In a new study Foodservice
Solutions® Grocerant Guru™ found; “The Family Dinner is Not Dead however it is
evolving from cook from scratch to meal assembly.” Let’s set the table; sales of food for
at-home consumption in the US are at $147.3 billion totaled over 50% more than
eating and drinking place sales in the first two months of 2015 according to
The Food Institute” But not all food for
dinner or meal components come from traditional retail, restaurant, or grocery
outlet today.
Although
grocery sales will almost certainly continue to outpace eating out sales for
the forseable future, people are eating away from home more. During the first
two months of 2015, grocery sales accounted for 61.1% of all food sales while
compared to 62.6% a year earlier – down 1.5%. Eating and drinking places’ share
meanwhile, rose 1.5% to 38.9%. In short customers are continuing to migrate too
Ready-2-Eat from cook from scratch when they can. Consumers first choice is not
cooking from scratch any longer.
However
a new Gallup study found that most U.S. Families with children under 18 still
dine together at home. “The average 5.1 dinners that families share each week
is down slightly from 5.4 in 1997, but unchanged from 2001” according to
Gallup.
The
study did find “there has been a slight increase in the percentage eating
together less than four times per week; this was 16% in 1997, but jumped to 22%
by 2001 and has remained at that level since. With unemployment dropping the
occasions of eating at restaurants will continue to climb according to
Gallup.
Gallup
found “since 2001 married parents report eating dinner at home with their
families more often than unmarried ones. Married parents report that their
family eats 5.3 dinners at home weekly, on average, compared with 4.8 dinners
weekly among those who are not married.”
The
same study found “parents who work full time dine slightly less frequently with
their families than those who work part time or who don't work (5.0 dinners vs.
5.3). Also, parents who are aged 35 and older enjoy fewer family dinners than
do younger parents (5.0 dinners vs. 5.3, respectively).
Remember
that 50% of U.S. consumers over the age of 18 are still single when you think
about this data. Regular readers of this blog know that we have documented time
and time again that cooking from scratch is something from a by-gone era, and
meal assembly is home cooking today.
The
family dinner is not dead, it has certainly changed. Is your restaurant, C-store, or grocery store
selling Ready-2-Eat or Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared meal component’s that can be
mix & matched into a customized family meal? You should be. Think Customer Migration, think The 65 Inch HDTV
Syndrome.
Are you interested in learning
how Foodservice Solutions 5P’s of Food Marketing can edify your retail food
brand while creating a platform for consumer convenient meal
participation, differentiation and individualization? Email us at: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or visit: www.FoodserviceSolutions.us for more
information.
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