Rnrmarketresearch.com adds “Fruit
and Vegetable Juices: U.S. Market Trends” new report on it’s database.
When defined in terms of overall dollar sales and
volume consumption, the market for fruit juices and juice drinks has remained
remarkably stable for years. Packaged Facts estimates that between 2007 and
2012 dollar sales of fruit and vegetable juices and juice drinks barely budged
and that the volume of juice and juice drinks consumed by households hardly
kept up with population growth.
Yet, underneath its apparently placid surface, the
market for juices and drinks has been roiled by undercurrents of constant,
unpredictable change. Traditional consumption patterns are rapidly changing as
consumers continue to turn away from classic products such as frozen orange
juice. For example, between 2007 and 2012, the consumption of orange juice
declined by 3.6%. Frozen orange juice experienced an especially significant
decline (-14.7%).
As they reject the traditional, consumers are
embracing new juices and juice drinks with wildly innovative forms and flavors.
Many of the products achieving the highest growth rates are those riding the
wave of trends and fads driven by juice bars and smoothie chains that have had
a seemingly overnight impact on the tastes of health-obsessed juice consumers.
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Report Details @ http://www.rnrmarketresearch.com/fruit-and-vegetable-juices-u-s-market-trends-market-report.html
As a result, the market for packaged fruit and
vegetable juices has been upended. No longer do consumers need to frequent
juice bars or natural and specialty gourmet retail channels to find novel
blends and flavors. They only need to cruise the aisles and perimeter of their
nearest supermarket to find a wide range of cutting-edge products such as
exotic blends of fruit juices, unexpected combinations of fruit and vegetable
juices, smoothies, coconut water, aloe vera juice, and juices made from
mysterious, antioxidant-rich “superfruits.”
This new Packaged Facts report analyzes how the
fruit and vegetable juice market has evolved into its current configuration and
identifies what marketers need to do to stay on top of even more challenging
changes in the future. The report pays particular attention to the competitive
threats facing marketers of packaged juices and highlights how they can take
advantage of emerging market opportunities.
Fruit
and Vegetable Juices: U.S. Market Trends identifies a number of factors that
are likely to lead to accelerating growth in a market that has showed little
momentum in recent years. First, it is likely that the increase in the number
of large households as a result of the rise in the population of multicultural
consumers will have a disproportionate impact upon growth in the overall market
for juices and juice drinks. Furthermore, Packaged Facts anticipates that there
will be an intensive effort on the part of juice marketers to respond to
consumer concerns about the high sugar content of their products by introducing
a broader array of low-calorie products based on safe alternatives to sugar. It
is also expected that marketers will continue to innovate and launch new,
premium, high-profit, better-for-you juice products that attract
health-conscious Millennials and Boomers seeking out the latest flavor fad.
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Market
Definition
This
Packaged Facts report defines the market for fruit and vegetable juices and
juice drinks on the basis of product segments provided by SymphonyIRI InfoScan
Reviews, which tracks sales through U.S. supermarkets and grocery stores,
drugstores, and mass merchandisers (including Target and Kmart but excluding
Walmart) with annual sales of $2 million or more. SymphonyIRI InfoScan divides
the juice and juice drink category into the following major product types or
segments: aseptic juices and juice drinks; juice and juice drink concentrates;
bottled juices; canned juices; frozen juices; and refrigerated juices and
drinks. Where SymphonyIRI InfoScan data allow, the report further breaks down
each segment into fruit and vegetable juices.
Methodology
The
first source of primary data used in this report is SymphonyIRI InfoScan
Reviews as described above. The second is the Summer 2012 Simmons National
Consumer Study (NCS), which was fielded between October 2011 and November 2012.
Simmons conducts telephone and booklet-based surveys of a large and random
sample of consumers who in aggregate represent a statistically accurate
cross-section of the U.S. population. Each Simmons NCS survey release involves
a sample of approximately 25,000 respondents. The report also includes data
from the SPINSscan from SPINS, Inc., which tracks product sales in the natural
and specialty gourmet supermarket channel.
The
report is also based upon data collected from a wide range of industry sources,
including company websites, trade publications, business newspapers and
magazines; consumer blogs; and annual reports, 10Ks and other releases from
public companies.
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