What the Bentonville Waiting Room Taught Me
By Brian PozeskyThe first time I visited Bentonville, I went as the “quant guy.”
A major CPG had brought my company, Spectra Marketing/Bases, to do one thing: help make their case to Walmart’s category managers and convince them that a new product deserved a spot on one of the most valuable pieces of real estate in American commerce: a Walmart shelf.
The waiting room told you everything you needed to know about the power dynamic.
High-level executives who had flown in on private planes were sitting on folding chairs in a room that looked like the DMV: cinder block walls, fluorescent lights, and TVs playing midday soap operas. It didn’t matter how big your company was; in Bentonville, everyone waited.
Then the category manager called you back into a windowless room, and you had exactly 15 minutes to make your case.
We came prepared: velocity estimates benchmarked against comparable products; sophisticated planogram recommendations; geo/demographic profiles of the brand’s buyers and how they mapped to Walmart’s core shopper; trade area analysis to identify which stores were best suited for a test. And if you made it through all of that, you could start talking about pricing.
What was easy to forget in that moment was that the category manager was also being asked to take a personal risk on the product and your marketing team. Every inch of shelf space has a job to do; if your product doesn’t perform, you don’t just lose your spot. The category manager misses their velocity targets, their category growth goals, their performance review. They bet on you.
That context changed everything about what came next.
And the first thing brands did when they got back to headquarters was turn to their marketing teams and say: “Don’t blow this.”
At first, some of them did blow it. They threw money at the problem: awareness campaigns, promotions, in-store activations. Whatever it took to juice velocity numbers before Walmart reviewed performance.
It worked. Until it didn’t.
Category managers aren’t just looking at raw velocity; they’re asking whether your product is genuinely pulling new shoppers into the category or just cannibalizing the parent brand’s existing shelf set.
For major CPGs, that’s a particularly loaded issue. When you’re launching something new under a legacy portfolio, you’re not just competing against other brands; you’re under pressure to prove the new product adds net value to the category, not just net cost to the trade budget.
As the big blast of media wore out, the conversation shifted fast. Brand and trade teams started asking a sharper question:
How many incremental units did we actually drive per dollar spent?
That question, incremental units per dollar, became the organizing principle for everything: test markets; media allocation; promotional timing. It forced teams to get honest about what their marketing was actually doing versus what it was just taking credit for.
That was then.
Today, the same fundamental conversation is happening; but with 20x the marketing options and 50x the data available to make sense of it all.
Retail Media Networks have fundamentally changed the playing field: Walmart, Target, Kroger, Amazon, every major retailer now has a media business sitting on top of its retail operation. CPG brand teams can target shoppers at the moment of purchase, measure on-shelf impact, and close the loop between ad spend and sales in ways that weren’t possible even 5 years ago.
But here’s what hasn’t changed: the category manager still wants proof.
More shelf space, better placement, expanded distribution; it’s all earned with evidence. Velocity data. Shopper lift. Proof that your new product is bringing incremental demand to the category, not just reshuffling what’s already there. And proof that the person who bet on you made the right call.
The teams winning at retail right now are the ones treating their retail media spend not just as an advertising investment, but as a data generation strategy: every campaign is an opportunity to build the case for the next buyer conversation; every buyer conversation is a chance to defend the shelf space they’ve already earned.
For major CPGs launching new products, the playbook hasn’t changed as much as you might think. You still need to walk into that room, virtual or otherwise, with proof.
The difference is that today, the data exists to make that proof irrefutable. The question is whether your organization is structured to use it; or whether it’s still siloed between trade, brand, and media teams who aren’t speaking the same language.
That’s the real opportunity. And the brands getting it right are pulling ahead fast.
The challenge hasn’t changed: proving incrementality.
What’s changed is the ability to measure it.
Pēq helps brands turn retail media, trade, and marketing into one unified performance system — so every dollar spent builds the case for the next shelf win.