Tuesday 5 January 2010

Ways to Grow the Beef Mince Market - A Report for Beef Producers


Mince accounts for 52% of all beef sold, and it has come under the spotlight in a new report written by the Institute of Grocery Distribution with contributions from Dunhumby, who analyse Tesco data, and Taylor Nelson Sofres who monitor the total market. The report’s aim is to “help beef producers understand the challenges that the wider beef supply chain faces in maintaining and growing one of the most important and versatile meat products”. The report is endorsed by the NFU, EBLEX and the AHDB.

Some of the data in the report could be guessed, but some is really quite startling. Fairly predictable is the fact that mince beef sales, although down 1% in volume over the past year, have held up better than any other cut. Total beef sales are down around 3%. It’s also unsurprising that premium mince, sold under supermarkets expensive labels such as Tesco’s Finest and Sainsbury’s Taste the Difference, tends to be bought by the more affluent, whilst value mince is bought by the less well off. Smaller 250g packs are bought by pensioners and older families, and bigger packs by bigger families.

Other facts are less obvious. For example, nearly half of all mince is sold on some sort of price promotion, the most popular just now being “buy 2 packs for (say) £4”. This compares with about a third of sales on promotion a year ago. And mince is not just mince. In fact the market is divided up into 4 segments – premium, standard, value and healthy. These are categories defined by supermarkets themselves, and are designed to appeal to different types of consumers. Region wise, the Scots eat most premium mince, value sells best in the North East, and healthy mince appeals most in the south and east.

Most startlingly of all, value mince has grown very fast with sales doubling in the last year, but it still only accounts for a small proportion of mince sold. IGD shows that in Tesco, value mince in the biggest selling 500g pack size, is just 3.4% of sales of all its mince in the 250g to 500g sizes, compared with 4.5% for premium and 11% for healthy. So, contrary to most people’s expectations, consumer choices are not all about lowest possible price.

Looking forward, the report suggests that anyone seeking to grow the beef mince market should bear consumer trends in mind. Chief of these is health, with 57% of people thinking that they can make a difference to their health through the foods they eat. Interest in local foods continues, as does commitment to buying products with high animal welfare standards. And most encouraging of all, 89% of consumers feel that British farmers should be supported.

The last point made by the report is the need for carcase balance. And they are right to point this out. Clearly it makes little financial sense to grow the mince market yet in the process use up cuts which can be sold at a higher price. Although easier said than done, a marketing strategy is needed for the whole animal.

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