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Trends & Insights     >     Publications   >     Consumer Insight Magazine

2003 Consumer & Market Trends Report

Price:  US$495

This special edition of Consumer Insight features our Seventh Annual Consumer and Market Trends Report. The complete report is available for a purchase price of US$495.

To obtain your copy, please call 1-800-988-4ACN, or email your request to CommunicationsDept@Nielsen.com. Complimentary issues of Consumer Insight will resume with the Winter edition.

 

Introduction

An early success in Iraq caught military planners off balance, working to establish a functioning infrastructure to deliver much-needed food, water and supplies. By mid-year 2003, peacekeeping was proving far more dangerous than the war effort, and a firm date for a pullout had yet to be announced.

The Domestic Outlook
Stateside, the economy continued to baffle the experts, who reluctantly agreed that it was possible to experience an economic recovery along with a contracting labor market. The disenfranchised (a net loss of 938,000 payroll jobs) joined the disillusioned (150,000 people dropped out of the labor market by choice) generating free market drag. The National Bureau of Economic Research did see its way clear to declare that the recession, which began in March 2001, had officially ended eight months later.


The housing market rested on a solid foundation characterized by unrelenting demand and decades-low mortgage rates. Escalating home values prompted owners to refinance at lower rates and free up hostage cash, which fueled consumer spending. In the words of Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, “The frenetic pace of home equity extraction…is likely to appreciably simmer down in 2003, possibly notably lessening support to household purchases of goods and services.”

Under Attack

The bomb shelters of the 1960s gave way to the terror alerts of the 2000s, where a rainbow color bar became the visual cue signaling the need for heightened awareness. Some of the most serious threats to domestic tranquility originated within U.S. borders: from natural disasters like the wildfires that destroyed more than six million acres in western states to the malevolent sniper activity that took ten lives in the greater Washington, D.C., area.

Greed—personal and corporate—continued to dominate the headlines. Winona Ryder plundered the shelves at Saks Fifth Avenue, while domestic diva Martha Stewart is accused of doing the same in the financial markets, allegedly dumping 4,000 shares of ImClone stock based on insider information. The concept of personal accountability and corporate ethics so consumed the public dialectic that Time magazine named three whistleblowers (Cynthia Cooper of Worldcom, Coleen Rowley of the FBI and Sherron Watkins of Enron) as Persons of the Year 2002.

On a Lighter Note
France, among the most vocal opponents to the Iraqi incursion, attempted to co-opt the United Nations and pressure the United States to moderate its stance. Congress reacted with calls from the floor for a boycott of French goods. Months later, another French offensive was launched, this time on the Internet front. The Ministry of Culture announced that the word e-mail was banned, and would henceforth be known as courriel, a contraction of the phrase le courrier electronique.

A Sporting Chance
Ethical dilemmas came into play on the athletic front as well. Baseball slid in the standings as the all-American sport thanks to a triple threat: steroids, strike threats and Sammy's corked bat. Olympic skating enthusiasts were on edge after a French judge admitted to rigging results in the pairs figure skating competition.

Offsetting these troubling reports was a series of stellar performances. Serena Williams continued her reign as queen of women’s tennis, relegating older sister Venus to attendant status. LPGA legend Annika Sorenstam proved she could play with the boys, hitting a 243-yard opening drive on her first day at the PGA’s Colonial tournament.

Speaking of big drivers, 13-year-old wunderkind Michelle Wie leveraged every inch of her six-foot frame to connect on 300-yard drives and place ninth at the Kraft Nabisco Championship. Unknown Ben Curtis shrugged off his 396th world ranking to win the British Open, outshooting the likes of Tiger Woods and Vijay Singh.

Lance Armstrong pedaled his way to Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year honors and his fifth consecutive win of the Tour de France. The San Antonio Spurs pounded the floorboards and the New Jersey Nets into submission, netting their second NBA championship title. The most exciting thing about Super Bowl XXXVII wasn’t the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but the $2 million cost to advertisers whose commercials jolted viewers awake during a wearisome game.

In Tune with the Times
Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band staged a revival with The Rising album, attracting critical praise and a new generation of fans. Hipster performer Beck bobbed onto the charts with Sea Change, a down-tempo melange of blues and folk melody lines punctuated by emotion-laden lyrics. The Eminem Show album quieted skeptics and proved that everybody’s least favorite bad boy has staying power.

“The King” ruled the Billboard charts again with the posthumous release of Elvis: 30 #1 Hits. Sales were up for Shania Twain with her double-edged album Up!, which paired country renditions with pop interpretations of the same songs.

Seeing Double
Sequels breathed a second wind into a waning box office this year as film remakes had moviegoers seeing double. The cinema redux offerings included: Legally Blonde 2, Charlie's Angels 2, X2: X-Men United, 2 Fast 2 Furious, Bad Boys II, Tomb Raider 2 and The Matrix Reloaded.

On the silver screen, Terminator 3 outmuscled The Hulk and other summer movie competition. Awash in a celluloid ocean, The Pirates of the Caribbean and Finding Nemo surfaced as nautically themed film winners.

The Retail Perspective. Tax cuts. Rate reductions. Military spending. Modest inflation. Mortgage availability. Economic stimulus. Yet a solid market recovery remains elusive. Wal-Mart expanded its global footprint and tied up the top retailer spot again with sales of $244 billion. The accounting scandals associated with telecommunications and energy companies crept into retail as Ahold executives acknowledged massive overstatement of earnings. Grocery’s former stranglehold on consumers has slipped to a whisper touch, with attrition of 10 trips per household per year.

Categorically Speaking. The medical community is getting exercised over obesity and its toll on society. The second most preventable cause of death, obesity is grabbing a fat share of headlines, and spawning an expansion of weight-control products and ingredients. High fat, sugar and carbohydrate foods rounded out the roster of top product classes and contributed to the heavyweight issue.

The World View. The French and the Swiss broke the bank with their highest per capita annual spends at retail. Storage, refrigeration and family size dictated trip count, with Hong Kong leading on the frequency measure (one shopping excursion every 1.4 days). Geography contributed to supermarket channel dominance in Australia, where 96% of purchases ring up at grocery.

Marketing Online. The image of online advertising benefited from some plastic surgery, as consumers charged ahead with beauty purchases. As advertisers acclimate to the potential of the medium, content becomes more interactive and sticky, building customer relationships and loyalty. Two great examples: the M&M Global Color Vote and the Altoid Acid Test campaigns.

The Hispanic Consumer. Say hello to the newly recognized dominant minority in the United States, the Latino population. Numbering almost 40 million strong, the Hispanic segment has spiced up popular culture, introducing a Latin accent to everything from menus to music. Marketers interested in merchandising to Hispanics will need to consider country of origin and language preference when determining the marketing mix.

Rx Health Trends. A growing aging population and escalating incidence of chronic conditions has fueled the more than three billion dollar annual prescription drug business. Consumers plagued with chronic ailments comprise a growing and high-potential market for retailers and manufacturers. With annual average shopping spends double their non-Rx buying counterparts, these high-value patrons are worth getting to know.

Private Label. Coming into their own as a market force, private label goods borrowed a page from consumer brands and now boast sophisticated packaging and visual presentations. Once the exclusive purview of staples like bread and cheese, private label has migrated to value-add categories including pre-cut fresh salad and refrigerated meal starters. Since quality ranks at parity vis-à-vis national brands while price lags, private label ran circles around branded items, growing twice as fast over the last five years.

Marketing to the Right Consumer. It’s no longer enough to market to consumers; the challenge becomes marketing to the most profitable consumer segments. Draw a bead on high-spending consumers to calibrate the marketing mix for maximum returns. Indexing a brand against the category can reveal helpful insights for shaping campaigns and distributing marketing dollars across channels. Making each dollar work smarter and harder can reduce the overall spend and turbocharge results.





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