Amid the current cost of living crisis, new research shows that supermarket private label loyalists (shoppers that buy them over 75% of the time) are now equal those of national brands loyalists in all key European markets.
According to a new report from IRI called
Private Labels: Hiding in Plain Sight, around 50% of shoppers switch between both with most now appearing in the mid-income bracket, but also with high-income cohorts in France and Germany. Private label shoppers are looking beyond price. Where they intend to spend more or less in 2022 and beyond is in line with wider category trends.
The study highlights that modern private label brands have evolved from their origins 40 years ago and developed into strategy-focused, differentiated, data-driven, and consumer-obsessed brands. Private labels are gaining ground in value sales, market penetration, consumer value and retail experience, while closing the gap on instantly recognisable national labels.
According to IRI, private labels now occupy a global category footprint of 16.5% of FMCG value sales. Driven by several growth factors, private labels are said to offer the same or better quality, affordability, healthier options, consumer acceptance, and portfolio stratification into Premium.
With the highest penetration in Spain (44%) and Germany (38%), private labels make up 35% of total FMCG sales in Europe, equating to €194bn. Germany records the highest absolute value (around €60bn), followed by the UK (€43bn).
The report notes that private labels have become a substitute in several growth categories for many national brands having undergone a significant transformation that focuses on quality, trust, environmental credentials, innovation, and delivery on claims.
In certain categories, such as beauty, vitamins and supplements, and alternative remedies for example, private labels often lead in innovation, which is then followed by national brands.
Ananda Roy, International Senior VP, Strategic Growth Insights at IRI, said: “Private labels may not be instantly recognisable brand names, but the fact is they don’t need to be. Retailers have re-imagined what consumers can expect from them in every supermarket aisle. They offer considerable value to shoppers who are not entirely price-driven by delivering quality, product performance and premium innovations which are comparable to the bigger, more established national brands.
“They compete for growth and margin on near equal terms and often present worthy competitors that are perhaps not fully acknowledged by the big brand owners. Private label brands are basically hiding in plain sight.”
Report highlights:
Pandemic chaos causes sales to slide, but positive outlook ahead – Consumer buying behaviour amid pandemic chaos provided a transient boost to national brands, causing private label value sales to fall. During 2018-2019, private labels experienced strong value sales growth (+8% and +11.3% respectively). However, this tapered off during the early stages of the Covid crisis as consumers opted for trusted national brands amid uncertainty – value sales dropped 1% in 2020 (value share 35.2%) and 1.4% in 2021 (value share 34.6%).
However, IRI believes there is a distinctly positive outlook ahead as this trend is likely to be dampened and possibly reversed as national brands raise prices to counter inflationary headwinds and private labels return to growth.
Strategic drivers of growth – Growth in private labels has accelerated due to established retailer equity and trust, transparent pricing and consistent availability across national store portfolios. Edible and non-edible private label products are often manufactured under white-label arrangements alongside national brands. Consumers are receiving the same high-quality products they would if buying a national brand in terms of product performance, and in the case of edibles, taste, quality, and healthy options often match those of rival national brands.
Occasionally, if things do go wrong, consumers also receive the exact same consumer protections (returns, refunds and goodwill gestures) from retailers as they would from national brands. This has helped narrow the value and equity gap with national brands significantly.
Price wars looming – Small and mid-sized manufacturers are likely to lose consumers, volume and value to large manufacturers and private labels who are expected to mitigate inflation and maintain availability, despite ingredient shortages and supply-side disruptions. This creates the real possibility of price wars in the remaining half of 2022 with private labels having the potential to capitalise on inflationary trends.
Innovation is the new battleground – Private labels are often leading innovation in high-margin categories, such as Bakery, Beverages, Beauty, Vitamins and Supplements and over the counter healthcare remedies. IRI’s research shows that consumers found shopping in-store for private labels easier owing to clean labelling and clear ingredients. This made the experience more enjoyable and less confusing than having to shop amongst the confusing array and proliferation of packs, offers and formats among national brands. Shoppers say the gap between private label and national brands is narrower still when shopping online due to the platforms and mechanics being identical.
IRI expects new innovations to make private labels even more competitive as they take advantage of quick commerce, shoppable recipes, meal kits and leveraging retail media, all of which offer new routes-to-market, attraction of higher-income shoppers, and lower cost-of-sales.
Beyond retailers, Quick Commerce players are now creating their own private labels as seen recently in the UK by the launch of Jiffy’s bakery range.
Non-edibles lead recovery – Growth has been led by Italy (+3.4%) and Spain (+1%) and lagged in France and the Netherlands (-4%). However, there is evidence of a soft recovery, particularly in non-edibles, which is being driven by the easing of Covid restrictions. This has risen by 1.2% in value sales over the last five weeks.
Actions for manufacturers and retailers
As private label enters 2022 with a competitive tailwind, IRI has outlined several strategic opportunities and actions:
- Induce shoppers by trial and conversion of the 50% that regularly switch between private label and national brands.
- Further mining of loyalty data to enrich shopper segmentation and tracking.
- Invest more in retailer media to personalise promotions, experiences and track effectiveness.
- Promote private labels as ‘better value’ based on quality, trust, innovation and sustainability credentials.
- Make shopping for private labels quick, easy and fun by ensuring transparent pricing and clean labelling that helps clarify range, endorsements, innovative packaging and merchandising.
- Disrupt product experience and route-to-market which are less easily substituted.
- Partner with quick commerce leaders to create higher margins, bypass brands and distributors and create opportunities to offer a wider range of food and non-food products.
IRI’s ‘Private Labels: Hiding in Plain Sight’ report can be downloaded
here.NamNews Implications:
- If retailers obey the normal brand ground rules…
- …especially ‘always more than it says on the tin’…
- …and focus on repeat sales via loyals…
- …then own label sales and penetration will continue to increase.
- Largely at the expense of less focused brands?
- This IRI report is a worthwhile read…