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Convenience Foods in the U.S., Volume 1: Fresh Prepared Deli and Packaged Foods
Market Report, December 2007, 2400  €


Description

Following in the footsteps of Whole Foods, food retailers industry-wide have awakened to the fact that—when it comes to offering fresh prepared meals that are both convenient and appealing—they are often in a better position than restaurants to meet the increasingly specific needs of busy Americans.
Accordingly, food retailers are emphasizing highly customized prepared foods for time-pressed shoppers to eat in or take out, and counting on gains in perimeter departments to help offset sluggish center-store sales.
A key thrust is offering consumers healthier eating choices, given the juggling act most Americans are doing with food nutrition and convenience.
For their part, marketers of packaged fresh convenience foods—including Fresh Express (Chiquita), Kraft, ConAgra, General Mills and Dole—are launching products that invite consumers to customize their own quick meals by combining pre-packaged and pre-cooked components.
This report examines the U.S.
market for fresh prepared convenience foods sold refrigerated or hot to consumers at retail, through outlets including supermarkets, mass-merchandiser supercenters, warehouse clubs, convenience stores and vending.
These products include prepared meals, entrees and side dishes that require no or little preparation beyond, for example, heating up or adding salad dressing.
(Frozen convenience foods are covered in the companion volume to this report: Convenience Foods in the U.S., Volume 2: Frozen Prepared Meals, Entrees, Appetizers and Snacks.) Packaged Facts divides the market into two classifications: Deli foods, including self-service and full-service deli items prepared in-store by food retailers for take-out or on-site consumption, such as rotisserie meats and other entrees, salads, appetizers, sandwiches, fruit and vegetable trays, side dishes, pizza and soup.Packaged foods, including fresh refrigerated prepared foods that arrive at the store packaged and ready to be sold, often under leading national or regional brands, across ten categories: fresh-cut salad, dinners/entrees, lunch kits, prepared salad/fruit/coleslaw, side dishes, appetizers/snack rolls, hand-held non-breakfast entrees, fresh soup, pizza/pizza kits and breakfast entrees.For each classification, the report provides extensive retail sales breakouts along with an examination of consumer trends, the competitive situation and future trends, such as the shift back toward smaller stores and hybridized food retailers/restaurants.
It details marketers and brand shares across all ten packaged categories, and analyzes consumer attitudes toward nutrition and time constraints on a channel by channel basis.
Companies profiled include major retailers emphasizing fresh prepared foods including Safeway, Whole Foods, online grocer FreshDirect LLC, and Tesco—whose new Fresh & Easy convenience store format is predicted to cause “seismic shifts” in this market—and marketers of fresh packaged foods Kraft Foods and Chiquita Brands International.


Sommaire
 
Chapter 1: Executive Summary

Introduction
Market Definition: Fresh Prepared Convenience Foods
Exclusions
Report Methodology


Market Trends
Retail Sales Top $20 Billion in 2007
Table 1-1: Total U.S. Retail Sales of Fresh Convenience Foods, 2003-2012 (in millions of dollars)
Deli Foods Account for Over Half of Market
Figure 1-1: Share of U.S. Retail Sales of Fresh Convenience Foods by Type, 2003 vs. 2007 (percent)
Entrees Top Prepared Deli Foods Chart
Packaged Sales Slip Despite Gains in Some Categories
Food Retailers Realigning Around Fresh Prepared Foods
Consumers Balancing Convenience and Health
Competition from Restaurants, Fast Food and Take-Out


Retailing Trends
Competitive Overview
Food Retailers Challenging Restaurants Head-On
Range of Retailer-Prepared Foods Rapidly Proliferating
Convenience Focus Spurs Shift to Smaller Stores
Demographic and Regional Market Targeting
Warehouse Clubs Ramping Up in Prepared Foods
Drugstores: Underdeveloped in Fresh Foods But Likely to Expand
C-Stores Also Getting Fresh
Online Grocery Retailers Staging a Comeback


Trends in Packaged Fresh Convenience Foods
Hundreds of Marketers
Major Consumer Packaged Goods Marketers
Produce Growers/Distributors and Meat Processors
Key Niche Marketers
Deli Prepared Foods Pose Growing Competitive Threat
Advertising Trends
Number of Entries Steady Across Most Categories
Top Marketing Claims: Convenience, Fresh, Upscale and Natural
Customize It!
Adding Ethnic Flare
Adding Gourmet Flare
Innovative Packaging
Chapter 2: Market Trends


Introduction
Market Definition: Fresh Prepared Convenience Foods
Exclusions


Market Size and Growth
Retail Sales Top $20 Billion in 2007
Table 2-1: Total U.S. Retail Sales of Fresh Convenience Foods, 2003-2007 (in millions of dollars)
Deli Foods Account for Over Half of Market
Figure 2-1: Share of U.S. Retail Sales of Fresh Convenience Foods by Type, 2003 vs. 2007 (percent)
Figure 2-2: Compound Annual Growth Rates in U.S. Retail Sales of Fresh Convenience Foods: By Type and Overall, 2003-2007 (percent)
Entrees Top Prepared Deli Foods Chart
Figure 2-3: Prepared Deli Foods: Share of Total U.S. Retail Sales by Type, 2006 (percent)
Self-Service Deli Foods: Fruit, Sandwiches, Pasta and Entrees Make Healthy Gains
Entrees and Sandwiches Account for Three-Fifths of Sales
Table 2-2: Supermarket Sales of Self-Service Deli Prepared Foods: By Category, 2002-2006 (in millions of dollars)
Table 2-3: Share of Supermarket Self-Service Deli Prepared Food Sales: By Category, 2002-2006 (percent)
Packaged Sales Slip Despite Gains in Some Categories
Table 2-4: IRI-Tracked Sales of Packaged Fresh Refrigerated Convenience Foods, 2003-2007 (in millions of dollars)
Table 2-5: IRI-Tracked Sales of Packaged Fresh Refrigerated Convenience Foods: By Category, 2006 vs. 2007 (in millions of dollars)
Table 2-6: IRI-Tracked Sales of Packaged Fresh Refrigerated Convenience Food: By Category, 2002-2006 (in millions of dollars)
Figure 2-4: Share of IRI-Tracked Sales of Packaged Fresh Refrigerated Convenience Foods: By Category, 2006 vs. 2007
Supermarkets the Primary Retail Channel
Figure 2-5: Share of U.S. Retail Sales of Fresh Convenience Foods by Channel, 2007 (percent)


Market Trends
Food Retailers Realigning Around Fresh Prepared Foods
Figure 2-6: Supermarket Shopper Interest in Ready-to-Eat Meal Solutions, 2007 (percent)
Growth of In-Store Foodservice
Consumers Balancing Convenience and Health
Figure 2-7: Consumer Attitudes About Healthy Foods and Time Constraints, 2007 (percent of U.S. adults)
Blurring Between Meals and Snacks
Consumer Demand for Fresh Foods at an All-Time High
What Is Fresh?
Freshness + Convenience = Affluent Appeal
Revised Food Pyramid Favors Fresh Foods
The Global Palate
Food Safety in the Spotlight
Packaged Goods Manufacturers Fighting Back with Customizable Fare
Competition from Restaurants, Fast Food and Take-Out
Fast Food Meets Consumers’ Convenience Food Needs
Restaurant Take-Out: All Systems Go


Looking Ahead
Retailer-Prepared Deli Foods: Healthy Gains at Expense of Other Convenience Food Options
Figure 2-8: Factors That Would Make Customers More Likely to Purchase from Supermarket Delis/Hot Food Stations, 2006
Better Deli Packaging
American Consumers: Busier and Busier
Growing Health Awareness, Ongoing Trends
Wealthy, Healthy Gourmets and the Obese Poor
Meals Blurring, Snacks Rising
Tesco’s U.S. Entry Heralds Seismic Market Shifts
Channel Blurring
Natural and Organic Foods Going Mainstream
Growth of the Green
Technological Advances
The Return of the Automat?
Projected Market Growth: Retail Sales to Top Sales to Top $28 Billion by 2012
Table 2-7: Projected U.S. Retail Sales of Fresh Convenience Foods, 2007-2012 (in millions of dollars)
Chapter 3: Retailing Trends


Competitive Overview
Food Retailers Challenging Restaurants Head-On
Range of Retailer-Prepared Foods Rapidly Proliferating
Convenience Focus Spurs Shift to Smaller Stores
Demographic and Regional Market Targeting
Hispanic Market Targeting
Warehouse Clubs Ramping Up in Prepared Foods
Drugstores: Underdeveloped in Fresh Foods But Likely to Expand


Supermarkets and Supercenters
Supermarkets Leading Food Retailers’ Push into Fresh Prepared Foods
Fresh Format and Lifestyle Stores
Table 3-1: Percentage of Traditional Supermarkets Offering Meal Solutions: By Type, 2007 (percent)
Emphasizing Health
Eating On-Site
Supermarket Take-Out Poised to Explode
Emphasizing Dinner and Hot Foods
New Product Trends
Going Ethnic
Natural Foods Retailers Moving Mainstream
Supercenters Freshening Up


Company Profile: Publix Super Markets, Inc.
Corporate Background
Driving Through, Eating In
Expanding on Deli
Customizing the Future


Company Profile: Safeway, Inc.
Corporate Background
The Lifestyle Format
A New Sit-Down Experience: Citrine


Company Profile: Whole Foods Market, Inc.
Corporate Background
Company Acquires Wild Oats
A Natural Leader
The Whole Foods “Experience”
Bigger and Bigger, and Smaller
Adrift Toward the Mainstream?


Convenience Stores
C-Stores Also Getting Fresh
Emerging C-Store Competition


Company Profile: 7-Eleven, Inc.
Corporate Overview
Focusing on Fresh
Company Acquires White Hen Pantry


Company Profile: Tesco PLC
Corporate Overview
U.S. Expansion
Shopping Fresh, the Tesco Way
Filling the Ready-to-Eat Gap
Tesco’s Market Entry “A Wakeup Call”


Online Grocery Retailers
Staging a Comeback
Amazon.Com Launches Grocery Delivery Service
Safeway and Other “Bricks-and-Clicks” Retailers


Company Profile: FreshDirect LLC
Corporate Overview
Focus on Fresh
Vertical Expansion


Vending
Sales Sluggish Despite Inherent Convenience Appeal
Vending Nutrition
School and Corporate Vending Leading Healthy Push
Get & Go Express


Consumer Attitudes by Retail Channel
Methodology
Most Americans, Though Time-Pressed, Are Trying to Eat Healthier
Figure 3-1: Consumer Attitudes About Healthy Foods and Time Constraints, 2007 (percent of U.S. adults)
Supermarket Shoppers Middle of the Road in Food Health, Convenience Trends
Natural Food Store, Warehouse Club Shoppers Embracing Healthy Foods
Wal-Mart Clientele into Fast Food
Convenience Store Shoppers in a Rush
Drugstores and Dollar Stores at the Norm
Table 3-2a: Percent of Consumers by Retail Channel Who Agree with Selected Statements on Healthy Eating and Time Constraints, 2007 (U.S. adults)
Table 3-2b: Percent of Consumers by Retail Channel Who Agree with Selected Statements on Healthy Eating and Time Constraints, 2007 (U.S. adults)
Table 3-2c: Percent of Consumers by Retail Channel Who Agree with Selected Statements on Healthy Eating and Time Constraints, 2007 (U.S. adults)
Table 3-3: Shopper Indices by Retail Channel for Agreement with Statement: Try to Eat Healthier Foods These Days, 2007 (U.S. adults)
Table 3-4: Shopper Indices by Retail Channel for Agreement with Statement: Like Trend Toward Healthier Fast Food, 2007 (U.S. adults)
Table 3-5: Shopper Indices by Retail Channel for Agreement with Statement: Don’t Have Time to Prepare/Eat Healthy Meals, 2007 (U.S. adults)
Table 3-6: Shopper Indices by Retail Channel for Agreement with Statement: Fast Food Fits My Busy Lifestyle, 2007 (U.S. adults)
Table 3-7: Shopper Indices by Retail Channel for Agreement with Statement: Rarely Sit Down to a Meal Together at Home, 2007 (U.S. adults)
Table 3-8: Shopper Indices by Retail Channel for Agreement with Statement: Often Eat Store-Made, Pre-Cooked Meals, 2007 (U.S. adults)
Chapter 4: Trends in Packaged Fresh Convenience Foods


Competitive Overview
Market Definition
Hundreds of Marketers
Major Consumer Packaged Goods Marketers
Produce Growers/Distributors and Meat Processors
Key Niche Marketers
Mergers and Acquisitions
Deli Prepared Foods Pose Growing Competitive Threat
Fresh Convenience Foods Add Value and Brand Cachet to Commodity Products
Tapping Non-Supermarket Channels
Advertising Trends
Table 4-1: Selected U.S. Marketers of Packaged Fresh Convenience Foods


Marketer and Brand Shares
Methodology
Fresh Express Gains Amidst Fresh-Cut Salad Losses
Hormel Leads in Refrigerated Dinner Entrees
Oscar Mayer Lunchables Dominate Refrigerated Lunch Kits Business
Refrigerated Salad/Fruit/Coleslaw Primarily Private Label
Unilever, Northern Star Lead Refrigerated Side Dishes
Asian Favorites Rule in Refrigerated Appetizers/Snack Rolls
Private Label Almost Half of Refrigerated Hand-Held Entrees
Fresh Soup Also a Private-Label Affair
ConAgra’s Gilardi Is Top Brand of Refrigerated Pizza
Bob Evans Farms Leads in Refrigerated Breakfast Entrees
Table 4-2: Top Marketers of Fresh-Cut Salad by IRI-Tracked Sales and Shares, 2006-2007 (in millions of dollars)
Table 4-3: Top Marketers of Refrigerated Dinner Entrees by IRI-Tracked Sales and Shares, 2006-2007 (in millions of dollars)
Table 4-4: Top Marketers of Refrigerated Lunch Kits by IRI-Tracked Sales and Shares, 2006-2007 (in millions of dollars)
Table 4-5: Top Marketers of Refrigerated Salad/Fruit/Coleslaw by IRI-Tracked Sales and Shares, 2006-2007 (in millions of dollars)
Table 4-6: Top Marketers of Refrigerated Side Dishes by IRI-Tracked Sales and Shares, 2006-2007 (in millions of dollars)
Table 4-7: Top Marketers of Refrigerated Appetizers/Snacks by IRI-Tracked Sales and Shares, 2006-2007 (in millions of dollars)
Table 4-8: Top Marketers of Refrigerated Hand-Held Non-Breakfast Entrees by IRI-Tracked Sales and Shares, 2006-2007 (in millions of dollars)
Table 4-9: Top Marketers of Refrigerated Fresh Soup by IRI-Tracked Sales and Shares, 2006-2007 (in millions of dollars)
Table 4-10: Top Marketers of Refrigerated Pizza by IRI-Tracked Sales and Shares, 2006-2007 (in millions of dollars)
Table 4-11: Top Marketers of Refrigerated Breakfast Entrees by IRI-Tracked Sales and Shares, 2006-2007 (in millions of dollars)


New Product Trends
Number of Entries Steady Across Most Categories
Table 4-12: Number of Fresh Packaged Convenience Food Product Reports, 2005-2007
Table 4-13: Number of Fresh Packaged Convenience Food Product SKUs, 2005-2007
Top Marketing Claims: Convenience, Fresh, Upscale and Natural
Table 4-14: Number of Fresh Packaged Convenience Food Introductions by Package Tag/Claim, 2005-2007
Stagnito Survey of Manufacturers Documents Key Trends in Prepared Foods
Customize It!
Adding Ethnic Flare
Figure 4-1: Trended Number of Foreign Food Enthusiasts, 2005-2007 (in millions)
Adding Gourmet Flare
Figure 4-2: Trended Number of U.S. Gourmet Food Enthusiasts, 2005-2007 (in millions of U.S. adults)
Salad Category Expanding with New Varieties, Kits
Ready-to-Cook Vegetables Use Advanced Packaging Technologies
Produce Getting More Exotic
Pre-Cut Fruit in Personal and Party Sizes
Adding Value to Meat and Poultry
Prepared Dinners and Entrees See New Ethnic Entries
Lunch Kits Go Natural
Refrigerated Sushi Is Hot
Innovative Packaging
Package Labels and Shelf Tags Facilitate Healthy Choices


Trend Profile: Chiquita Brands International
Corporate Overview
Not Just Bananas
Expanding in Fresh-Cut Fruits
Growing Fresh Express


Trend Profile: Kraft Foods
Corporate Overview
Fresh Salads a Fresh Focus
Oscar Mayer Extending Lunch Kit Equity to Adults
Appendix: Addresses of Selected Marketers and Retailers

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