Consumer packaged goods (CPG) cases test your understanding of brand economics, retailer dynamics, and consumer behavior at scale. Based on our analysis of MBB interview data, CPG cases appear in roughly 12-15% of first-round interviews, often focusing on brand portfolio decisions, pricing architecture, or go-to-market strategy for new products. Unlike retail cases that emphasize store operations, CPG cases center on the manufacturer’s perspective — how to build brands, win shelf space, and drive consumer pull.
CPG Industry Structure
The CPG value chain differs fundamentally from retail. Understanding where value is created and captured helps you frame any CPG case correctly from the start.
flowchart LR
A[R&D] --> B[Manufacturing]
B --> C[Marketing]
C --> D[Sales/Distribution]
D --> E[Retail Partners]
E --> F[Consumers]
A --> A1[Product Development]
A --> A2[Packaging Innovation]
C --> C1[Brand Building]
C --> C2[Consumer Insights]
D --> D1[Trade Marketing]
D --> D2[Key Account Mgmt]
style A fill:#1e3a5f,color:#fff
style C fill:#2563eb,color:#fff
style E fill:#1e3a5f,color:#fff
| Value Chain Stage | % of Consumer Price | Key Success Factors |
|---|---|---|
| Raw Materials & Manufacturing | 25-35% | Scale, vertical integration, supply chain resilience |
| Brand Marketing | 10-20% | Share of voice, emotional positioning, consistency |
| Trade Spending & Distribution | 15-25% | Retailer relationships, promotion ROI, coverage |
| Retailer Margin | 25-35% | Category captaincy, private label defense |
In our experience, candidates who recognize that CPG companies compete for both consumer mindshare and retailer shelf space perform significantly better than those who focus on only one dimension.
Five CPG Case Types You Will Encounter
1. Brand Portfolio Strategy
Should the company launch a new brand, extend an existing brand, or acquire a competitor’s brand? These cases require you to analyze brand architecture, cannibalization risk, and portfolio gaps.
Key questions to ask:
- What is the brand’s current positioning and price tier?
- Which consumer segments are underserved?
- What is the cannibalization risk from line extensions?
Practice with our growth strategy framework to structure brand expansion decisions.
2. Product Innovation and Launch
CPG companies live or die by their innovation pipeline. These cases typically ask you to evaluate a new product concept, estimate market potential, or design a go-to-market strategy.
The innovation funnel matters: In our analysis, roughly 70% of new CPG products fail within two years. Successful launches require differentiated positioning, adequate trade support, and sustained marketing investment.
| Launch Success Factor | Weight | Diagnostic Questions |
|---|---|---|
| Consumer Need Gap | High | Does the product solve an unmet need or just add variety? |
| Differentiation | High | Can consumers articulate why this product is different? |
| Retailer Support | Medium | Will retailers allocate premium shelf space and feature ads? |
| Marketing Investment | Medium | Is the launch budget sufficient for awareness targets? |
| Operational Readiness | Medium | Can manufacturing scale to demand forecasts? |
3. Pricing and Promotion Optimization
CPG pricing cases often involve trade spending — the 15-25% of revenue that manufacturers invest in retailer promotions, slotting fees, and cooperative advertising. Optimizing this spend is a perennial consulting engagement.
Typical problem: A food company’s trade spending has grown from 18% to 24% of revenue over five years, but volume has remained flat. Where is the value leaking?
Use our pricing strategy guide as a foundation, then layer in CPG-specific trade promotion analysis.
4. Channel Strategy and E-Commerce
The rise of e-commerce and direct-to-consumer (DTC) models is disrupting traditional CPG distribution. Cases may ask you to evaluate channel mix, assess the DTC opportunity, or respond to Amazon’s growing power.
| Channel | % of CPG Sales (2025) | Gross Margin | Growth Rate | Strategic Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grocery | 35-40% | 30-40% | 1-2% | Core volume driver |
| Mass/Club | 25-30% | 25-35% | 2-3% | Scale and efficiency |
| Convenience | 8-12% | 40-50% | 1-2% | Impulse and immediate consumption |
| E-Commerce | 12-18% | 20-30% | 15-20% | Growth engine, data capture |
| DTC | 2-5% | 50-70% | 25-30% | Brand building, premium products |
5. Market Entry and Geographic Expansion
Should a US-based CPG company enter the Southeast Asian market? These cases combine market sizing with localization challenges — adapting products, packaging, and marketing to local preferences.
Browse our market entry framework and consumer goods cases for practice scenarios.
CPG Metrics That Win Points
These are the numbers interviewers expect you to know or ask about in CPG cases:
Market Share and Distribution Metrics
- Market Share (Value vs. Volume): Value share measures revenue capture; volume share measures unit sales. Premium brands target high value share; mass brands focus on volume.
- ACV Distribution (All Commodity Volume): Percentage of total retail sales represented by stores carrying your product. 80% ACV means your product is available in stores representing 80% of category sales.
- Velocity: Units sold per store per week. High velocity products earn better shelf placement and retailer support.
- Share of Shelf: Your brand’s shelf space relative to the category. Correlates strongly with market share.
Financial Metrics
- Gross Margin: Typically 40-60% for branded CPG, 20-30% for private label. Brand strength shows in margin premium.
- Trade Spending Rate: Trade spend as % of gross sales. Industry average is 18-22%; above 25% signals inefficiency.
- Marketing ROI: Incremental revenue generated per marketing dollar. Top performers achieve 3-5x ROI on advertising.
- GMROII (Gross Margin Return on Inventory Investment): Measures working capital efficiency. Target 200-400% for healthy CPG.
mindmap
root((CPG Performance))
Market Position
Value Share
Volume Share
ACV Distribution
Velocity
Financial Health
Gross Margin
Trade Spend Rate
Marketing ROI
Brand Strength
Awareness
Consideration
Loyalty
NPS
Brand Management Frameworks
The Brand Equity Model
Strong brands command price premiums and retailer cooperation. Assess brand equity across four dimensions:
| Dimension | Definition | Measurement | CPG Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Awareness | Do consumers know the brand exists? | Aided/unaided recall | Coca-Cola: 95%+ global awareness |
| Consideration | Would consumers consider purchasing? | Consideration set inclusion | Tide in laundry purchase consideration |
| Preference | Do consumers prefer this brand over alternatives? | Brand preference surveys | Apple vs. Android preference |
| Loyalty | Do consumers repurchase consistently? | Repeat purchase rate, NPS | Pampers parent retention |
Price-Value Positioning
CPG categories typically segment into distinct price tiers. Know where your client’s brand sits and the strategic implications:
quadrantChart
title CPG Price-Value Matrix
x-axis Low Price --> High Price
y-axis Low Perceived Value --> High Perceived Value
quadrant-1 Premium
quadrant-2 Super Premium
quadrant-3 Value
quadrant-4 Mainstream
Store Brand: [0.25, 0.3]
National Brand: [0.55, 0.55]
Premium Brand: [0.75, 0.8]
Luxury/Niche: [0.9, 0.9]
Private Label Defense
Private label (store brands) now capture 20-25% of US grocery sales and over 40% in some European markets. CPG companies face constant pressure to justify their brand premium.
| Defense Strategy | Mechanism | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Innovation Leadership | Continuous product improvement, first-mover advantage | R&D cost, imitation lag |
| Marketing Investment | Emotional brand connection, top-of-mind awareness | Diminishing returns at high spend |
| Trade Partnership | Category captain role, exclusive promotions | Margin erosion, retailer dependence |
| Value Tier Launch | Own value brand to capture price-sensitive segment | Brand dilution, cannibalization |
In our experience coaching candidates, the strongest responses acknowledge that private label growth is structural, not cyclical, and recommend a portfolio approach combining innovation, marketing, and selective value-tier participation.
Key Takeaways
- CPG cases focus on brand economics and retailer dynamics, not store operations — know the manufacturer’s perspective
- Master the five core case types: brand portfolio, product innovation, pricing/trade spending, channel strategy, and market entry
- Understand that CPG companies compete on two fronts: consumer mindshare and retailer shelf space
- Key metrics include value share, ACV distribution, velocity, and trade spending rate — be ready to interpret these
- Private label defense is a recurring theme; recommend portfolio approaches rather than single-tactic responses
- Trade spending (15-25% of revenue) is the hidden cost center where consulting projects often focus
Ready to apply these frameworks? Practice with consumer goods industry cases in our case library, or test yourself in a timed AI Mock Interview to build speed and confidence with CPG scenarios.