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P&G to lay off 1,600 employees

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Agencies

Posted: Feb 04, 2012 at 1550 hrs IST

Houston As part of cost-cutting due to flat market shares and growing investor pressure, Procter & Gamble Co plans to eliminate about 1,600 "overhead" or non- manufacturing jobs -- including some in marketing – banking on digital marketing to help contain long-term media spending.

The plan was announced by executives at the company's earnings conference. Reality appears to have finally dawned at Procter & Gamble, the world's largest marketer, whose USD 10 billion annual ad budget has hurt the company's margins.

Earlier this month, P&G announced that it would outsource in-store merchandising work covering about 2,700 employees, most of them part-time, to brokerage firms and expand a programme put in place for some categories two years ago.

That reduction affects about 3 per cent of P&G's non-manufacturing workforce of about 50,000.

Chief Financial Officer Jon Moeller said P&G would rely on a combination of attrition, "selective hiring" and restructuring to get to the reductions, which will result in USD 240 million in annual savings, in line with what P&G typically generates through annual restructuring spending.

Meanwhile, social networking site Facebook has claimed it managed to boost sales of a Procter & Gamble deodorant, underlining its growing significance in the retail industry.

As part of its IPO filing this week, Facebook highlighted a case study involving women's deodorant, 'Secret', saying a dedicated page related to anti-bullying helped boost sales of the brand by 9 per cent.

P&G chose to advertise on the site to generate awareness for the 'Mean Stinks' campaign and selected a female audience likely to be receptive to the campaign.

The sales growth was reported in the first 26 weeks after the campaign was launched in the US, Facebook claims.

This claim has led to a trend in which more companies will move their advertising dollars from the traditional to the digital media for convenience, more exposure and ease of usage.

According to a marketing expert at Washington University in St Louis, Procter & Gamble is banking on digital marketing to help contain media spending in the long-term.

Company CEO Bob McDonald said he expects its advertising costs to moderate as it moves into the digital arena, citing the billions of free impressions generated by Internet-only ad campaigns, like P&G's Old Spice commercials in recent years.

"With the advent of digital ad tracking software and digital ad shops like Google, companies are able to track the effects of digital ads in real time in a fine-grained manner," said Seethu Seetharaman, PhD, the Patrick W McGinnis Professor of Marketing at Olin Business School.

"Companies can quickly monitor who is clicking on an ad, with whom they are sharing the link to the ad and what that second person is then doing," he said.

Traditional media offers no such capability.

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