We asked the same shoppers which of the things on the list below
would make food shopping more convenient. The strong response to
"basic items up front" would be very interesting if most
shoppers agreed on what items are basic these days. "For my
daughter, the basics are specific flavors and brands of yogurt and ice
cream. For my son, it's energy drinks. For me it's eggs and
cheese. I don't think it's possible, but I would be delighted
if they were all right there, easy to grab and go. " Put that
together with "Be smaller, but still have what I want," and it
sounds like the stores that Tesco is expected to open any day now, as
well as stores that Wal-Mart is designing and others are considering.
What 100 shoppers agree would make food shopping more Percent
convenient Agree
Basic items up front 73
Fewer gimmicks 71
Service depts like meat and pharmacy open 64
during all open store hours
Fewer out of stocks 57
Be smaller, but still have what I want 56
Better prices on organics 56
Be friendlier 55
Eliminate or speed up checkout 54
No loyalty cards needed 53
Healthier take-out foods 46
More product tasting 45
Customer information around the store 44
Samples of new products up front 36
Easier (no line) returns 27
More organics 26
Easy prep demos for featured items 20
Convenient one-stop shopping 18
In-store tables for eating or beverages 18
Drive thru window for basics 17
Dinner items up front 14
Outdoor tables for eating or beverages 8
Special parking for prepared foods 8
As supermarkets have been getting bigger and bigger to deliver
one-stop shopping and compete with mass stores and clubs, the population
has gotten older and older and convenience stores and dollar stores have
continued to grow. So smaller stores that have whatever shoppers in that
locale consider basic might be the answer to today's
consumers' wishes. Of course, sometimes, once your wish comes true,
it doesn't work the way you thought it would. The small store
doesn't have the brand and flavor of the yogurt your son or
daughter craves, so it's back to the big store again.
There is a skeptical sadness in the high response to "fewer
gimmicks" as a way of making supermarkets more convenient. Shoppers
are telling us that gimmicks are like hurdles that shoppers have to
watch for and jump over, and without the hurdles, shopping would be more
convenient and easier.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
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