Monday, 6 July 2009

Discount Supermarket Growth Slows - Is It All Over for ALDI et al?


Discount supermarkets like Aldi and Lidl are making headlines again, but this time for sales slowing rather than growing.

Editor of The Grocer, Adam Neyland wrote a piece a couple of weeks ago entitled “Is the discount boom over?” This was followed a few days later by figures from market research company TNS Worldpanel, which showed that in the 12 weeks to June 14th Sainsbury and Morrison grew faster than Aldi and Lidl, with Asda growing at about the same rate. Actual figures were +6.5% for the total grocery market, Morrisons +9.3%, Sainsbury +8.9%, Aldi +8.7%, Lidl +7.5%, and Asda 8.2%. It’s a marked change. In the previous months the discounters were growing at anything up to 3 times the rate of their main stream competitors.

Why the change?

As Neyland points out some slowdown in growth was inevitable as competitors fought back with price promotions, million £ advertising budgets, and a focus on the quality and value of their fresh food. Which is a lesson to all of us to never underestimate the competition, particularly in UK grocery.

I think there is more to it.

It is interesting to reflect on what caused the discounter boom in the first place. Of course some of it was due to consumers on a strict budget searching for value as food prices rocketed. Much responsibility though must be laid at the door of the media. Not a day went by without headlines about the middle classes turning to Aldi, that it was now more chic to be seen with an Aldi bag than a Waitrose one, and that discount car parks were full of Range Rovers and Mercedes. No wonder many read the hype, worried about missing out, and nipped along to see what all the fuss was about. The monetary value of all that media coverage must have run into millions.

The big question is, of those who made the visit, how many tried, were disappointed and never came back versus how many changed their shopping habits and returned every week. Market research company Him! (yes, new to me too, but they are a genuine outfit despite the odd name), does regular research with discount shoppers. They say that shoppers are less satisfied with discounters this year than they were in 2008. Also that recent shoppers, and more upmarket shoppers expected more from the stores and were disappointed by what they found when they got there.

There is a lesson here too, which is that a business cannot be built on people buying just the once, rather, long term growth will come from having a solid base of loyal fans who buy again and again.

So what of the future?

Discounters have many devoted customers, but it is not a way of shopping that appeals to all. If it were, the market share for all three discounters would be far higher than its current 5.9%, which compares with a share of 11.6% for Morrisons, 16.1% for Sainsbury, 16.8% for Asda, and 30.8% for Tesco.

Adam Neyland rightly concluded that discounters will not go away. Largely privately owned so without shareholder pressure for fast returns, they have cash and big ambitions. Aldi is committed to opening a store a week until they have 1500 in total. It also recently won best supermarket award from Which?, the consumer organisation. Lidl is supporting consumer trends with the addition of Fairtrade products, and a commitment to sourcing British beef, chicken and pork.

Whether they will make a major breakthrough is questionable. Already some research by Him! shows the numbers shopping at discounters dropping from 15% to 13% of the population, which compares with 79% visiting a mainstream supermarket. And if you look at shares held by all discounters, it has not moved much from the days when Kwiksave was operating. Indeed Edward Garner of TNS has consistently argued that the growth seen in discounters is merely a mopping up of market share held by the now defunct Kwiksave.

The future for discounters is likely to be one where the total sector will hold its market share, and within that there will be winners and losers with Aldi consolidating its position as the main player.

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