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Market Research Report
The U.S. Market for Pet Supplies and Pet Care Products, 6th Edition
| Published by |
Packaged Facts |
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| Published |
2005/08 |
Content info |
352 pages |
| Product code |
PF31711 |
| Price |
From US $ 2250  |
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PDF by E-Mail Approx. 1-2 business days
Hard Copy/CD-ROM Approx. 3-4 business days
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Chapter 1: Executive Summary
- Scope and Methodology
- Scope of Report
- Report Methodology
- Pet Supplies 2002: Comparison and Review
- The Market
- Overall Retail Sales at $8.5 Billion in 2004
- IRI-Tracked Sales Static at $1.5 Billion in 2004
- Table 1-1: Share of IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Supplies by Product Category, 2000 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Independent Pet Stores: Share of Sales by Animal Type
- Sales by Retail Channel: PETsMART and PETCO Take the Helm
- Competitive Overview
- A Cast of Thousands
- Nestlé Purina Up Front
- Figure 1-1: Top Marketers of Pet Supplies by Share of IRI-Tracked Sales, 2004 (percent)
- Natural Product Specialists
- Industry Globalization
- Marketing and New Product Trends
- Cross-Category Expansion
- Channel-Specific Marketing
- Human Product Mega-Marketers
- Licensing: Fun Names, Serious Implications
- Tapping into Alternative Channels
- National Consumer Advertising Expenditures
- Figure 1-2: Share of Consumer Advertising Expenditures on Pet Supplies by Company Type, 2003 vs. 2004 (percent)
- New Product Surge Continues
- Common Denominators in New Product Development
- Retail Trends
- The Consumer
- Over 50 Million Households Own Dogs or Cats
- Jump in Multiple-Dog Households
- Female Skew for Cat Ownership
- Jurys Out on Aging Boomers
- Whites Are 20% More Likely to Own Both Dogs and Cats
- Looking Ahead
Chapter 2: The Market
- Introduction
- Market Definition
- Exclusions
- Four IRI-Tracked Product Categories
- Trade Associations and Shows
- Regulatory Agencies and Trends
- Pet Animal Welfare Statute of 2005
- Market Size and Growth
- Overall Retail Sales at $8.5 Billion in 2004
- Table 2-1: U.S. Retail Sales of Pet Supplies, 2000-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- IRI-Tracked Sales Static at $1.5 Billion in 2004
- Table 2-2: IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Supplies, 2000-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 2-3: Dollar Change in IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Supplies by Category, 2000-2004
- IRI-Tracked Sales of Cat Litter Stalled at $725 Million
- Table 2-4: IRI-Tracked Sales of Cat Litter, 2000-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Other Dog/Cat Supply Sales at $410 Million
- Table 2-5: IRI-Tracked Sales of Other Dog/Cat Supplies, 2000-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Dog Chews at $282 Million
- Table 2-6: IRI-Tracked Sales of Dog Chews, 2000-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Non-Dog/Cat Supplies at $47 Million
- Table 2-7: IRI-Tracked Sales of Non-Dog/Cat Supplies, 2000-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Market Composition
- Mass-Market Retailers: Share of Sales by Product Type
- Table 2-8: Share of IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Supplies by Product Category, 2000 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Independent Pet Stores: Share of Sales by Animal Type
- Table 2-9: Share of Independent Pet Store Pet Supply Sales by Animal Type, 2004 (percent)
- Dog Products: Share of Sales by Category
- Table 2-10: Share of Independent Pet Store Sales of Dog Products by Category, 2003 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Fish Products: Share of Sales by Product Category
- Table 2-11: Share of Independent Pet Store Sales of Fish Products by Category, 2003 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Bird Products: Share of Sales by Product Category
- Table 2-12: Share of Independent Pet Store Sales of Bird Products by Category, 2003 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Cat Products: Share of Sales by Product Category
- Table 2-13: Share of Independent Pet Store Sales of Cat Products by Category, 2003 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Small Mammal Products: Share of Sales by Product Category
- Herptile Products: Share of Sales by Product Category
- Non-Food Supplies Account for 29% of Natural Product Sales
- Figure 2-1: Share of U.S. Retail Sales of Natural Pet Products by Category: 2000, 2004, 2009 (percent)
- Sales by Retail Channel: PETsMART and PETCO Take the Helm
- Table 2-14: Share of Pet Supply Sales by Retailer Type, 2002 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Household Purchasing of Pet Supplies by Retail Outlet Type
- Table 2-15: Household Purchasing of Non-Food Pet Supplies by Outlet Type: Purchasing vs. Sole Purchasing, 2004 (U.S. adult cat or dog owners)
- Table 2-16: Household Purchasing of Non-Food Pet Supplies by Outlet Type: Percent of Purchasers Who Are Sole Purchasers, 2004 (U.S. adult cat or dog owners)
- Quarterly Sales Trends Indicate Growing Seasonality
- Figure 2-2: The U.S. Pet Supplies Market: Share of Mass-Market Sales of Cat Litter by Quarter: 2002 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Figure 2-3: The U.S. Pet Supplies Market: Share of Mass-Market Sales of Other Dog/Cat Supplies by Quarter: 2002 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Figure 2-4: The U.S. Pet Supplies Market: Share of Mass-Market Sales of Dog Chews by Quarter: 2002 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Figure 2-5: The U.S. Pet Supplies Market: Share of Mass-Market Sales of Non-Dog/Cat Supplies by Quarter: 2002 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Factors to Market Growth
- The Retail Thrust
- The New Product Thrust
- Table 2-17: Rate of New Product Introduction vs. Market Growth, 2000-2004 (number and percent)
- Scaling up the Market
- The Marketing Thrust
- Pet Pampering
- Table 2-18: Humans and Pet Well-Being, 2003 and 2004 (percent)
- Pet Population Trends
- The Aging Pet Population
- The Boomer Factor
- Figure 2-6: Share of U.S. Population Growth for Selected Age Brackets, 2005-2010 (percent)
- Table 2-19: Dog and Cat Ownership Indices: By Adult Age Bracket, 2004 (U.S. households)
- Other Key Demographics
- Figure 2-7: Share of Dog Biscuit/Treat Purchasers by Frequency of Use: Households Without Children vs. Households With Children, 2004 (U.S. dog-owning households)
- Projected Market Growth
- Sales to Approach $10 Billion by 2009
- Table 2-20: Projected U.S. Retail Sales of Pet Supplies, 2004-2009 (in millions of dollars)
Chapter 3: Competitive Overview
- The Marketers
- A Cast of Thousands
- Multi-Category Market Leaders
- Central Garden & Pet
- Hartz Mountain Corp.
- Rolf C. Hagen
- Rayovac/Spectrum Brands
- Second-Tier Multi-Category Marketers
- Natural Product Specialists
- Category Leaders
- Cat Litter
- Flea/Tick-Control Products
- HBC (Grooming, Supplements, Oral Care)
- Clean-Up/Odor-Control Products
- Rawhides/Dog Chews
- Toys
- Training/Containment Products
- Shelter, Crates, Carriers, Furniture
- Non-Dog/Cat Supplies
- Mergers & Acquisitions: The Big Get Bigger
- Central Garden & Pet
- Hartz Mountain Corp
- Rayovac/Spectrum Brands
- Smaller Acquisitions
- Industry Globalization
- The Import Tsunami
- Shifting Trade Regulations and Currency Rates
- The Private-Label Factor
- Table 3-1: Private-Label Pet Supply Sales and Category Shares, 2000 vs. 2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Impact of Retailer Consolidation
- Table 3-2: U.S. Market for Pet Supplies: Selected Marketers and Leading Brands, 2005
- Marketer and Brand Shares
- Methodology
- Nestlé Purina Up Front
- Figure 3-1: Top Marketers of Pet Supplies by Share of IRI-Tracked Sales, 2004 (percent)
- Cat Litter: The Most Consolidated Category
- The Natural Niche
- Figure 3-2: Top Natural Cat Litter Brands by Share of IRI-Tracked Sales, 2000 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Other Dog/Cat Supplies: Hartz and All the Rest
- Figure 3-3: Top Marketers of Other Dog/Cat Supplies by Share of IRI-Tracked Sales, 2005 (percent)
- Dog Chews: Hartz Way Ahead, But Many Up-and-Comers
- Figure 3-4: Top Marketers of Dog Chews by Share of IRI-Tracked Sales, 2005 (percent)
- Non-Dog/Cat Supplies: Perky-Pet Takes the Lead
- Figure 3-5: Top Marketers of Non-Dog/Cat Supplies by Share of IRI-Tracked Sales, 2005 (percent)
- Brand Rankings in the Pet Specialty Channel
- Table 3-3: Marketer Sales and Shares of U.S. Mass-Market Sales of Pet Supplies by Category: 2000 vs. 2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 3-4: Marketer and Brand Shares of IRI-Tracked Sales of Cat Litter, 2004 vs. 2005 (percent)
- Table 3-5: Cat Litter Marketers by Dollar Change in IRI-Tracked Sales, 2000 vs. 2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 3-6: Cat Litter Brands by Dollar Change in IRI-Tracked Sales, 2000 vs. 2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 3-7: Marketer and Brand Shares of IRI-Tracked Sales of Other Dog/Cat Supplies, 2004 vs. 2005 (percent)
- Table 3-8: Marketers of Other Dog/Cat Supplies by Dollar Change in IRI-Tracked Sales, 2000 vs. 2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 3-9: Brands of Other Dog/Cat Supplies by Dollar Change in IRI-Tracked Sales, 2000-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 3-10: Marketer and Brand Shares of IRI-Tracked Sales of Dog Chews, 2004 vs. 2005 (percent)
- Table 3-11: Marketers of Dog Chews by Dollar Change in IRI-Tracked Sales, 2000-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 3-12: Brands of Dog Chews by Dollar Change in IRI-Tracked Sales, 2000-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 3-13: Marketer and Brand Shares of IRI-Tracked Sales of Non-Dog/Cat Supplies, 2004 vs. 2005 (percent)
- Table 3-14: Marketers of Non-Dog/Cat Supplies by Dollar Change in IRI-Tracked Sales, 2000-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 3-15: Brands of Non-Dog/Cat Supplies by Dollar Change in IRI-Tracked Sales, 2000-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 3-16: Specialty Pet Retailer Brand Leaders in Key Pet Supply Categories, 2002 vs. 2004
Chapter 4: Marketing and New Product Trends
- Marketing Trends
- Cross-Category Expansion
- Mass-Market/Pet Specialty Cross-Over
- Channel-Specific Marketing
- Human Product Mega-Marketers
- Licensing: Fun Names, Serious Implications
- Tapping into Alternative Channels
- Advertising Trends
- Methodology
- National Consumer Advertising Expenditures
- Figure 4-1: Share of Consumer Advertising Expenditures on Pet Supplies by Company Type, 2003 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Retail Product Marketers Spend $57 Million
- Figure 4-2: Share of Consumer Advertising Expenditures on Pet Supplies by Marketer, 2003 vs. 2004 (percent)
- Pet Retailers Spend $49 Million
- Veterinary Product Marketers Spend $57 Million
- Advertising Positioned on a Few Major Themes
- Targeting the Hobbyist
- Consumer Promotions
- Trade Advertising and Promotions
- Trade Support
- New Product Trends
- New Product Surge Continues
- Table 4-1: Number of New Pet Supplies Product Lines and SKUs, 1996-2005
- Table 4-2: Pet Supply Product Selling Points by Package Tags, 2001-2005
- Common Denominators in New Product Development
- Functional/Value-Added
- Product Humanization
- Natural
- Oral Care
- Convenience
- Portable Pets
- Table 4-3: Pets and Travel: 2002, 2003, and 2004 (percent)
- Gifting
- Table 4-4: Pets and Gifts/Birthdays/Holidays: 2002, 2003, and 2004 (percent)
- Luxury
- Trends In Key Categories
- Cat Litter
- Flea/Tick Products
- Chews and Toys
- Spa/Grooming Products
- Supplements
- Clean-Up/Odor-Control Products
- Training Products, Carriers, and Shelter
- High-Tech Products
- Non-Dog/Cat Supplies
- Table 4-5: U.S. Pet Supplies Market: Selected New Product Introductions, 2004-2005
- Retail Trends
- Overview
- Figure 4-3: Share of Pet Supply Sales by Retailer Type, 2004 (percent)
- The PETsMART/PETCO Dynamic Duo
- Table 4-6: Revenues of PETsMART and PETCO, 1998-2004 (in millions of dollars)
- PETsMART
- PETCO
- Other Top-Ranked Pet Specialty Chains
- Independents More Optimistic
- The Mass-Market Contingent
- Wal-Mart Makes Pet Department a Priority
- Target
- Supermarkets Building on Commodity Sales
- Natural Food Stores
- Leading E-tailers of Pet Supplies
- Table 4-7: Selected E-tailers of Pet Supplies, 2004
Chapter 5: The Consumer
Chapter 6: Looking Ahead
- Trends and Opportunities
- Ongoing Consolidation and Globalization
- Brand Building
- The Oral Care Wave
- The Natural Wave
- Other Cross-Category Opportunities
- Pet Supplements on the Ups
- Demographic Targeting
- Figure 6-1: Share of U.S. Population Growth for Selected Racial/Ethnic Populations, 2005-2010 (percent)
- Growing Online
Appendix: Addresses of Selected Marketers i
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