A Harvest of Fresh Produce Insights
Though consumer awareness of the key role fresh produce plays in healthy lifestyles has never been higher, deflationary pressure from lower fruit and vegetable prices, coupled with persistent frugal consumer behavior that has given rise to more home gardens and fewer weekly store visits, is keeping retail produce directors on their toes, according to top-line insights from Progressive Grocer’s 2012 Annual Produce Operations Review.
With the majority of supermarket produce executives striving to ensure that their stores’ fresh produce prices are as competitive as possible with discount formats on both ends of the spectrum, bottom-line reinforcements are being generated by higher-ticket organics, more packaged salads and locally grown products, expanded fresh-cut fruit and vegetable options, and more impactful displays of specialty/exotics and mainstay pantry staples.
As an encapsulated overview of the principal operational issues retail produce directors square off with on a daily basis, PG’s annual produce study – complete results of which will appear in our forthcoming October print edition -- was compiled from a range of input from retail executives with authority for the all-important category. Panelists responding to the benchmarking survey were asked to provide comparable estimates for a variety of operational issues in play in their stores’ average produce departments, along with projections about what’s on the horizon for the balance of the calendar year, among others.
Among the key highlights of this year’s annual produce survey, year-to-year total department sales generated $52 billion versus $50.2 billion a year ago, good for a 3.6 percent overall gain, or 1.8 percent in actual per-store department sales growth. The remaining 2.8 percent sales increase, meanwhile, was driven by an increase in new stores opened during the study’s measuring period.
When asked to gauge the baseline performance of their average produce departments during the past year, 58.3 percent of panelists weighed in with favorable progress, which, while not as upbeat as last year’s tally, is nevertheless positive. Even better, fewer survey respondents — 25 percent — reported downward sales during the past 12 months, although a higher comparable sum — 16.7 percent — reported steady sales trends.
Although random-weight fruits and vegetables continue to far outpace sales of their fresh produce department counterparts, retailers in this year’s study are heeding the industry call by adding more quality-focused, value-added, convenience-oriented products that lend splendidly to immediate consumption and quick preparation. Innovative kid-inspired and menu-making products, in particular, are helping grocers meet demand for fresh and healthy snack foods that are housed in easy-open/quick-to-reclose packaging. However, given that price is generally the biggest factor for consumers deciding between packaged and loose produce, continued sales growth in this segment will depend upon how well retailers promote the convenience of packaged produce and help consumers to see the value of these products.
An encouraging trend bloomed in this year’s study, with regard to floral sales: Among the 65 percent of retail panelists with floral departments, after several years of wilted progress, 35.5 percent reported an increase in floral category sales — 10 points higher than was reported in last year’s study.
When evaluating the always-insightful problem index, which asks Produce Operations Review panelists to rank the most troublesome departmental issues on a scale of 1-6 (with 1 being not serious and 6 being extremely serious), the impact of the summer drought in key growing regions leapfrogged to the top of this year’s hit parade, a particularly noteworthy fact in light of the issue’s first-ever inclusion on the produce retailer’s worry list. While the full impact of this year’s drought isn’t expected to affect food prices across other parts of the store until 2013, many grocers faced the summer with scarce supplies of locally grown crops, which severely hampered their ability to take advantage of fine-tuned partner plans hammered out with local growers earlier in the year.
Among other heartburn inducers for produce execs, competition from Walmart and traditional supermarket rivals claimed the second and third spots, while wholesale prices dropped three rungs to rank as this year’s fourth most vexing consideration, paced by that familiar foe — profits — to round out the produce department’s top five hot buttons.