Why Gen Z is Abandoning Traditional Supermarkets for Walmart & Aldi | Fast Five Shorts
This week on the Omni Talk Retail Fast Five podcast, sponsored by the A&M Consumer and Retail Group, Simbe, Mirakl, and Ocampo Capital, we explore the generational shift reshaping grocery retail.
Traditional supermarkets are falling out of favor with younger generations, with Gen Z, millennials, and Gen X increasingly turning to discount retailers for groceries. According to new survey data, 22% of Gen Z shoppers made their most recent grocery trip at Aldi, matching Walmart's share. Meanwhile, 28% of baby boomers and 31% of the silent generation still prefer traditional supermarkets.
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β© Topics Covered:
π 00:00 β Headline Details
π 02:10 β The Shocking Survey Numbers
π 05:20 β Chad Lusk: A&M's Consumer Sentiment Data
π 08:15 β Why Young Shoppers Choose Walmart & Aldi
π 11:30 β Private Label Confidence Among Generations
π 14:45 β David Brown on Experience Quality
π 17:20 β Content Creation Strategy for Regional Grocers
π 20:05 β The Future of Traditional Supermarkets
For the full episode head here: https://youtu.be/sgweq_AtMms
#grocerytrends #genz #millennials #walmart #aldi #supermarkets #privatelabel #discountretail #consumerbehavior #omnitalk
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Podcorn - https://podcorn.com/privacy
Transcript
Supermarkets appear to be losing ground with younger shoppers, according to Grocery Dive.
Speaker A:Traditional supermarkets are falling out of favor with younger generations, with people in those cohorts increasingly turning to discount retailers to buy groceries, according to survey data published Tuesday by the feedback group Gen Zers.
Speaker A:Millennials and Gen Xers.
Speaker A:Yes, shout out to all those Gen Xers out there are most partial to Walmart, with more than a fifth of of people in each of those groups who participated participated in a poll the research firm fielded this spring, saying they most recently shopped for food at the mass retailer.
Speaker A:Those generations also showed a preference for Aldi, with Gen Zers especially likely to have made their latest grocery shopping trip at that chain.
Speaker A:22% of shoppers in that group shop for groceries most recently at Aldi, the same proportion that did so at Walmart.
Speaker A:While supermarkets might be losing ground with younger shoppers, they remain popular with older consumers, the survey found.
Speaker A:I love how the survey said older consumers, 28% of baby boomers and 31% of people in the silent generation.
Speaker A:We got to come up with a better name for that generation than the silent generation.
Speaker A:Well, they said they shopped for groceries most recently at a supermarket ahead of other formats.
Speaker A:Walmart came in at number two among members of both baby boomers and the silent generation, well ahead of Aldi.
Speaker A:Chad, what advice would you have for regional grocers as they appear to be losing share with the younger generations but still attracting boomers and the silent generation?
Speaker B:I'm not sure first of all where I fall into all of this I generation.
Speaker B:Wait, what, what are we calling me again?
Speaker B:I don't know.
Speaker B:You know, I love when predictive data starts to actually play out in the, in the market.
Speaker B:And what I mean by that is is we, we can go back shameless plug.
Speaker B:But we can go back to some of the learnings of within our A and M consumer and retail group.
Speaker B:We do a semiannual consumer sentiment survey and we look at these sort of buying trends and look at all kinds of different spreads and segments of the population, household income and, and there's a lot of generational preferences that, that have popped when it, when it came to grocery over our past couple surveys.
Speaker B:So you know, on the whole, younger grocery consumers are more price sensitive and they're more likely to look and try out different products and assortments.
Speaker B:They have a particularly high confidence in private label.
Speaker B:They're interested in quality of goods, but they're the ones who disproportionately see a quality boost in store brands so that trade off for the better price isn't as significant to them because they feel like they're getting quality.
Speaker B:And about half say they're likely or very likely to try new brands that they see, especially when they provide better for you health benefits.
Speaker B:That's the playbook, right?
Speaker B:And like these are the areas that Walmart and Aldi are winning at, right?
Speaker B:Discount prices, high private label penetration with good quality that they invest in healthy assortment options.
Speaker B:And this is where we can see that, you know, many regional grocers are falling behind.
Speaker B:So look no further to the data and preferences and purchase drivers of these generations and the playbook is laid out in front of you.
Speaker A:Yeah, Chad, I'll give you another plug because in addition to your consumer sentiment survey, you guys also released a report on space planning, which I got thinking about in regards to this conversation too.
Speaker A:And so to answer the question from that perspective, in terms of the advice that I personally would give to the regional grocers would be, and I got it from talking to your team about that report, is you gotta map out your current strengths and weaknesses as a grocer and you gotta do it by category.
Speaker A:And then you have to ask yourself the hard question of how are those categories gonna be trending five to 10 years out and placing bets again on which trends you think are gonna be most impactful against your overall value proposition.
Speaker A:You know, is it gonna be E commerce, is it gonna be fresh food, Is it gonna be food as medicine?
Speaker A:As the trend?
Speaker A:And you need to get to work.
Speaker A:You need to get to work designing your in store experience and your digital experience, not just for today, because I feel like a lot of people are just designing both those experiences for today.
Speaker A:You got to be designing it five to 10 years out.
Speaker A:That's what I think.
Speaker A:And that's why Walmart's killing it on both ends.
Speaker A:They're killing it with the younger shoppers and the high income demo, which is why they're so strong right now.
Speaker A:But I don't know, David, anything you'd add here?
Speaker C:Yeah, the only thing I'd add is, I think where you were going, Chris, is that I actually think that they're just a better experience.
Speaker C:Right.
Speaker C:Like if I, I just think about like the.
Speaker A:Gotta amplify that.
Speaker C:The three or four options that I have here in my little hometown of Truckee, California.
Speaker C:You know, we have a Raley's One Market, which was the first Raley's One Market, which is an amazing experience.
Speaker C:We have a brand new grocery outlet which is a way better experience than the Safeway that is right across the street and it's better prices, et cetera.
Speaker C:So, you know, why wouldn't I go shop at some place that has a better experience and lower prices?
Speaker C:I mean, it's as Chad said, it's simple data.
Speaker C:And the data's playing out.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker A:And all the data we're seeing is converging to this, this answer, this, you know, eventual thing.
Speaker A:Like we saw a report yesterday on just E commerce and who's gaining the share in E commerce that Mercados put out and it was saying the same thing, the same people are winning.
Speaker A:Walmart.
Speaker A:Aldi got highlighted in that too.
Speaker A:And close us out here, what are your thoughts?
Speaker D:I think price is the biggest concern.
Speaker D:Like I think you have to be making sure that you're investing to make sure that your pricing is competitive in those areas.
Speaker D:And the second thing I would say is content creation.
Speaker D:Like, I think that even though you're a regional grocer, I think it's important to be thinking about how you're finding those news, new consumers and connecting with them.
Speaker D:And I think of, you know, creating video or creating other, like other types of engaging content that will show up in some of the places where Gen Z is too, because they don't know about you.
Speaker D:Like, unless you know, Walmart, Target, Amazon, like these people are investing in creating content, capturing interest, sending out recipes, being saying we have the trending product that you're talking about on TikTok.
Speaker D:Like they're investing in those areas and there are partners that I think these regional grocers can find to help do that so that they remain relevant.
Speaker D:Because like you said, you know, then the research showed they're, they're, they're having this consistent audience across, you know, boomers and even some older Gen Xers.
Speaker D:But that's going to go by the wayside.
Speaker D:So I'd be invested in how am I creating content so that I show up for these audiences that are coming into the market in the places that they're spending the most time.
Speaker A:That's a great point.
Speaker A:It calls to mind was it, was it stop and shop that was doing the kiosks for the mobile couponing in store, you know, and like, who's your muse as you're designing this?
Speaker A:Is it the silent generation that's probably likely to use that kiosk?
Speaker A:Or is are you putting your resources towards what you're going to be in the future and what you want to be?
Speaker A:That's a great point, Anne.