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August 2004 Times & Trends Executive Summary:
CCARB-CUTTING SHOPPERS
Stirring up CPG Food & Beverage Categories
Times&Trends reviews new developments and critical events across
all major CPG categories, key channels and all consumer groups, providing
powerful benchmarking insights to help guide strategic decisions.
This month’s subject is part of Times&Trends series on the Wellness
Evolution, specifically the latest trend of low-carb consumption and carb-branded
product sales trends. The purpose of this report is to summarize trends in
the latest year and most recent 12 weeks through mid-June.
Here’s a summary from the brief:
Carb-Cutting Is Still Trending Strong – The Battle For Dieters’
Attention Is Just Beginning.
CPG companies are launching carb versions, carb packaging, reduced-calorie
and artificially sweetened products to stimulate dieting shoppers’
interest and trial – ultimately, taste satisfaction and price versus
dieting results will determine who wins.
This free summary is also accessible via the GMA Web site at
http://www.gmabrands.com/publications/gmairi.cfm
Shoppers are faced with
unavoidable weight control and associated health issues. Two-thirds of
Americans are overweight. The CPG industry’s opportunity to serve these
consumers with products that satisfy but also support weight-loss goals is
enormous.
There’s been an unprecedented consumer response to the low-carb diet.
Low-carb dieting is easy, effective and fast. Reporters are claiming that
carb-cutting is declining – but store sales trends do not show that to be
the case. Yes, the jury is still out on its long term effectiveness.


The major positive sales impact of this craze is with naturally low-carb
products – like eggs, bacon, light beers, & others – estimated to have
grown as a group over $4 billion in annual sales in the latest year.
Food Manufacturers are jumping in with low-carb line extensions.
Companies launching multi-category offerings, package blurbs and “we’re
low-carb” ad campaigns – are taking over a larger share of carb-branded
activity from carb companies like Atkins. Total carb-branded activity, in
aggregate over $1 billion in sales, is estimated to have grown over $800
million in annual sales through June 13, 2004.
Portable, between meal snacks & beverages is the likely carb-cutting
battleground. Soft drinks & beer, snack bars, candy and other sweets
are predicted to sustain consumer carb-cutting or calorie-cutting
interests. However, lower-calorie or artificially sweetened, diet versions
may take over shoppers’ attention and taste satisfaction. Pepsi Edge and
Coke C2 competition has just begun and will challenge dieters to
reconsider their options. Artificially sweetened line extensions are
growing rapidly.
Retailers are evaluating low-carb stocking, merchandising & shopper
communications strategies. Carb-brands have received unusually strong
display support and are often displayed in multiple locations with
multiple carb-brands. “Healthier Eating” sections are being tested within
categories and as separate departments. Food ads are flagging a deluge of
new entries. The jury is still out on which strategies and which best
practices consumers will respond to more than others.
Taste approval, price/value and weight-loss results – the ultimate
test. Many carb-company products are premium priced compared to brand carb-extensions,
which are more competitively priced. Klondike’s Carb Smart – a much better
value to the carb-cutting shopper – doubled Atkins’ Endulge share of
frozen novelties in latest 12 weeks of data.
Concerned overweight shoppers are trying multiple diets. IRI
MedProfiler™ data shows that low-carb dieting is competing against
low-fat/cholesterol, low-calorie/sugar and low-salt dieting for
weight-loss results. Awareness and interest is heightened. Media and
government news may sway dieters in new directions away from carb-cutting.


Low-carb could go the route of low-fat. The low-fat branded craze
in the early 90s – including SnackWell’s & WOW! branded snacks – saw about
five years of growth and then has declined ever since. However, consumers
may sustain interest in selected naturally low-carb products as they did
with naturally low-fat yogurts.
Implication – It’s too early to predict low-carb’s rise or demise –
but the industry opportunity to serve the consumer and support America’s
need to curb the obesity crisis is huge, and it’s just begun. IRI has
taken the initiative to provide manufacturers and retailers with updates
on the status and market trend of carb-branded items with a new syndicated
service, CarbTracker™, the industry’s most complete source of sales
results for the low-carb industry. This service is now available.
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