Consumers do not want to cook dinner.
While wages are up; we ask are they keeping up with prices? Today it seems as
price continue to creep up for everything that consumers want or need including
restaurant meals, gasoline, electricity, water, produce, and bakery items.
If restaurants want to continue to operate,
they must evolve according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®. Here let’s look at just how bad it is. The news for the restaurant sector gets even worse as new research
says delinquencies across all small businesses are at an 18-month high because
of deteriorating business conditions and landlords raising their fees.
“About 46% of restaurants lacked the
funds to pay their August rents, an 8-point jump in delinquencies from two
months earlier, according to the latest survey of small businesses by Alignable Research
Center.
If you own a restaurant, you cannot keep
doing what you have always done you must try and find a new normal, according
to Johnson. Paying rent comes before
profits and if you can’t pay the rent, you cannot pay yourself.
·
Fifty-seven percent of consumers have
changed their eating habits or meals at least moderately in the past two
years.
·
Forty-two percent of respondents claim
that their eating habits have become healthier vs. 12 months ago.
·
Eighty-two percent say they ate more at
home than away from home in the last six months.
Examining Consumption Moments, which
provide a 360-degree view of consumption, NielsenIQ defines what "snack as
the new black" looks like for consumers. They are:
·
Smaller meals are healthier: Thirty-nine percent of consumers say the products they
consume during small meals are healthy for them.
·
Full meals are for sharing: Full meal is the largest sharing occasion at 39 percent.
·
Chips, pretzels and popcorn
are the most shared snacks: These snacks represent
30 percent occasions of snacking.
·
Sweet snacks are indulgent: Twenty-four percent of consumers have a sweet snack to
indulge.
Resurgence of the Midday Pick-Me-Up
Midnight snacking is a thing of the past
as the midday pick-me-up resurges. Respondents say they consume three to four
small meals steadily throughout the day from late morning to late afternoon.
Nearly half of all full meals are eaten between 3 p.m. and 7 p.m.
The biggest occasion across categories
and the highest for snacking is to recharge, according to consumers. Days of
the week matter, too. More consumers say they eat alone on Monday and with
their partner on Sunday.
Snacking in Style
Eighty-two percent of snacking occasions
are consumed at home, with chips, pretzels and popcorn ranking as the No. 1
shared snack. Consumers' offices are the second most popular place for
snacking.
Sharing Occasions vs. Eating Alone
The company consumers keep impacts how
and what they eat. Full meals are eaten more with others and small meals are
consumed alone, NielsenIQ found.
Full meals are less frequent, saved for
time with others, according to 39 percent of consumers. These occasions are
consumed when they are happier and have more energy. Alternatively, 49 percent
of small meals are consumed alone and when consumers say their mood and energy
is lower than when they consume full meals.
Small meals and snacking are also
perceived healthier by consumers. Consumers believe that 68 percent of the
products they ingest are healthy. The snacks most often eaten alone include
fruits and vegetables.
When it comes to modern-day snacking, NielsenIQ has three key pieces of
advice for retailers and brands:
1. Consider focusing on "better for you" messaging.
2. Communicate around midday moments, both at home and in-office
settings.
3. Encourage consumers to change their habits by communicating the
benefits around snacking with others.
Are you ready for
some fresh ideations? Do your food marketing ideas look more like yesterday
than tomorrow? Interested in learning how our Grocerant
Guru® 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: us on our social media sites by clicking one of
the following links: Facebook, LinkedIn, or Twitter
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