Partner & Director, Customer Centricity
Paris
By Gaby Barrios, Lauren Taylor, Patrick Witschi, Arnab Sinha, and Jean-Manuel Izaret
Inflation is not the only reason why consumers increase their spending. As it turns out, many consumers also deliberately choose to spend more. Why? Because they feel good about their income and savings, because they have good job prospects, because they enjoy spending on things they couldn’t previously afford, or because they just want to treat themselves.
Of course, for consumers, inflation remains a very real challenge. Consequently, some people spend less on certain product and service categories as they adapt their shopping habits to counter the effects of inflation or to deliberately reduce their spending. For brands, inflation is a challenge as well: it’s hard to uncover sources of growth in such an environment.
But our research shows that when consumer spending shifts, for whatever reasons, brands can develop growth strategies. (See “About Our Research.”) The key is to understand those reasons: What motivates consumer behaviors? Changes in consumer behavior involve shifts in purchase frequency and willingness to explore new products—trading up, within the brand or beyond it. Brands can respond by finding ways to maximize uptake of their products and tailor touch points to encourage the most relevant purchases.
Inflation impacts consumers around the world. It correlates with higher spending but differs across categories and markets. For example:
Thirty percent of survey respondents told us that they are spending more across the categories we researched. They cite higher prices as one reason for the uptick in spending, yet 80% actually opt to spend more. Overall, this means that one of four consumers across markets increase spending because they choose to do so.
Brands can capture opportunities from nuanced shifts in consumer spending, especially when they rely on true consumer patterns rather than conventional (but sometimes erroneous) wisdom, as our research shows.
Our look at category differences allowed us to develop several actionable category archetypes. (See “Three Category Archetypes.”)
We can analyze survey findings in various ways. Overall, our findings reveal three general category archetypes that can guide brand actions. (See the exhibit.)
Accordingly, brands can take action:
From there, brands can look at greater nuances. For example, a deep dive into the affluent segment reveals that these consumers spend more on snacks and beverages and are more likely to explore other products, whereas middle-class consumers and aspirers spend less and buy less often when it comes to this category. Higher-income consumers are going to buy potato chips more often and are more likely to buy, say, artisanal, premium-brand chips. Middle-class consumers and aspirers will buy less often. Brands are thus vulnerable to losing sales from affluent customers who opt for other brands and other customers who opt to purchase chips less often.
Of course, inflation and other global trends will continue to have ongoing effects on consumers and how, where, and why they spend their money—or don’t. Our global consumer sentiment surveys and analyses will continue to track sentiment across markets, categories, regions, and income segments.
In September 2024, we surveyed 23,130 consumers in 19 markets:
Managing Director & Senior Partner; Global Leader, Marketing, Sales & Pricing Practice
San Francisco - Bay Area
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