BRIANWOOLF.COM
 
  Welcome     Marketing & Loyalty     Speaking & Connecting     Brian's View     Books by Brian     Marketing Studies     Contact Us  
 
 

Have you seen The Customer-Focused Marketing Playbook?

This comprehensive and practical guide to the latest ideas in customer-focused marketing hands you over 200 packed pages of strategy, best practices, do's and don'ts, practical know-how, facts and figures, and ideas to optimise your marketing strategy, boost sales, market share, increase ROI and profit.

Get it on Amazon (Kindle/Print)
 

Consumer holiday spending set to increase for 2018

Social media will play a big role in holiday shopping

US consumers say they expect to spend more money on holiday shopping in 2018 than in 2017, with millennials being most likely to be the biggest spenders, according to results of the '12th Annual Holiday Shopping Survey' from Accenture.

The online survey of 1,500 U.S. consumers found that Americans will spend $658 on holiday shopping this year, on average, compared with $632 in the 2017 survey. Nine in 10 respondents said they plan to spend as much or more than they did last year - 53% and 36%, respectively - with only 11% planning to spend less. Older millennials will spend $779, on average, while nearly four times as many younger millennials compared to baby boomers (49% versus 13%) said they plan to spend more this holiday season.

The research also found that retailers' inclusion and diversity practices - with regards to age, gender, ethnicity and disability etc. - are playing a role in millennial shoppers' purchasing decisions.

The findings suggest that if a retailer is not authentically committed to prioritising inclusion and diversity, millennials are likely to take their money to a competitor who is inclusive:

"Our research suggests that the millennial generation has high expectations when it comes to retailers' commitment to inclusion and diversity, and those values are influencing their decision-making in choosing one brand over another," said Jill Standish, senior managing director and head of Accenture's Retail practice. "National and multinational retailers serve diverse customer bases, so they need to position the brand accordingly - its messaging as well as its product selection. That will require not just more local decision-making, but also assistance from analytics tools that enable retailers to build a granular picture of their customers."

Among the survey's other key findings:

"Social media continues to be a real disruptor in targeting today's consumers, who are spending a great deal of time in these channels and naturally want to be able to purchase directly, through the click of a button," Standish said. "Now, more than ever, it's imperative for retailers to further rethink and redesign their digital shopping capabilities and methods so they can meet customers on their terms."

Food quality matters
This year for the first time, Accenture's survey included questions related to food shopping for the holidays. A key finding was that quality matters, and shoppers are willing to pay more for it. Six in seven shoppers (86%) cited quality as "important" or "very important." In addition, consumers are also likely to "trade up" when shopping for food this holiday season, with more than half (54%) likely to shop from a high-quality retailer and nearly as many (48%) likely to buy premium brands instead of the market's own label.

When asked to select the factors that influence their purchases when shopping for groceries during the holidays, respondents most often cited "trust of the grocery provider and its products and services" - with 82% of respondents ranking it as one of the top three factors - followed closely by "offers best range of options so you can buy majority of items in one place" (78%). More than two-thirds (69%) of consumers cited convenience/location of the physical store as the key factor that would inspire them to purchase from a grocery provider they don't normally go to.

Home for the holidays?
The theme of "home for the holidays" seems to ring true, with more than one-third (35%) of survey respondents planning to host more holiday gatherings this year than last year. Millennials are leading the holiday hosting trend, with younger millennials (ages 21-27) 50% more likely than baby boomers to say they plan to host a Christmas meal or party (60% versus 40%) and to host a Thanksgiving meal (62% versus 41%) - and more than four times as likely as baby boomers to say they're planning to host more holiday meals this year than last year.

This might explain why they're also more likely to trade up on the quality of the food brands they buy and the grocers from which they buy, as well as why they're more likely than other age groups to purchase from a grocer they normally don't shop at if that provider offers access to food at different stages of preparation (from raw ingredients to chopped-and-diced ingredients to ready-to-eat products).

"Holiday meals have historically been how we show we care for our loved ones," said Standish. "It's positive to see millennials, with their significant purchasing power, taking a greater interest in hosting these important holiday meals at home. And what an opportunity for grocery retailers to meet this generation of shoppers. If done right, it might be the start of a relationship that will last all year and beyond."


Sources: Accenture /
The Marketing Factbook.
Copyright © 2018 - 2025 The Marketing Factbook.

    Categorised as:

  • Customer Experience
  • Customer Loyalty
  • Knowing The Customer
  • Marketing Know-How
  • Marketing Technology

Have you seen The Customer-Focused Marketing Playbook?

This comprehensive and practical guide to the latest ideas in customer-focused marketing hands you over 200 packed pages of strategy, best practices, do's and don'ts, practical know-how, facts and figures, and ideas to optimise your marketing strategy, boost sales, market share, increase ROI and profit.

Learn the insider's tricks and techniques to turn every customers into a 'super spreader' for your brand. It's better than free advertising. Once you start this ball rolling, your brand can grow rapidly through word-of-mouth, advocacy, influencers, and customer loyalty. Super-charge your company's marketing strategy, build up your market share, and make more sales through repeat business and customer loyalty.

Find out what works - and what doesn't - and who's succeeded, and how they did it. See how the world's top brands keep their competitive edge against all odds.

The Customer-Focused Marketing Playbook walks you step-by-step through the techniques, metrics, reporting, analysis, marketing models, technologies, tools and innovations for successful marketing strategies - both traditional and emerging - with expert guidance from thought leaders in every major market. Find out the best ways to gather, analyse, and act on customer data to increase profitability, build your brand, empower your customers, beat the competition, reduce churn, and increase customer profitability. This is a marketing book you simply can't afford to be without.

This book aims to hand you all the facts, figures and research data you need for the best decisions for a more profitable, more engaging marketing strategy. It also highlights all the facts, forecasts and trends identified by our experts from the global Marketing Factbook's vast database of market data, news, studies, research and articles, and presents you with an invaluable library of ideas and practical support you can call upon at will.

With The Customer-Focused Marketing Playbook at your side, you'll have instant access to a true goldmine of easily adaptable and up-to-date strategies, walk-throughs, trends, research and market data, plus all the supporting arguments you need to build a solid, profitable marketing strategy.

Get it on Amazon (Kindle/Print)
 
Copyright © 2001-2025 Peter J. Clark