The stereotypical perception of
Soft Drinks consumers is that they have a younger profile; however, Older
Consumers’ volume share of global consumption is almost 2 percentage points
higher than their share of the population, which shows that Older Consumers are
less drawn to Alcoholic Drinks and Hot Drinks than imagined.
“Value for money” is important to
Older Consumers, while “quality” ranks lower among Older Consumers than
overall, which makes Older Consumers the most important drinkers of private
label products.
Although often categorized together, consumers in each of
the BRIC markets have very different tastes and characteristics; low per capita
beverage consumption is probably the main factor that they have in common. For
instance, Brazil is the most developed beverage market within BRIC and has
consumer consumption patterns more closely aligned to the Non-BRIC region than
anywhere else.
Defying the stereotype, the survey found that Older
Consumers, those aged 55 and over, punch above their weight in Soft Drinks
markets. Shrewd marketers can take advantage of this by assessing how they can
better exploit the product vacuum for Older Consumers.
Whereas the Hot Drinks consumption of men and women is very
similar, in the overall Soft Drinks market there is a small swing in favor of
men. This can be accredited to China, where Chinese women make up 48% of the
survey and just 44% of the consumption. If China is discounted, the balance
swings in favor of female consumption.
Marketers need to address evolving lifestyles as consumers
age. This is not just with regard to product but also to packaging and
marketing. In the UK for instance, the expansion of access to higher education
and social trends delays the age at which people tend to settle down and start
families, which has created an important consumer group within the Early Young
Adults, and even Older Young Adults, age group whose lifestyles more closely
resemble a “youth” market than those of Early Young Adults twenty or thirty
years ago.
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