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How shoppers and supermarkets are responding to the recession

How shoppers and supermarkets are responding to the recession

Steve Smith

Despite the average household’s disposable income declining over the past few years, people are shopping more often now than they were ten years ago. Tesco, Marks & Spencer and Waitrose have all made changes to adapt to this shift in consumerism, so how are these brands driving and maintaining brand equity in a time as financially uncertain as this? Innovation, says SMG’s Steve Smith.

There has been a remarkable change in our chief concerns over the last ten years. A decade ago it was about the NHS and Defence. Now it’s about the economy and unemployment.

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Dig deeper though, and you will find that these concerns are much closer to home. It’s about how much money people have in their wallets and purses and what they have got to spend it on. Whilst household disposable income continued to rise until the middle of 2009, it has since declined.

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This decline is due largely to average earnings growing at less than inflation. The Consumer Prices Index has almost consistently been above total pay since late 2007, which effectively means people have been steadily getting worse and worse off for six years. Between 2007 and 2012, cost of food rose by 32% (Defra 2012).

It is not surprising then, that there is a rise in people wanting to live more conservatively and within their means. Since 2008 there has been an 11% fall in people treating themselves to things they feel they don’t really need, and a 21% increase in people saying they budget for every penny (TGI).

In particular, people are going out and entertaining at home less frequently. This includes going to pubs and clubbing, and the proportion of adults going to eat a restaurant at least once a month has declined by one third since 2008.

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Fewer people entertaining at home is part of a larger impact around shopping behaviours. People are now shopping more often, with just under half of people shopping two-three times a week, compared with one third in 2004. This means a significant rise in the average number of shops per year, rising from 127 in 2004 to 187 in 2012.

This increase in shopping frequency is largely down to top-up shopping. On its own, this is a sign of people wanting to shop more carefully and minimise waste. Added to this is a significant rise in people who keenly budget when shopping. Since 2008 there has been a 19% rise in shoppers using vouchers, and a 9% fall in people who believe well known brands are better than supermarkets’ own brands (TGI).

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Supermarkets’ responses

Supermarkets have been reacting to changing buying habits.

Tesco launched Price Promise last week – the UK’s first price comparison voucher. Covering own-label as well as branded products, Price Promise looks at the overall cost of a basket of branded, own-label and fresh food. If found to be cheaper, Tesco customers receive a voucher for the difference – up to a maximum of £10.

Price Promise has the potential for helping Tesco improve its financial results. Sainsbury’s similar Brand Match voucher scheme (which does not cover own-label) contributed to an increase in its half year results, published last November.

Although price is clearly important to customers, competitiveness is about far more than just this. Other factors include meeting needs beyond price, store design, shopping experience, service and quality.

Tesco and Morrisons have made significant investments in store redesign, customer training and improving own brand ranges and quality. Some are also experimenting with new technology to facilitate customers.

Tesco is piloting an augmented reality mirror and digital mannequin in several of its stores. Asda employs “hybrid” checkouts that switch from human operated checkouts to self-serving. These reduce queues and waiting time by around 85%. Tesco has a ‘click and collect’ service that allows customers to collect their shopping at a time of their choosing, with the Tesco assistant placing the shopping goods in the customer’s vehicle whilst they wait.

Supermarkets’ ‘eat in at home’ experiences take advantage of the increased amount of time people spend at home and can encourage additional footfall and in-store spend. At ASDA, families can make their own pizzas for a Friday night in, and Sainsbury’s runs a big night in promotion that combines food deals with cheap DVDs.

Marks and Spencer’s ‘Dine in For Two’, which it extends to Mother’s Day and Valentine’s Day, promotes price with quality and a sense of occasion.

Supermarkets are innovating outside of the immediate shopping experience. Waitrose has started giving its Waitrose loyalty card holders a free coffee every day, and Tesco has just launched Tesco TV, which is free to Tesco Clubcard holders. Tesco TV will of course be of interest to advertisers because it will give them greater access to viewing habits of Tesco shoppers and better targeting.

An ongoing challenge to some of the supermarkets is to translate pleasurable elements into their media experiences. Waitrose and Marks and Spencer are often held as exemplars, but some of Tesco’s more recent ads are humorous. Even ads from Aldi that focus on price can be entertaining.

When supermarkets provide entertaining experiences, they are likely to be more effective at driving consideration, stickiness and brand equity. Given people are likely to talk about and share relevant and impactful content and experiences, supermarkets are also able to encourage positive talk and recommendation to friends and family.

28th March 2013

UK supermarkets have shown undoubtedly good and effective tactics and skills in response to the recession. Those tactics and skills have not only ameliorated the damage of recession but have actually served some chains well. It takes them, however, only so far. The supermarket chains are now in an epoch-changing scenario. The new normal is here and it needs more than the existing skills and tactics.

Consumers are moving beyond ‘going out less’ – they are now moving towards ‘going out only on special occasions’. In the same mode, they seek a return to the more traditional preparation and cooking at home. Even if they are seeking a ‘special’ meal they will be seeking more of the basic foodstuffs with which to prepare what is now too expensive to buy in-store.

Supermarket chains will have some significant re-positioning of their offer to do in order to appeal to this new market. Just one simple example; the consumer will now be seeking out the basic cooking ingredients for making their own soups and stews. Finding those basic, unprocessed and unprepared, ingredients in the typical UK supermarkets – even the hypermarkets – is a challenging and uninspiring exercise at present. The supermarkets that move to more properly service that demand will win the business that is seeping away from the purchase of more expensive, more sophisticatedly packed, processed and prepared foodstuffs.

The crunch statement in the article is;

“This decline is due largely to average earnings growing at less than inflation. The Consumer Prices Index has almost consistently been above total pay since late 2007, which effectively means people have been steadily getting worse and worse off for six years. Between 2007 and 2012, cost of food rose by 32% (Defra 2012).”

Edward Harkins
Knowledge and Research Advisor

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