How Britain Shops for Food A look at the post-recession landscape.

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Transcript of How Britain Shops for Food A look at the post-recession landscape.

How Britain Shops for FoodA look at the post-recession landscape

Today’s agendaWhat we’ll talk about

theeconomy

food shoppingbehaviour

food retailstrategies

the economyrecovery on the way?

The economy

The recession mindset

lack of money

I can’t spend

lack of will

I won’t spend

lack of

spontaneityI think, then spend

The economy

The household budget

Income(-1.4%)

Costs(-1.8%)

Credit(-6.9%)

Saving(+31%)

Total change(-2.7%)

Changes in position since H2, 2009

The economy

Higher debt servicing costs

Debt payments as a proportion of income

10.5%

2008

7.1%

2009

9.5%

2010/11

10.7%

2010/11

11.2%

2010/11

3% rate

5% rate6% rate

The economy

Taxation and statutory spend

incometax

nationalinsurance

value addedtax

counciltax

pensioncosts

The economy

Erosion of discretionary income

30

32

34

36

38

40

42

44

2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020

38.4%

42.1% %

Percentage of income that is discretionary

38.4% £13,26035.1%

The economy

Spending decisions will be different

Retail Savings

Household Health services

Automotive Leisure

Lower priority Higher priority

food shopping behaviourwhat does this mean for the consumer?

Food shopping behaviour

Inflation

+2.5% +5.5%

2006/07 2008/09

Food shopping behaviour

Food spending dynamics

Food retail spend as a proportion of all retail spend%

35

36

37

38

39

40

41

42

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

40.0%

37.7%

41.7%

Food shopping behaviour

Consumer reaction

Importance of price in driving store selection%

47.146.8

42.642.1

39

40

41

42

43

44

45

46

47

48

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

Food shopping behaviour

Consumer reaction

%

47.1 46.8

42.642.1

48.2

39

40

41

42

43

44

45

46

47

48

49

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

Importance of price in driving store selection

Food shopping behaviour

Shopping around

1.9

…other grocery retailers

In 2008 on average customers visited their

main store and…

2.4

In 2009 on average customers visited their

main store and…

…other grocery retailers

Food shopping behaviour

Use of discount grocers

+7.9% pts +3.2% pts +0.7% pts

7.9%

9.8%

3.6%

15.8%

13.0%

4.3%

2008 2009 2008 2009 2008 2009

+0.6% pts

8.4%9.0%

2008 2009

Food shopping behaviour

Eating out

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

+3.4%

+2.3%

-3.1% -0.1% +1.9%

Percentage change in dining out expenditure (year-on-year)

Food shopping behaviour

What it means for food and grocery

+4.0%

+5.5%

+3.5%

2007

2008

2009

2010

+3.2%

2011

+3.1%

2012

+3.5%

2013

+4.0%

Year on year change in all food and grocery expenditure

Food shopping behaviour

Summary

Grocery will remain the most buoyant major retail sector

Inflation will remain in the market, but not at 2008 levels

Achieving volume growth will be challenging

But there will be solid pockets of growth

Value and price will remain more important

food retail strategiesresponses of the food and grocery sector

Food retail strategies

Four considerations

FragmentationDemand is becoming more fragmented

StoresConsumers have more stores to pick from

Proliferation of productThere is more choice than ever before

ReachShoppers want to buy in a variety of ways

Food retail strategies

Consideration 1: fragmentation

20%of Waitrose shoppers are

C2DE

18%of Aldi shoppers are AB

Food retail strategies

Solution 1: segmentation

SegmentationA segmented approach is required to grow

FragmentationDemand is becoming more fragmented

GOOD BETTER BEST

Low volume

Highest price pointsHigher marginsPremium offer

High volume

Low priceLow margin

Competitive entry prices

Core product

Core offerBasis of positioning

Standard margin

Food retail strategies

Solution 1: segmentation

Food retail strategies

Consideration 2: proliferation of product

Important to have a wide range with lots of

choice

Important to provide an edited range of what I

want

+6.9% pts

-5.4% pts

Change from 1999 in consumer views on range

Proliferation of productThere is more choice than ever before

Edited choiceLess will become more

Food retail strategies

Solution 2: clarity and edited choice

Food retail strategies

Solution 2: clarity and edited choice

Cooking from scratch

Eating in treats

Everyday basics

Indulgent

Food retail strategies

Consideration 3: choice

1970s 1990s 2000s1980s

4 4 63

Average number of grocery stores consumers have easy access to

Added value and differentiationStand out from the crowd

StoresConsumers have more stores to pick from

Food retail strategies

Solution 3: added value

Food retail strategies

Solution 3: added value

niche

differentiation

fashionability

personal service

brand marketing

experience / environment

Watchwords for adding value and differentiation

Food retail strategies

Consideration 4: customer reach

Supermarkets, 46.8% Internet,

4.6%

Neighbourhood, 35.9%

Other,12.6%

Sources of growth in food and grocery retail (2009-13)

Multi-formatUse multiple touch points

ReachShoppers want to buy in a variety of ways

Food retail strategies

Solution 4: multi-format

Food retail strategies

Solution 4: multi-format

Meeting multiple customer needs

Food retail strategies

How it all fits together

Slowing sales growth, rising cost growth Must drive market share – must add value

Consumer wallets are under pressure Need to stimulate wants

Consumers and shopping trips becoming more segmented

Segment stores/channels/ranges

Competition intensifies space saturation product proliferation

message overload

Clarity of offer focused propositions, clearly identified/branded clear

price/range architecture less is more

The endThanks for listening