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Market Research Report

Insights into Tomorrow's Nutraceutical Consumers

Published by Datamonitor Contact us : +1-860-674-8796
Published 2005/10 Content info  
Product code DC33332
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Description TOC

Table of Contents

CHAPTER 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

    • The hot topic
    • The future decoded
      • Lifestyle health problems are on the rise
      • Nutraceutical consumption is growing fast
      • Higher-income women and young people are the key audience
      • People do not believe manufacturers health claims
      • Consumers have an attitude-behavior gap concerning healthy eating
    • Action points

CHAPTER 2 THE FUTURE DECODED

  • Introduction TREND: Lifestyle health problems are on the rise
    • The proportion of Senior consumers is growing
      • Early Seniors need energy and preventative health measures
      • Late Seniors are more focused on disease maintenance
    • Lifestyle diseases are becoming more common
      • Ageing population drives bone health problems
      • Almost 25% of people suffer from heart health problems
      • Serious gut health problems are rare
  • TREND: Nutraceutical consumption is growing fast
    • US consumption growth is driven by energy and drinks
      • Dairy and soft drinks are fastest growing categories
      • Energy is top, and will remain top
    • European consumption is more evenly split
      • Confectionery growing to rival soft drinks
      • Gut health and heart health are the key need states
    • Swedes and Germans are Europes keenest nutraceutical consumers
  • TREND: Healthy eating is increasingly part of consumers lives
    • People increasingly understand the importance of a healthy diet
    • On-the-go healthy food and drink consumption is rising relentlessly
      • Healthy OTG food occasions are growing at 3% annually
      • Healthy OTG drinking occasions will rise to more than one a day
  • INSIGHT: Higher-income women and young people are the key audience
    • Seniors lag behind in consumption terms
    • American women are the biggest nutraceutical consumers
    • Nutraceutical products are not benefiting from masstige trends
      • Masstige is a real phenomenon
      • Masstige has genuine potential in food and drink markets
      • Functional and masstige have not yet been successfully combined
  • INSIGHT: People do not believe manufacturers health claims
    • People are increasingly skeptical about corporate claims
    • Food and drink claims are particularly distrusted
    • Consumers must understand products to trust their claims
    • People will believe realistic and focused claims
  • INSIGHT: Consumers have an attitude-behavior gap concerning healthy eating
    • Younger consumers show the biggest gap concerning general health
    • Men show the biggest gap when it comes to healthy eating
    • The picture is more mixed when health enters the fray
    • The attitude-behavior gap is declining
  • INSIGHT: People use nutraceuticals for short-term reasons
    • Weight loss, energy and clean teeth are most important
    • Long-term health concerns are becoming more important
    • Anti-ageing beauty benefits are an emerging niche
  • INSIGHT: Nutraceuticals must satisfy trends beyond just health
    • A good sensory experience is vital, but challenging to achieve
      • Functional ingredients restrict ability to meet consumer flavor preferences
      • Authenticity conflicts with added functionality
      • Striking a middle path
    • Time pressure drives healthy consumers to nutraceuticals
    • Some functional food and drinks have cool value Conclusions

CHAPTER 3 ACTION POINTS

  • Introduction Communicate effectively with consumers to gain their trust
    • Focus tightly on specific health benefits
      • Ensure that natural products also make specific health claims
    • Seek endorsements from reputable organizations
  • Build trust in your company as well as your products
    • Show a corporate commitment to health and wellness
      • Become a lifestyle information provider
      • Use interactive media to build brand relationships
    • Extend brands that consumers already trust
  • Create products that address the attitude-behavior gap
    • Use natural ingredients for taste and authenticity
    • Draw attention to products convenience and cool benefits
      • Improve convenience, especially among niche consumer groups
      • Promote nutraceuticals as cool through celebrity endorsement
  • Create masstige products for lower-income groups
    • Tap into demand for accessible premium products
    • Apply hi-lo consumption to functional food marketing
  • Meet older and younger consumers unmet needs
    • Target Seniors by highlighting product effectiveness
    • Help younger consumers to maximize their alertness
  • Stimulate demand for appearance-enhancing products
    • Capitalize on obesity concerns with weight-loss functional foods
    • Target reluctant consumers with beauty claims
  • Borrow successful innovations from abroad
    • Look to Japan for esoteric advances
    • Learn what consumers like from other Western markets

CHAPTER 4 APPENDIX

  • Supplementary data
    • Functional food & drink sales in France
    • Functional food & drink sales in Germany
    • Functional food & drink sales in Italy
    • Functional food & drink sales in the Netherlands
    • Functional food & drink sales in Spain
    • Functional food & drink sales in Sweden
    • Functional food & drink sales in the UK
    • Functional food & drink sales in the rest of Europe
  • Definitions
  • Research methodology
  • Future readings
  • Report writing team
  • How to contact experts in your industry

List of Tables

  • Table 1 : Population by age group (m), Europe and US, 1999-2009
  • Table 2 : Consumers suffering from bone health problems (m), Europe and US, 1999-2009
  • Table 3 : Consumers suffering from heart health problems (m), Europe and US, 1999-2009
  • Table 4 : Consumers suffering from gut health problems (m), Europe and US, 1999-2009
  • Table 5 : US functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by category, 1999-2009
  • Table 6 : US functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by claimed health benefit, 1999-2009
  • Table 7 : Europe functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by category, 1999-2009
  • Table 8 : Europe functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by claimed health benefit, 1999-2009
  • Table 9 : Europe functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by country, 1999-2009
  • Table 10 : Importance of improving physical health through diet, Europe and US, 2005
  • Table 11 : Healthy on-the-go eating occasions (per head and total), Europe & US, 2004-2009
  • Table 12 : European and US healthy on-the-go drinking occasions (per head and total), 2004-2009
  • Table 13 : Functional food and drink share of volume consumption by age group, Europe & US, 2004
  • Table 14 : Functional food and drink share of volume consumption by gender, Europe & US, 2004
  • Table 15 : Consumers trust of specific institutions (% respondents), 2003
  • Table 16 : Consumers trust of claims made by food and drink manufacturers (% respondents), Europe and US, 2005
  • Table 17 : Consumers likelihood of taking active steps to improve physical health as % of stated importance of improving physical health, Europe and US, 2005
  • Table 18 : Consumers likelihood of improving their diet as % of stated importance of improving physical health through diet, Europe and US, 2005
  • Table 19 : Consumers likelihood of choosing health over taste as % of stated importance of choosing health over taste, Europe and US, 2005
  • Table 20 : US consumers perceived interest in functional and fortified product types, 2005
  • Table 21 : Fastest-growing new nutraceutical ingredients in Japan, 2003-2005
  • Table 22 : France functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by category, 1999-2009
  • Table 23 : France functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by claimed health benefit, 1999-2009
  • Table 24 : Germany functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by category, 1999-2009
  • Table 25 : Germany functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by claimed health benefit, 1999-2009
  • Table 26 : Italy functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by category, 1999-2009
  • Table 27 : Italy functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by claimed health benefit, 1999-2009
  • Table 28 : Netherlands functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by category, 1999-2009
  • Table 29 : Netherlands functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by claimed health benefit, 1999-2009
  • Table 30 : Spain functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by category, 1999-2009
  • Table 31 : Spain functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by claimed health benefit, 1999-2009
  • Table 32 : Sweden functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by category, 1999-2009
  • Table 33 : Sweden functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by claimed health benefit, 1999-2009
  • Table 34 : UK functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by category, 1999-2009
  • Table 35 : UK functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by claimed health benefit, 1999-2009
  • Table 36 : Rest of Europe functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by category, 1999-2009
  • Table 37 : Rest of Europe functional food & drink market value (US$ m), by claimed health benefit, 1999-2009
  • Table 38 : Definitions of disease types covered

List of Figures

  • Figure 1 : Swedes and Germans are the biggest per-capita nutraceuticals consumers
  • Figure 2 : Low earners are almost as indulgent as high earners in terms of purchasing behavior
  • Figure 3 : There are strong gains to be made from targeting the needs of specific consumer groups, such as pregnant women
  • Figure 4 : Consumers health behaviors in the future will be decreasingly characterized by attitude/ behavior gaps
  • Figure 5 : US consumers well-being concerns focus on presentation issues
  • Figure 6 : Oral beauty products have a limited but rising market penetration across the leading developed economies
  • Figure 7 : Nutraceuticals that target specific beauty care concerns are starting to appear
  • Figure 8 : All-natural nutraceutical products have authenticity and often taste benefits over artificial additives
  • Figure 9 : Targeted functional products can be made from natural ingredients, but many natural products currently just make general health claims
  • Figure 10 : Successful healthy product lines can easily be extended into functional categories
  • Figure 11 : Some fortified categories can be marketed as strongly aspirational even at a relatively low price point
  • Figure 12 : Products that are closely targeted to Seniors taste and health requirements can help overcome their skepticism
  • Figure 13 : Highly specific alertness claims may win over younger consumers, but only if they can be substantiated
  • Figure 14 : Functional products can target weight-conscious consumers with active weight-loss benefits
  • Figure 15 : Many Japanese nutraceuticals could not be replicated in the US or Europe
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