CHICAGO, Dec. 10, 2009 - More than 90 percent of surveyed shoppers
cite brand familiarity as the most important influencer when purchasing
beauty products, far surpassing the 73 percent consumer packaged goods
(CPG) benchmark, according to new research from the "Beauty Shopper
Report," released today by Information Resources, Inc. (IRI). Price,
while important for many decisions, was a distant second. Brand
preference, in addition to a continued focus on affordability, remains
paramount and underscores the rapidly evolving and unique nature of
shopper attitudes and behaviors shaping the $11.5 billion U.S. beauty
market.
"The beauty industry is characterized by significantly different
dynamics than other CPG market sectors, creating a major opportunity
for beauty marketers and retailers that can quickly and effectively
leverage the nuances," said John Deputato, senior vice president,
Client Solutions, IRI. "Even within the hair care, skin care and
cosmetic segments of the industry, shoppers often exhibit behaviors
unique to each of those categories. Shopper behavior diverges a great
deal among these segments particularly in times of changing economic
climates, such as today's emergence from the recession, where some
consumers are exhibiting a new confidence, while others are keeping
their frugal practices in place."
"The IRI Beauty Shopper Report empowers us to understand and adjust to
the needs of our core shoppers, who we want to retain and leverage to
drive growth across our L'Oreal beauty portfolio of brands," said Mark
Anton, vice president, Consumer and Market Intelligence, L'Oreal
Consumer Products Division. "These insights have proven to be valuable
and actionable, given our ongoing efforts to incorporate 'shopper
behavior' into our key go-to-market strategies."
The IRI research focuses on the beauty market overall and also includes
an in-depth review of "heavy" beauty shoppers-also dubbed "power"
shoppers-who represent just 11 percent of households, but account for
40 percent of dollar sales.
The Changing Face of Today's Beauty Market
IRI's report reveals that, as with many markets, the recession has
caused significant shifts. Beauty dollar sales for the 12-month period
ending September 2009 were flat versus 2008, as manufacturer price
actions were not offset by increased unit sales. As dollar sales at
department stores sagged more than 4 percent in 2009, value retailers,
such as supercenters and mass outlets, attracted increased consumer
interest.
Shoppers also continued to employ multiple trade-offs to save money,
including moving to lower-priced brands and switching retail outlets,
buying products in bulk or smaller sizes of their favorite products,
attempting to make products last longer, as well as sharing products in
the home or purchasing multi-use products.
Further, in-home versus in-store purchase decisions vary widely
depending on the beauty product and can be influenced by price or
feeling of "need to have" or "have to have." While shoppers believe
there is a quality difference among channels, with spas/salons,
department stores and specialty stores ranked as having higher quality,
shoppers are flocking to value outlets anyway.
The report also takes a deep dive into several critical shopper beliefs
and behaviors. For instance, nearly three-quarters of surveyed shoppers
believe leading a healthy lifestyle makes a person more beautiful,
while just half are satisfied with their current appearance. These
beliefs create synergy opportunities between better-for-you food,
over-the-counter products and beauty makers. Further, half of shoppers
count proof of effectiveness in clinical trials as important in the
products they use, creating the opportunity for enhanced efficacy-based
marketing.
Power Beauty Shoppers Continue to Rule
Power beauty shoppers, defined by IRI as purchasing $185 or more in
beauty products per year, remain a powerful force and are more likely
than beauty shoppers overall to purchase products as part of a skin or
hair treatment system, purchase products that are proven effective in
clinical trials and try new products. Among power beauty shoppers'
attitudes about lifestyle, these consumers are most likely to try to
look their best every day. Further, they are more likely to shop for
multi-function products, buy in bulk and buy smaller sizes of favorite
beauty products, while less inclined to purchase private brands.
"Power beauty shoppers influence the beauty market far beyond their
numbers," added IRI Consulting & Innovation Partner Timothy
Ressmeyer, Ph.D. "Understanding these shoppers can help manufacturers
and retailers drive sales within these categories. Marketers and
retailers alike who can deeply understand and connect with this highly
sophisticated and valuable segment of the beauty market can win and win
big, despite challenging economic times."
About the Report
"The 2009 Beauty Shopper Report" is a culmination of research that
includes an exclusive IRI AttitudeLink survey of shoppers, proprietary
IRI InfoScan and Consumer Network data and the Beauty Cross Channel
Monitor, a joint venture between IRI and NPD. For detailed information
about the report's availability and pricing, contact Timothy Ressmeyer
at timothy.ressmeyer@infores.com
About IRI
IRI is the world's leading provider of consumer, shopper, and retail
market intelligence and insights supporting 95 percent of the FORTUNE
Global 500 consumer packaged goods (CPG), retail and healthcare
companies. Only IRI offers the unique combination of integrated market
information, automated and predictive analytics, innovative enabling
technologies, and domain expertise. With IRI, leading retailers and
manufacturers are able to quickly discover breakthrough insights
driving smarter decisions and actions across the enterprise for
breakthrough results. Companies around the world depend on IRI for
improved productivity, stronger brands, and dramatic revenue growth.
For more information, visit http://us.infores.com.
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IRI CONTACTS:
John McIndoe
E-mail: john.mcindoe@infores.com
Phone: (312) 474-3862
Fax: (312) 726-1091
Shelley Hughes
E-mail: shelley.hughes@infores.com
Phone: (312) 474-3675
Fax: (312) 726-1091