At Cole & Weber, he saw that the wine industry had an “incredibly rich” system of sales data and igured a simi- lar system could help the apple industry. “We were still competing heavily with Midwestern and Eastern apples and needed to quantify inancial beneits for retailers to change old habits,” he says. Retailers regarded apples as fall and winter produce. Lutz researched and developed data to show them they were leav- ing dollars on the table, that if they carried apples longer and offered two sizes of Red Deli- cious they could gain sales. This was 1993 and 1994. Category management — the collection and analysis of sales data by product category to aid marketing strategy — was used by Chiquita in bananas, Dole in pineapples and Tani- mura and Antle in lettuce and vegetables. It wasn’t done with apples. By using data to understand what drives sales, a marketer can become more valuable to a retailer and help determine the right mix, shelf space and timing of products. “It was hard for a lot of peo- ple in the apple industry to ac- cept that we could know more about the elements that created success on the retail shelf than the retailer did,” Lutz says. “We care about apples. The retailer has hundreds of items, so the only ones driving apples are those who sell them.” At the commission He had “quite a sales job” to convince Apple Commission board members that spending $200,000 on research and ana- lytics could be just as valuable as a $2 million ad buy. Lutz won over a majority of the board and pursued devel- opment of category manage- ment with the help of Bruce Axtman, a partner in Willard Bishop Consulting of Chicago. However, some in the Washington apple industry to this day view category man- agement as a waste of time, and for them it is, Lutz says, if their business model is sell- ing volume at the lowest price. “That’s a valid model,” he says. At the commission, Lutz was able to convince retailers that Red Delicious was king of the apple market and get them to give it prominent display in two sizes, all to the chagrin of competitors. By the late 1990s, oversup- ply of Red Delicious was caus- ing apple prices to fall. Lutz igured the industry might look for a scapegoat. Several large companies, as they still do today, were hold- ing back inventory to ill the gap between old and new crop, hopefully at good prices, but quality suffered. “We had a big crop and bad condition. A lot of fruit was going to market that shouldn’t have gone. Apples were soft when they were shipped. They were trying to help growers get paid in the short term. But it kills consumers from coming back and hurts everyone in the long run,” Lutz says. Several on the commission asked Lutz to speak out about the need to maintain quality. He did. Perishables Group In 2000, Axtman wanted to expand category manage- ment and bought part of Wil- lard Bishop from his partners to form The Perishables Group in Chicago, offering marketing consulting, communications, consumer research and perfor- mance analysis. Lutz left the commission and joined Axt- man as a partner. In 2012, the Nielsen Co. offered to buy the Perishables Group because retailers, not- ing more than half their proits come from fresh foods, want- ed one source of category management information. Lutz became vice presi- dent of marketing for Colum- bia Marketing International, a major apple marketer in Wenatchee in 2013. This story irst appeared Feb. 26, 2016.