Episode Details
Back to EpisodesPCV: Why the Best Products Avoid the Biggest Stores
Description
The concept of product category volume (PCV) deconstructs the assumption that more exposure always leads to more sales, revealing instead that context—not traffic—is the true driver of conversion. This episode of pplpod analyzes how brands strategically choose where their products appear, exploring why being in the biggest store in town can actually hurt performance, and the deeper reality that distribution is a game of precision, not scale. We begin our investigation with a familiar contradiction: a premium product missing from a massive superstore, only to appear perfectly placed in a small specialty shop down the road. This deep dive focuses on the “Context Principle,” deconstructing why relevance beats reach.
We examine the “ACV Trap,” analyzing how traditional distribution metrics prioritize total store sales—treating all retail environments as equal opportunities. The narrative reveals how this approach leads brands to chase high-traffic outlets where their products are surrounded by irrelevant categories, diluting visibility and weakening conversion.
Our investigation moves into the “Category Lens,” where PCV isolates what actually matters: how much of a store’s sales come from the specific product category. By focusing only on relevant spending, brands shift from asking “Where are people spending money?” to “Where are people spending money on products like mine?”
We then explore the “Push vs Pull Tension,” where distribution strategy becomes a balancing act. From paying for shelf space and promotions (push) to generating consumer demand (pull), we uncover how misalignment between the two leads to wasted capital—products placed in front of the wrong audience at the wrong time.
Finally, we confront the “Lost in the Aisles Effect,” where products disappear despite massive foot traffic. Without the right customer intent, even premium products fail to convert—proving that visibility without relevance is effectively invisible. In response, brands reallocate resources toward high-intent environments, even if it means shrinking their overall footprint.
Ultimately, this story proves that success in retail is not about being everywhere—it is about being exactly where you belong. And as commerce shifts toward digital environments with infinite shelf space, the challenge is no longer securing placement, but ensuring that placement still aligns with human intent.
Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles and transcript materials accessed 4/7/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.