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市場調査レポート
世界の消費者動向:コネクティビティー
Global Consumer Trends: Connectivity
| 発行 |
Datamonitor |
| 出版日 |
2009年10月 |
商品コード |
102083 |
| ページ情報 |
英文 139 pages |
| 価格 |
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Abstract
Introduction
The Connectivity mega-trend reflects the inherent consumer desire to connect
with both their peers and surroundings. Forging strong personal relationships
is important to consumers, especially in difficult times. Similarly, a feeling
of responsibility is driving the trend for ethical consumerism and actions
which are motivated by a need to do ' the right thing' for the global community.
Scope of this research
- Detailed trend analysis outlining what constitutes ' value' for consumers
(trends are, after all, a reflection of what' s important to consumers)
- Global in focus, but also offers country-by-country and sector insights
thereby catering to top-line or more specific information needs
- Covers all major FMCG sectors, but also with applicability to wider
consumer goods audiences
- One of 10 dedicated mega-trend reports outlining the most important issues
shaping global consumers' buying behavior both now and in the future
Research and analysis highlights
Good trend-watching is about taking the bigger-picture approach. Adopting a
broader global perspective to trend-tracking facilitates better decision
making by overcoming ' category myopia' . Monitoring the broader FMCG
environment will enable bigger picture learning that can be applied more
specifically.
Connectivity is a responsibility orientated mega-trend reflecting how global
consumers are more connected to their environment. The Pew Global Attitudes
Project in 2009 found that majorities in 23 of 25 countries agree that
"protecting the environment should be given priority, even if it causes slower
economic growth and some loss of jobs".
The effect of branding on consumers in Asia Pacific is extremely significant.
These consumers not only consider what a brand means to them personally, but
also how it connects them to the wider community and defines their social
status.
Key reasons to purchase this research
- Understand the significance of the different Connectivity-aligned trends
across markets and FMCG sectors to help support market diversification plans.
- Save time and gain maximal insight by using this ' one-stop-shop' resource
which offers a clear and up-to-date framework for understanding consumers.
- Access data from two waves of global primary research to increase the
likelihood of being ' on-trend' with NPD and marketing activities
Table of Contents
OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION: THE IMPORTANCE OF TREND-TRACKING
- Tracking consumer mega-trends is fundamental to long-term success
- Trend-tracking insight 1: mega-trends can be classified in two ways
according to desirable product/service benefits and societal complexities
- Trend-tracking insight 2: trends are aligned with pre-existing, but
evolving human values, attitudes, needs and behaviors
- Trend-tracking insight 3: mega-trends can be broken down into trends and
sub-trends to provide structure and clarity at a time of ' information
overload'
- Trend-tracking insight 4: manufacturers, retailers and
researchers/futurologists perpetuate trends
- Trend-tracking insight 5: adopting a broader, global perspective to
trend-tracking facilitates better decision making by overcoming ' category
myopia'
- Trend-tracking insight 6: trends have longer-term implications than fads
and can be categorized by evolvement
- Trend-tracking insight 7: for every trend there is a ' counter-trend'
while ' trend-crossover' is also an important phenomena
- Takeouts and implications: a trend framework boosts the quality and
frequency of insight generation ensuring maximum return from the broader
market research processes in place
THE FUTURE DECODED
- MEGA-TREND SYNOPSIS: Consumers desire an altruistic lifestyle that is rich
in relationships and belonging
- TREND: Ethical and Environmental Consumerism: awareness and concern of
ethical environmental issues is at an all-time high and this increasingly
directs shopper choice
- SUB-TREND: Environmental Consciousness: consumers are increasingly
concerned about the wider environment and their own personal impact
- Key takeouts and implications: consumers are undoubtedly more aware of
environmental issues than in the past, but not all are prepared to change
long-standing habits in order to make a difference
- SUB-TREND: Ethical Consumerism: more consumers are trying to do ' the
right thing' in buying products with greater consideration for ethical
principles
- Key takeouts and implications: increasing interest in the environment
and general ethical policies of companies means that ethical consumerism is
a trend that is likely to be apparent in the long-term
- SUB-TREND: Ethical Boycotting and Ethical Advocacy: consumers also
actively avoid products and companies which have a particularly unethical
reputation
- Key takeouts and implications: the pressure on business organizations to
exhibit responsible behavior has inevitably increased
- SUB-TREND: Ethical Skepticism: the ' greenwashed' consumer has become
more discerning and less trusting about declarations of ethicality
- Key takeouts and implications: consumers are inherently skeptical when
it comes to ethical issues so industry players must go the extra mile to
reassure them
- TREND: Digital Lifestyles: consumers increasingly harness new connective
technology for multiple purposes
- SUB-TREND: Networked Living: adoption and usage of new connective
technologies continues to influence consumer lifestyles
- Key takeouts and implications: consumers are becoming more connected due
to the growth of mobile phones and improvements in internet availability and
speeds
- SUB-TREND: Life Caching: collecting, storing and displaying lifestyles
using digital content
- Key takeouts and implications: the amount of time spent on social
networks illustrates how important it is to consumers to have an outlet to
display their lifestyles on
- SUB-TREND: Changing media/entertainment orientations
- Key takeouts and implications: consumers are gravitating towards new
media consumption habits, but this is only available to those with the very
latest and best technology
- TREND: Relational Wellbeing: consumers want to maximize personal
connections with family and friends
- SUB-TREND: (Re) prioritizing family/friend time
- Key takeouts and implications: global citizens are generally content
with their relationships with friends and family, but certainly believe that
things can still get better in this respect
- SUB-TREND: Creating entertaining and connected living spaces
- Key takeouts and implications: consumers are entertaining at-home more
regularly as both a means of spending more time with their loved ones and to
combat the recession
- TREND: ' Curated' Consumerism: consumers are making purchasing decision
based on the advice of other sources
- SUB-TREND: Interpersonal Curation: global shoppers rely on interpersonal
recommendations to help minimize the risk of making the wrong choiceAs
consumers want to connect with their friends and family more (see previous
analysis in this report)) it logically follows that they place a great deal
of importance on the thoughts and opinions of their peers. In a world where
many major corporations are seen as faceless and untrustworthy, consumers
are looking to people they know and understand for important information.
This can have a major effect on consumption options, with consumers more
likely to buy something that their friends like than something they see
advertised by little-known celebrities on television.
- Key takeouts and implications: word of mouth advice from friends and
relatives is believed by consumers to be the most trustworthy source of
information available to them
- SUB-TREND: Consumer Empowerment: using blogs and other virtual
interfaces to make informed consumption decisions
- Key takeouts and implications: consumers feel that they are making
better decisions thanks to the use of online reviews and other information
available from this platform
- SUB-TREND: Expert Curation: consumers increasingly have access to
' expert curators' and lifestyle gurus
- Key takeouts and implications: more specific niche curators will
continually emerge to empower consumers
- TREND: Positional consumption: consumers are purchasing products based on
identity and status
- SUB-TREND: Choosing brands conspicuously to demonstrate group memberships
- Key takeouts and implications: there are large regional differences in
how consumers relate to brands, though the common consensus everywhere is
that brands are important to society in some way
- SUB-TREND: Consumers are expanding their connoisseurship
- Key takeouts and implications: consumers' connoisseurship is a
manifestation of their appreciation of authenticity and the sensory benefits
of higher quality products and experiences
APPENDIX
- Definitions
- Methodology
- Further reading and references
- Ask the analyst
- Datamonitor consulting
- Disclaimer
FIGURES
- Figure: Datamonitor' s mega-trends are having a long-term and substantive
impact on the marketing landscape and can be grouped into two categories
- Figure: Consumer behavior and the innovations targeting it inevitably fit
into a ' trend hierarchy'
- Figure: Datamonitor' s mega-trend framework helps set the agenda for the
specific topics covered in the New Consumer Insight (NCI) research stream
- Figure: Trend tracking can be a source of (comparative) competitive
analysis
- Figure: Trend development is dictated by both ' consumer pull' and
' manufacturer push' and Datamonitor offers the intelligence tools to
capitalize on this reality
- Figure: In a consumerist global culture, the broad consumption
spheres/segments transcend geographical borders which is another reason why
adopting a broader approach is necessary
- Figure: Several factors distinguish a trend from a fad
- Figure: Consumers desire an altruistic lifestyle that is rich in
relationships and belonging
- Figure: There are a number of drivers and inhibitors that influence the
connectivity mega-trend
- Figure: Global consumers are more interested in
ethical/environmentally-friendly purchases but this is not always possible
- Figure: Over four in five consumers living in the urban area feel they
have personal responsibility on conserving the global environment
- Figure: More than three quarters of Europeans believe that protecting the
environment is important
- Figure: For Europeans, environmental awareness has heightened in the past
two years
- Figure: Italians and Spaniards in particular perceive they have become
more conscious about their personal impact on the environment in the last few
years
- Figure: Brazilians in particular believe that environmental issues are of
the utmost importance
- Figure: For the majority of Brazilians, protecting the environment has
become a more important issue in recent times
- Figure: Brazilian consumers are considerably more worried about their
personal impact on the environment than the global average
- Figure: Only a small percentage of consumers in Asia Pacific do not attach
importance towards protecting the environment
- Figure: More than three quarters of Indians have become more aware of the
importance of protecting the environment in recent years
- Figure: When it comes to assessing their individual impact on the
environment, consumers in Asia Pacific are roughly in line with the global
average
- Figure: Around two thirds of MENA consumers believe that protecting the
environment has become more important in the past two years
- Figure: Nearly a fifth of consumers in Saudi Arabia have become less
concerned about their own contribution to environmental problems
- Figure: Significant numbers of Europeans claim to be actively seeking
environmentally friendly products
- Figure: Europeans believe products have too much packaging but this is not
fully met the actual influence on purchasing behavior
- Figure: Except in Russia, ethicality is deemed less important to Europeans
in alcoholic beverages than in other FMCG sectors
- Figure: Around a quarter of Europeans decide where to shop based on
retailer ethicality
- Figure: US consumers are less likely than the global average to actively
purchase ethical products, whereas Brazilians are far more likely
- Figure: Sustainable packaging is a topic of particular importance to
environmentally conscious Brazilians
- Figure: Ethicality is only an influential factor in purchasing decisions
for around a quarter of US consumers across the four major FMCG sectors
- Figure: Nearly two thirds of Brazilian consumers believe that the
ethicality of retailers is a big influence on where they do their grocery
shopping
- Figure: Ethical consumerism is important to consumers in China and India,
but far less so in Japan
- Figure: Chinese and Indian consumers are proactive about seeking out
environmentally friendly products, whereas Australian, Japanese and Korean
consumers are more reactive
- Figure: Ethicality is not particularly influential in product purchasing
decisions for consumers in Australia and Japan
- Figure: Japanese consumers do not tend to choose grocery outlets solely
based on the ethical policies of the retailer
- Figure: Gulf consumers are far likelier than the average consumer globally
to be highly influenced by the ethical policies of grocery retailers when
choosing where to shop
- Figure: Europeans are deeply divided on the issue of avoiding food and
beverages based on a company' s poor ethical reputation
- Figure: Europeans are less likely to avoid unethical household care
products than food and beverages, albeit not to a significant extent
- Figure: Brazilians are far likelier than Americans to boycott products and
services based on ethical issues
- Figure: The majority of Brazilians require household cleaning products and
services to demonstrate that they are ethically sound
- Figure: Chinese, Indian and Korean consumers are more willing than
Australian and Japanese consumers to boycott food and beverage products and
services that they perceive to be unethical
- Figure: Only a tenth of Japanese consumers actively avoid unethical
household care products and services which is considerably lower than the
global average
- Figure: Gulf consumers are more proactive than the global average of
consumers regarding the avoidance of unethical products and services
- Figure: Around half of Gulf consumers regularly avoid purchasing unethical
household care products and services
- Figure: Europeans largely express ambivalence about whether corporations
are truthful in declarations of ethicality
- Figure: Less than half of Europeans in all countries express trust in food
and beverages claiming natural or organic ingredients
- Figure: Europeans display a low level of trust when it comes to
organic/natural claims made by cosmetics or beauty brands
- Figure: Europeans believe there is minimal credibility to environmental
claims made by household care brands
- Figure: Less than a quarter of US consumers trust corporations
declarations of ethical practices, but trust is higher in Brazil
- Figure: Consumers in the Americas are more trusting than the global
average in natural/organic claims in food and beverages
- Figure: Generally, Brazilians award more credibility than Americans to
cosmetics or beauty brands when it comes to making organic or natural claims
- Figure: More consumers in the US believe that environmental claims made by
household care brands are not credible than credible
- Figure: In Asia Pacific, Indians are the least skeptical about the
trustworthiness of corporation
- Figure: With the exception of Indians, Asia Pacific consumers generally
exhibit similar attitudes to consumers globally with regards to stated trust
in food and beverage products claiming natural or organic ingredients
- Figure: Around a third of consumers in Asia Pacific do not believe
cosmetics or beauty brands to make credible claims about being organic or
natural, with distrust particularly high in Australia
- Figure: Consumers in Australia and Japan are more skeptical than the
global average about the credibility of environmental claims made by household
care brands
- Figure: Consumers are generally welcoming the increases in connectivity
that technology is facilitating
- Figure: Nearly three-quarters of consumers in North America use the
internet the highest regional penetration in the world
- Figure: The number of mobile phone subscriptions in Europe has grown
consistently in the past few years
- Figure: Around two-thirds of Western Europeans use the internet
- Figure: The majority of European internet connections are broadband,
meaning consumers have access to high speeds that facilitate more varied and
sophisticated internet usage
- Figure: The vast majority of Europeans are in agreement that technology
has improved everyday life
- Figure: Few Europeans rely on online shopping to purchase the majority of
their groceries
- Figure: Mobile cellular subscription rates are lower in Latin America
- Figure: Almost three-quarters of consumers in North America use the
internet
- Figure: Internet connection speeds in North America are significantly
higher than in South America
- Figure: The majority of consumers in the Americas agree that science and
technology are helping to improve their lives
- Figure: In 2008, US and Brazilian consumers made more efforts to shop
online for financial products than they did for groceries
- Figure: Mobile phone subscriptions are particularly prominent in Australia
- Figure: There are more internet users in China than other Asia Pacific
countries in spite of a comparably low penetration rate
- Figure: Internet users in Hong Kong, Japan and Korea enjoy particularly
high broadband speeds
- Figure: In Asia Pacific the level of skepticism about science and
technology is generally very low
- Figure: Consumers in emerging markets in particular are looking to shop
more over the internet
- Figure: Annual growth in mobile cellular subscriptions has been phenomenal
in the UAE and Saudi Arabia
- Figure: Nearly half of all consumers in the UAE use the internet while
penetration is lower in Saudi Arabia
- Figure: Less than one in five Middle Eastern consumers have internet
connection speeds of above 2mb/s
- Figure: More than three-quarters of Gulf consumers never shop online for
groceries
- Figure: Russians spend significantly longer on social networks than any
other European consumers
- Figure: Brazilians spend considerably longer on social networking websites
than the global average
- Figure: In the Asia Pacific region, social network online penetration is
highest in Singapore, Australia and Korea
- Figure: The increase in the number of MENA consumers visiting social
networks is higher than in other major global regions
- Figure: Consumers see personal connections as an important part of
wellbeing
- Figure: Europeans tend to be happier about the time they can afford to
spend with their families than they are with their social lives
- Figure: Spanish consumers in particular have shown a great inclination to
spend more time with their loved ones in recent years
- Figure: Russians are significantly less content than others around the
continent when considering their family life, job and household income
- Figure: Despite living in a time-pressured society, Americans are happier
than consumers globally when it comes to spending time with their families and
children
- Figure: Nine in ten Brazilians believe that spending time with their
friends and family is more important now than in the past
- Figure: Consumers in the Americas are very satisfied with their family
lives
- Figure: Japanese and Korean consumers in particular report dissatisfaction
with their family and social life
- Figure: The fact that spending time with friends and family has not
changed much in importance to Japanese consumers suggests a long-standing
emphasis on this type of socialization in this country
- Figure: Pakistani and Indonesian consumers are less satisfied with their
family lives than other consumers elsewhere across Asia Pacific
- Figure: Gulf consumers are generally happier than the global average when
it comes to their family and social lives
- Figure: More than two thirds of Gulf consumers believe that spending time
with loved ones has grown in importance recently
- Figure: Satisfaction in the MENA region is lower than in Europe, Asia
Pacific or the Americas
- Figure: Cocooning Europeans are entertaining friends at home on a more
frequent basis
- Figure: Despite entertaining guests less frequently than in the past,
Brazilian consumers are nevertheless highly motivated by a need to impress
when cleaning their homes
- Figure: Japanese consumers rarely entertain friends and family at home,
whereas Koreans have found it a particularly appealing way to enjoy themselves
during the recession
- Figure: More than a third of consumers in the Middle East entertain
friends or family at home on at least a weekly basis
- Figure: Consumers feel that the more information they have available, the
better their consumption choices will be
- Figure: Europeans are less influenced by the recommendations of others
when it comes to alcoholic beverages than with food and beverages, personal
care/beauty products and household cleaning/laundry products
- Figure: Brazilian consumers are more likely than US consumers to purchase
products based on the recommendation of friends or family
- Figure: In what reflects their relative experience as consumers, Indian
and Chinese consumers are heavily reliant on others for advice about product
purchases in order to minimize ' purchase risk'
- Figure: Positional consumption is the result of the ongoing consumer need
to define status
- Figure: Consumers often display similar buying patterns so they can
noticeably demonstrate what social group they belong to
- Figure: Europeans want brands that say something about themselves but they
do not necessarily want it to be conspicuous
- Figure: Brazilians want their brands to be conspicuous to others far more
than Americans do
- Figure: For some Asian consumers, being seen with the right brand is even
more important than what a brand means to themselves as individuals
- Figure: Blogs are a resource for connoisseurs to meet, share and expand
their knowledge
- Figure: There are differences between consumer values and attitudes
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