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1 Nielsen Perishables Group
The evolution of fresh Nielsen Perishables Group Utah Food Industry Association

2 Who is Nielsen perishables group?
ESTABLISHED LEADERS IN FRESH NEW TOTAL-STORE PERSPECTIVE EXPANDED INFORMATION AND CAPABILITIES Meat Produce Deli Bakery Seafood

3 Economic concerns remain top of mind
What are your biggest concerns over the next six months? CONCERNS Share of responses ECONOMY 20% DEBT 12% JOB SECURITY 13% HEALTH 9% FOOD PRICES 6% FUEL PRICES UTILITY PRICES 3% WORK/LIFE BALANCE What is driving confidence? Confusion? On the plus side: Housing House prices surged +1.4% m/m in Feb, +11.6% y/y, and +14.3% from their low 19 months ago, a huge difference from 2010/11/12. The most important implications of house price increases are: • Banks encouraged to lend • Consumer net worth lifted • Builders encouraged to build • Fence-sitters incentivized to move • Consumer spending lifted • Consumer and business confidence lifted. Dow, nas and S&P yts nemployment rates were lower in January than a year earlier in 227 of the 372 metropolitan areas, higher in 124 areas, and unchanged in 21 areas, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Twelve areas had jobless rates of at least 15.0 percent Total nonfarm payroll employment increased by 236,000 in February, and the unemployment rate edged down to 7.7 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Employment increased in professional and business services, construction, and health care Among the major worker groups, the unemployment rate for whites (6.8 percent) declined in February while the rates for adult men (7.1 percent), adult women (7.0 percent), teenagers (25.1 percent), blacks (13.8 percent), and Hispanics (9.6 percent) showed little or no change The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) increased 0.7 percent in February on a seasonally adjusted basis, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Over the last 12 months, the all items index increased 2.0 percent before seasonal adjustment. The gasoline index rose 9.1 percent in February to account for almost three-fourths of the seasonally adjusted all items increase. The indexes for electricity, natural gas, and fuel oil also increased, leading to a 5.4 percent rise in the energy index. The food index increased slightly in February, rising 0.1 percent. A sharp increase in the fruits and vegetables index was the major cause of the 0.1 percent increase in the food at home index, with other major grocery store food group indexes mixed. The index for all items less food and energy increased 0.2 percent in February It’s hard to not get excited about this, but claims have looked Repeating Pattern Repeating? good early in 2011/12 as well, only to increase in the summer as each year’s Growth Problem unfolded. Economy improving just doesn't feel like it Source: Nielsen Global Omnibus Consumer Confidence Survey Q3 2013 3

4 U.S. GROWTH SLOWED Actual and Projected U.S. GDP Growth (2006-2017)
Forecast for 2014 Moderate Growth Actual Forecast 3.4% 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Source: IMF World Economic Outlook, Oct 2012; from Wells Fargo forecasts as of Dec ; TCG Analysis

5 Shrinking incomes in the middle class despite gdp increases
Decline in median household income in 9 of last 13 years – is this the new normal? Median household Income in 2012 Inflation Adjusted Dollars Source: U.S. Census Bureau

6 So what does this mean for fresh?

7 Fresh has not been immune to price increases
Volume % on Promo vs. year ago Avg. Retail price vs. year ago -1.2% +2.0% SALE -1.7% PRICE PROMOTION Source: Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts® Total U.S. (FCA) weeks ending 12/28/2013 vs. Year Ago

8 Despite price increases fresh departments thrive
Fresh growth continues to outpace rest of the store FRESH DEPARTMENTS CENTER STORE FOOD DEPARTMENTS 1% DOLLAR GROWTH VOLUME GROWTH TOTAL STORE TREND 0.2% Source: Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts® Total U.S. (FCA, does not include convenience, drug or dollar) weeks ending 4/26/2014 vs. Year Ago and Total U.S. - All Outlets Combined, plus Convenience ending 5/11/2014 (UPC only)

9 Winners and losers across the store
THE IMPACTS Winners and losers across the store Top 10 Fastest Dollar Velocity ($ per MM ACV) Growth Categories Across the Store Bottom 10 Biggest Dollar Velocity ($ per MM ACV) Losing Categories Across the Store Source: Combined Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts® and Nielsen ScanTrack point-of-sale data sets – ranked by dollars per MM ACV for 52 weeks May 2014

10 So how does an environment like that produce a scenario like this?
Agenda (Evolutionary Traits) Fresh is more available than ever Fresh fits the trip Fresh communicating consumer benefits (making a play for the need-state) Fresh has something for almost everyone Future of fresh – a critical piece in the total store “ecosystem”

11 Fresh is more available than ever

12 ALTERNATIVE CHANNELS Growing In Fresh
GROCERY DRUGSTORES DOLLAR STORES CONVENIENCE STORES CHANNEL2 33,445 Stores +7% 2013 vs 2007 PERISHABLES1 Purchase Frequency -2.6% vs YAGO CHANNEL 41,378 Stores +21% 2013 vs 2007 PERISHABLES Purchase Frequency +7.1% vs YAGO CHANNEL 25,486 Stores +36% 2013 vs 2007 PERISHABLES Purchase Frequency +2.0% vs YAGO CHANNEL 151,282 Stores +32% 2013 vs 2007 PERISHABLES Purchase Frequency +1.4% vs YAGO Baskets with Fresh 1.5 to 2x Bigger Than The Average Basket Source: 1. Nielsen Homescan Total Shopper View 52 weeks ending 12/28/13 versus year ago 2. Nielsen TDLinx

13 A growing number of ways to deliver fresh to consumers
City Target Dollar General Market Walgreen’s Walmart Neighborhood Market Source: Nielsen Perishables Group

14 What’s around the corner?
We’re probably not getting LESS busy Source: Nielsen Perishables Group

15 Fresh fits the trip

16 More Outlets, More Fragmented Trips
The Fast and the Frequent Across all outlets, more than 55% of all trips have 6 items or less Quick Trip Fill-in Trip Stock-up Trip <6 items in the basket 6-15 items in the basket 15+ items in the basket The Power of Fresh Trips to these outlets with fresh are up 4% (higher for quick trips) Source: Nielsen Homescan Total Shopper View Specialty Panel, 52 weeks ending March 2014

17 Millennials drive quick trips
Overall, Millennials make more trips per household than the average shopper Millennials are also the most important generation to quick trips, and spend the highest per quick trip Boomers and Generation X are the most important shoppers to stock-up trips It’s a New World Can’t assume Millennials will make bigger trips as they age – smart quick trip strategies are critical in food retail Source: Nielsen Perishables Group Total Shopper Study, from FreshFacts® Shopper Insights powered by DataLogix, 52 weeks ending 3/29/14, Millennials defined as born between

18 As quick trips become more popular some fresh categories stand to gain
Notably deli and bakery, two of the fastest growing fresh departments, QUICK TRIPS STOCK-UP TRIPS 6 ITEMS OR FEWER MORE THAN 15 ITEMS MOST IMPORTANT TRIPS TO: MOST IMPORTANT TRIPS TO: DELI DEPT. BAKERY DEPT. FROZEN DEPT MEAT DEPT. PRODUCE DEPT. DAIRY DEPT DRY GROCERY DEPT. Quick trips are different and offer different opportunities to win shopper dollars Source: Nielsen Perishables Group Total Shopper Study, FreshFacts® Shopper Insights powered by DataLogix for 52 weeks ending 3/29/14

19 Fresh communicating consumer benefits

20 Consumer benefits have not changed
WHAT WE BUY Consumer benefits have not changed HEALTH CONVENIENCE QUALITY/VALUE MULTICULTURAL/ GLOBAL Source: Nielsen Perishables Group

21 However How consumers meet those priorities is evolving
Fresh Growth by Consumer Priority 37% 18% 7% 2% CONTRIBUTION TO FRESH DOLLAR SALES Source: Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts® Total U.S. 52 weeks ending 12/28/2013 vs. Year Ago; Products in each group are not mutually exclusive

22 Top 10 FASTEST-GROWING FRESH CATEGORIES Exemplify CONSUMER PRIORITIES
WHAT WE BUY Top 10 FASTEST-GROWING FRESH CATEGORIES Exemplify CONSUMER PRIORITIES DELI PRODUCE Specialty Fruits $502M; +15% Cooking Greens $362M ; +24% Produce Beverages $972M; +17% Avocados $994M; +15% Dips, Spreads and Toppings $994M; +15% Deli Breakfast Foods $71M; +11% Value-Added Vegetables $1.3 B; +13% Citrus $2.5B; +12% Squash and Pumpkins $585M; +13% MEAT Bacon $3B; +12% Source: Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts® 52 weeks ending 12/28/13; includes categories with over 50% ACV selling over the 52 weeks ending 12/28/13

23 BRANDS PLAYs an increasingly important role in the fresh perimeter
Dollars % Growth Branded $56 B 6.2% PRIVATE LABEL $27 B 5% Unbranded $54 B 4.1% +0.4 -0.4 0.0 BAKERY DELI PRODUCE MEAT SEAFOOD $2.6 billion 25% of department sales $10.1 billion 45% of department sales $14 billion 33% of department sales $26 billion 48% of department sales $2.3 billion 39% of sales Source: Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts®

24 CONVENIENT OPTIONS BECOMING MORE POPULAR; consumers pay more for a different kind of value
VALUE-ADDED FRUIT VALUE-ADDED VEGETABLES Meal Prep Side Dish Snacking Trays Fresh Cut Fruit Jars and Cups Overwrap HOUSEHOLD PENETRATION +0.8% PURCHASE FREQUENCY +2.1% DOLLAR SALES +11.9% HOUSEHOLD PENETRATION +2.0% PURCHASE FREQUENCY +4.0% DOLLAR SALES +13.5% Frozen buyers are decreasing purchase of similar product Source: Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts®, 52 Weeks Ending 12/28/13; Total U.S. FCA Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts® Shopper Insights powered by Spire, 52 Weeks ending 12/28/13

25 EXOTIC FLAVORS AND NEW CONSUMER EXPERIENCES
SPECIALTY FRUITS DOLLAR SALES +14.9% SPEND PER TRIP +3.1% MANGO SALES +17.0% POMEGRANATE SALES +34.7% PAPAYA SALES +21.3% Old products deliver a new experience Milennialls pay a premium for a unique eating experience Source: Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts®, 52 Weeks Ending 12/28/13; Total U.S. FCA, PMA 2013 trade show Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts® Shopper Insights powered by Spire, 52 Weeks ending 12/28/13

26 HEALTHY ISN’T HEALTHY enough
These commodities didn’t actually become healthier did they? SUPERFOODS CALORIE COUNTING Opportunity for messaging of health benefits in produce Source: PMA 2013 trade show, brand websites

27 Connecting to a specific eating occasion
RISE OF SNACKING STRONG GROWTH IN BRANDED OPTIONS Opportunities exist for premium-priced offerings Source: PMA 2013 trade show, brand websites

28 It’s working in both directions; Fresh is inspiring new concepts in other parts of the store too
Haagen-Dazs Ice Cream - Japan: Tomato-Cherry, Carrot-Orange Magnolia Ice Cream: Avocado, Purple Yam Green Giant Blend-ins: Carrot, Butternut Squash, Spinach Garden-Lites Muffins: Veggie Blueberry Oat, Zucchini Banana Chocolate Chip, Zucchini Chocolate Veggie, Carrot Berry Veggie, Golden Corn Veggie Blue Hill Yogurt: Carrot, Sweet Potato, Beet, Parsnip Butternut Squash ,Tomato

29 WHAT WE BUY Lines are blurring between aisles, more ways to solve the same the same need state WHAT’S IN? Low fat/low trans fat/low calorie High protein Nutrional ingredients Four to five smaller meals/day WHAT’S OUT? High fat/high calorie Traditional, unhealthy snacks Processed snacks Three large meals/day 90% of U.S. consumers eat at least one snack a day 1 FRESH CATEGORIES GAINING SHARE OF CENTER-STORE SNACKING OCCASIONS Dollars Per MM ACV Dollar Per MM ACV % Change Category Fresh Pretzels $5K 50.8% Salty Snacks $17K 0.8% Fresh Mini Cookies $157 7.1% Cookies 3.1% Source: Source: 1. International Dairy-Deli-Bakery Association, Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts® 52 weeks ending 3/29/14

30 Is the whole store going to be fresh soon?
To Recap, Consumer behavior is evolving and In some Ways It’s favored fresh parts of the store Where We Shop HOW We Shop WHAT WE BUY More outlets offer us more options in more ways -> Wider, harder battle ground Stock-up trips still where we spend big -> but not the only opportunity to win our dollars Understand us and connect with our priorities-> get in our basket more SHOPPER Is the whole store going to be fresh soon? Source: Nielsen Perishables Group

31 We are all total store shoppers
WHO BUYS WHAT We are all total store shoppers Fresh Segmentation: All households segmented by ratio of fresh to total store spending Fresh Focused >32% Moderates 17-24% Center Store Enthusiasts 11-16% Center Store Focused <10% Fresh Enthusiasts 25-32% Dividing Metric: % fresh share of all spending Power Store Shopper Power Banana Shopper Power Packaged Salad Shopper Percent of Households 10% 23% 33% We are all total store shoppers Source: Nielsen Perishables Group

32 Consumers use the store to solve the meal in different ways
Fresh Focused & Enthusiasts Center Store Focused & Enthusiasts Frozen Frozen Vegetables Unprepared Frozen Meat Frozen Meals Frozen Novelties (Ice Cream Snacks) Frozen Pizza Frozen Potatoes Canned Canned Corn Canned Beans Canned Tomatoes Canned Green Beans Canned Pineapple Canned Peaches Canned Spaghetti Drinks Milk Refrigerated Juice Carbonated Beverages Shelf-Stable Juice Sweets Baking Supplies Bakery Desserts Chocolate Candy Cookies Fresh Fruits Fresh Grapes Fresh Oranges Fresh Stone Fruit Fresh Melons Fresh Bananas Fresh Apples Fresh Berries Fresh Vegetables Fresh Tomatoes Fresh Celery Fresh Peppers Fresh Mushrooms Fresh Lettuce Fresh Potatoes Fresh Onions Fresh Carrots Source: Nielsen Homescan Panel, 52 weeks ending 03/29/2014

33 The future of fresh

34 TOTAL STORE CONNECTIVITY
Future isn’t a fresh take-over, but understanding the role fresh is going to play in the store We’ve already observed many factors have played a role in the growth of fresh TOTAL STORE CONNECTIVITY Total store as a complex “ecosystem” with many players that have impact on one another Source: Nielsen Perishables Group

35 +19 Million 314 Drawing Connections
Quantify impact, Identify friends and foes, Act with new paths to win Enabling Total Store Sales Analytics Enabling Total Store Buyer Analytics New dataset for Nielsen Advanced Analytics combining UPC and non-UPC category retail sales data Improved Nielsen Homescan Total Shopper View, a specialty panel where shoppers track UPC items and random-weight category purchases NIELSEN TOTAL STORE CONNECTIVITY STUDY 49,449 +19 Million 314 Sales Correlations calculated for every store and every week Categories across the entire store (incl. food & non-food) Trips across all outlets Source: Nielsen Perishables Group

36 defining ranges of Sales connectivity across the store
-1 +1 -0.5 +0.5 Strong negative correlation Weak correlation Strong positive correlation Category sales trend in opposing direction measured over time (week/store level) Category sales trend in the same direction over time (week/store level) Average correlation factor between any two categories = .32 Source: Nielsen Total Store Connectivity Study, 2014

37 Initial Connectivity Confirmations and Surprises – About Meat
BEVERAGES: Tea & Cocoa: 0.70 Water: 0.64 New age bev: 0.63 SNACKS: Salty Snacks: 0.69 Fresh Grapes: 0.68 Dairy Brick cheese: 0.71 .32 Average correlation between any two categories SWEETS/DESSERTS: Frozen Dessert: 0.69 Fresh Cakes: 0.68 Fresh Cookies: 0.56 .42 Average correlation between beef and any other category BEEF INGREDINTS: Sauces/seasonings: 0.74 Condiments: 0.72 Fresh Onions: 0.65 Fresh beef is an ANCHOR category with strong connections across occasions and aisles throughout the TOTAL STORE SIDE DISHES: Fresh Potatoes 0.71 Canned goods: 0.68 FZ vegetables: 0.62 Source: Nielsen Total Store Connectivity Study sales correlation modeling, preliminary findings as of July 2014

38 Shifts in “anchor” category performance can impact sales across the entire store
Volume %Chg vs. YAGO Many center-store products were directly impacted when fresh beef prices increased in What will happen in 2014? +16% +11% +10% +12% +13% +15% +9% Total Beef ARP* %Chg vs. YAGO Source:  Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts, Total U.S. – Traditional Grocery; Nielsen Scantrack, Total U.S. – All Outlets Combined; *ARP = Average Retail Price (per pound) Source:  Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts, Total U.S. – Traditional Grocery; Nielsen Scantrack, Total U.S. – All Outlets Combined;

39 Low number of touch points across the store
Initial Connectivity Confirmations and Surprises – About Deli Prepared Foods Despite their size and growth, some categories remain relatively independent DELI PREPARED FOODS $12.6 B, up 7.6%, 95% HH penetration Average correlation between deli prepared categories and others .17 INDEPENDENT = Low number of touch points across the store .32 Average correlation between any two categories Growth in INDEPENDENTS like deli prepared indicate a retailer is winning a unique buyer, a unique trip or both Source: Nielsen Total Store Connectivity Study sales correlation modeling, preliminary findings as of July 2014

40 Share of Sales By Trip Type
Strong sales in INDEPENDENT categories can DRIVE incremental growth for retailers Share of Sales By Trip Type DELI PREPARED SANDWICHES $1.3B, up 6%, 29% HH penetration DELI PREPARED PIZZA $667M, up 3%, 18% HH penetration TOTAL STORE Quick trip Fill-in trip Stock-up trip <6 items in the basket Most deli prepared buying happens on quick trips and does appear to cannibalize stock-up meal solutions from other parts of the store 6-15 items in the basket 15+ items in the basket Source: Nielsen Homescan Total Shopper View Specialty Panel, 52 weeks ending 03/29/2014

41 conclusion

42 Key Take-Aways The market environment is always changing (economy, natural events, store openings and closings) There are some “constants” (the desire for quality, convenience, savings etc…) What’s evolving is how consumers solve for these “constants” – the increasing diversity of consumer types, store formats and products competing for the same need state makes this whole ecosystem a little more complex Today we’ve investigated some examples of fresh products that are winning in the current environment, but fresh success doesn’t always lead to total store success Success down the road relies on understanding how consumers use not only fresh, but all products in the store to solve the meal Source: Nielsen Perishables Group

43 SUCCESS IN THE “ECOSYSTEM”
Put more simply The evolution of analytics is a model that puts the consumer at the center PAST FUTURE SUCCESS IN THE “ECOSYSTEM” Source: Nielsen Perishables Group

44 Thank You Source: Nielsen Perishables Group

45 Questions? Contact NIELSEN PERISHABLES GROUP
Chris Balzer │

46 Initial Connectivity Confirmations and Surprises – About Meat
BEVERAGES: Tea & Cocoa: 0.70 Water: 0.64 New age bev: 0.63 SNACKS: Salty Snacks: 0.69 Fresh Grapes: 0.68 Dairy Brick cheese: 0.71 .32 Average correlation between any two categories SWEETS/DESSERTS: Frozen Dessert: 0.69 Fresh Cakes: 0.68 Fresh Cookies: 0.56 .42 Average correlation between beef and any other category BEEF INGREDINTS: Sauces/seasonings: 0.74 Condiments: 0.72 Fresh Onions: 0.65 Fresh beef is an ANCHOR category with strong connections across occasions and aisles throughout the TOTAL STORE SIDE DISHES: Fresh Potatoes 0.71 Canned goods: 0.68 FZ vegetables: 0.62 Source: Nielsen Total Store Connectivity Study sales correlation modeling, preliminary findings as of July 2014

47 Shifts in “anchor” category performance can impact sales across the entire store
Volume %Chg vs. YAGO Many center-store products were directly impacted when fresh beef prices increased in What will happen in 2014? +16% +11% +10% +12% +13% +15% +9% Total Beef ARP* %Chg vs. YAGO Source:  Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts, Total U.S. – Traditional Grocery; Nielsen Scantrack, Total U.S. – All Outlets Combined; *ARP = Average Retail Price (per pound) Source:  Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts, Total U.S. – Traditional Grocery; Nielsen Scantrack, Total U.S. – All Outlets Combined;

48 Initial Finding: An “Anchor” like fresh beef connects In Different Ways to Different Buyers
Each connection reveals a unique buyer profile- showing opportunity for different solutions even in similar categories SIDE DISHES1: Potatoes 0.71 Canned goods: 0.68 FZ vegetables: 0.62 SWEETS/DESSERTS1: Frozen dessert: 0.69 Fresh cakes: 0.68 Grocery cookies: 0.56 Highest Indexing Demographics/Fresh Segment for Beef And Side Dishes: Highest Indexing Demographics/Fresh Segment for Beef And Sweets: Canned Veg2 Frozen Desserts2 Grocery Cookies Frozen Veg BEEF BEEF Empty Nesters Less Educated Couples Hispanic-skew Fresh/Center Moderates Gen X to Boomers Affluent Higher Education HH with older children Fresh Enthusiasts Empty Nesters and HH w older children Affluent Comfortable country Fresh Enthusiast Gen X Less educated Young families Mid-income Hispanic Fresh Potatoes Fresh Cakes Boomers and older Lower education levels Couples Hispanic-skew (Similar to Canned Veg) Rural Fresh Focused Small and young families Mid-income to affluent Hispanic Fresh Enthusiasts Sources: 1- Nielsen Total Store Connectivity Study sales correlation modeling, preliminary findings as of July 2014 ; 2- Nielsen Homescan Total Shopper View Specialty Panel, latest 52 weeks ending 3/29/14

49 Low number of touch points across the store
Initial Connectivity Confirmations and Surprises – About Deli Prepared Foods Despite their size and growth, some categories remain relatively independent DELI PREPARED FOODS $12.6 B, up 7.6%, 95% HH penetration Average correlation between deli prepared categories and others .17 INDEPENDENT = Low number of touch points across the store .32 Average correlation between any two categories Growth in INDEPENDENTS like deli prepared indicate a retailer is winning a unique buyer, a unique trip or both Source: Nielsen Total Store Connectivity Study sales correlation modeling, preliminary findings as of July 2014

50 Share of Sales By Trip Type
Strong sales in INDEPENDENT categories can DRIVE incremental growth for retailers Share of Sales By Trip Type DELI PREPARED SANDWICHES $1.3B, up 6%, 29% HH penetration DELI PREPARED PIZZA $667M, up 3%, 18% HH penetration TOTAL STORE Quick trip Fill-in trip Stock-up trip <6 items in the basket Most deli prepared buying happens on quick trips and does appear to cannibalize stock-up meal solutions from other parts of the store 6-15 items in the basket 15+ items in the basket Source: Nielsen Homescan Total Shopper View Specialty Panel, 52 weeks ending 03/29/2014

51 Solutions center shopping
Trying to redefine convenience

52 fighting for foot traffic
Piggy backing partners

53 Blur the lines to create an experience
Source: Mariano’s (Business Wire & Facebook); Leopardo (drawing); Source: KSDK-St. Louis; Photography by J. Pollack Photography Sources: Supermarket News; quote by Randy Edeker, Hy-Vee chairman, president & CEO

54 Make it even easier than ever for shoppers
You don’t even have to leave your home

55 A FULL STORE PERSPECTIVE WILL HELP KRAFT…
 …understand how to maximize product performance based on understanding competitive threats in the store but also aligning more strategically with key fresh drivers …optimize trade investments by designing and evaluating more compelling cross-aisle partnerships …innovate new fresh concepts with Kraft product lines and identify white space opportunities (product innovation, acquisitions, retail targeting) …provide total store leadership to retail partners – new solutions to win bigger baskets and more frequent trips

56 Trip Types: Frequency or Spend?
Larger item trips still drive two-thirds of a supermarkets’ bottom line – but they only happen around one-quarter of the time Quick Trip Fill-in Trip Stock-up Trip Share of Trips- Supermarket Grocery2 41% 32% 27% 13% 24% 63% Share of Store Sales Shifting Focus Quick trips are becoming increasingly important to win Source: 1- Nielsen Homescan Total Shopper View Specialty Panel, 52 weeks ending March FreshFacts® Shopper Insights powered by DataLogix, 52 weeks ending May 2014

57 Despite tightening wallets, interest in traditional promotion wanes
Trade promotional spend is among the largest expenses for manufacturers, but success is low, even in a period of rising food costs. Of the $216B in promoted sales, only 17% is mutual growth that benefits both retailers and suppliers Discounts down 2 pts Source: 1. Nielsen; 2. Market Track

58 Despite tightening wallets, specialty retailers win on innovative execution and experience
Successful retailers are nailing jobs Same-Store Sales: Average Growth, latest 52 weeks Strong affluent shopper attraction Strong lower income attraction No strong attraction Source: Company press releases; monthly or quarterly news releases – excluding gas

59 Priority Areas Impact meal occasions Across the Store: BREAKFAST
WHAT WE BUY Priority Areas Impact meal occasions Across the Store: BREAKFAST DOLLAR % GROWTH VS YAGO VOLUME % GROWTH VS YAGO FRESH BREAKFAST CATEGORIES 6-Count Muffins Deli Breakfast Eggs Strudel Mini Bagels Deli Breakfast Sandwiches French Toast/Pancakes/Waffles +94% +49% +47% +26% +22% +15% +76% +22% +31% +18% +13% +21% Breakfast heating up outside store Source: 1. International Dairy-Deli-Bakery Association, Deli Business, Jan Nielsen Perishables Group 52-weeks ending 2/22/ Supermarket News

60 Concern Towards Health & Wellness
WHAT WE BUY Priority AREAS Impact Retailers: THE Most Health-Engaged shop and SPEND Concern Towards Health & Wellness Across All Outlets Combined WELL BEINGS are active shoppers & spend the most annually Source: Natural Marketing Institute (NMI), Health & Wellness Segmentation, Nielsen Homescan for Total U.S. – 52 weeks ending 12/28/2013; segment definitions in appendix

61 These concepts go beyond fresh
Health, convenience, quality/value and global are driving trends: Inside the Store And Beyond

62 Who’s driving your growth?
While a category may be growing or declining overall, performance within segments varies signaling where focus should be to grow the category Dollar Growth by Segment: Fresh Focused Fresh Enthusiasts Center Store Enthusiasts Center Store Focused Total Moderates Fresh Chicken Canned Soup Wine Source: Nielsen Homescan Panel, 52 weeks ending 03/29/2014 & YAGO

63 Center Store Enthusiasts Who are they more likely to be?
WHO BUYS WHAT They shop differently- But Each segment has an IMPACT Across Aisles and OUTLETS Fresh Focused Fresh Enthusiasts Moderates Center Store Enthusiasts Center Store Focused Who are they more likely to be? Affluent singles Affluent, mid-size families Large families Start-up families Senior singles >120 <80 Index to Total Panel Avg Store Trip $36.85 $37.35 $35.15 $33.22 $32.16 125 trips 138 trips 162 trips 189 trips 197 trips Store Visits Channel Trips Index $21.13 $17.87 $14.69 $11.88 $8.84 Avg Fresh Trip $23.31 $25.36 $25.39 $24.64 $23.25 Avg Center Trip Channel: Mass/Super Warehouse Convenience/Gas Drug $2MM+ Grocery Source: Fresh Segmentation, Nielsen Homescan Total Shopper View Panel, 52 weeks ending 03/29/2014

64 = size indicates % of trip dollars
BUT It’s STILL All Connected And STEADY– Beyond DEPARTMENT and Aisle Borders Seafood Dairy Meat Deli Dry Grocery Beverage Center HBC Non-Food Frozen Produce Percent of trips Cafe Florist Rx Bakery = size indicates % of trip dollars Source: Nielsen Perishables Group Total Shopper Study, Homescan Total Shopper View Specialty Panel, 52 weeks ending 3/29/14

65 Evolution of food retail
PAST PRESENT FUTURE SHOPPER Retailer: grocery dominated Retailer: more & more competition Center store: brands, innovation Center store: disparate growth Put shoppers at the center, take a holistic approach Fresh: commodity driven Fresh: growing more savvy

66 CONVENIENT OPTIONS BECOMING MORE POPULAR; consumers pay more for a different kind of value
VALUE-ADDED FRUIT VALUE-ADDED VEGETABLES Meal Prep Side Dish Snacking Trays Fresh Cut Fruit Jars and Cups Overwrap HOUSEHOLD PENETRATION +0.8% PURCHASE FREQUENCY +2.1% DOLLAR SALES +11.9% HOUSEHOLD PENETRATION +2.0% PURCHASE FREQUENCY +4.0% DOLLAR SALES +13.5% Frozen buyers are decreasing purchase of similar product Source: Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts®, 52 Weeks Ending 12/28/13; Total U.S. FCA Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts® Shopper Insights powered by Spire, 52 Weeks ending 12/28/13

67 EXOTIC FLAVORS AND NEW CONSUMER EXPERIENCES
SPECIALTY FRUITS DOLLAR SALES +14.9% SPEND PER TRIP +3.1% MANGO SALES +17.0% POMEGRANATE SALES +34.7% PAPAYA SALES +21.3% Old products deliver a new experience Milennialls pay a premium for a unique eating experience Source: Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts®, 52 Weeks Ending 12/28/13; Total U.S. FCA, PMA 2013 trade show Nielsen Perishables Group FreshFacts® Shopper Insights powered by Spire, 52 Weeks ending 12/28/13

68 HEALTHY ISN’T HEALTHY enough
These commodities didn’t actually become healthier did they? SUPERFOODS CALORIE COUNTING Opportunity for messaging of health benefits in produce Source: PMA 2013 trade show, brand websites

69 Connecting to a specific eating occasion
RISE OF SNACKING STRONG GROWTH IN BRANDED OPTIONS Opportunities exist for premium-priced offerings Source: PMA 2013 trade show, brand websites

70 EXAMPLE of CONNECTIVITY FINDINGS
Correlations and household in common can confirm and surprise with the strength of what’s connected Fresh meat sales connections strongest outside of fresh while the fresh departments are most tied to each other Growth in INDEPENDENTS like deli prepared foods indicate a retailer is winning a unique buyer, a unique trip or both BEEF INDEPENDENT = Low number of touch points across the store – incremental opportunities ANCHOR = Highly connected categories – critical to everyone’s success .32 .17 .42 Average correlation between any two categories Average correlation between deli prepared categories and others Average correlation between beef and any other category Source: Nielsen Perishables Group Total Store Connectivity Study

71 EXAMPLE CONNECTIVITY STUDY FINDINGS
Demographics and behavioral factors also play a vital role in understanding which consumers drive category connections across the store Chicken breasts Macaroni and cheese Pork chops Macaroni and cheese Ground beef Macaroni and cheese Purchase pairing indexes high for… Purchase pairing indexes high for… Purchase pairing indexes high for… Convenience and value focused Low – middle income Families with children in-home Health-focused Middle – affluent income Families with young children or Couples without children Price-focused Families with children Couples without children The Power of Sales + Shopper in Connectivity Demographics and behavioral factors also play a vital role in understanding which consumers drive category connections Source: Nielsen Perishables - The Full Article At

72 Initial Finding: An “Anchor” like fresh beef connects In Different Ways to Different Buyers
Each connection reveals a unique buyer profile- showing opportunity for different solutions even in similar categories SIDE DISHES1: Potatoes 0.71 Canned goods: 0.68 FZ vegetables: 0.62 SWEETS/DESSERTS1: Frozen dessert: 0.69 Fresh cakes: 0.68 Grocery cookies: 0.56 Highest Indexing Demographics/Fresh Segment for Beef And Side Dishes: Highest Indexing Demographics/Fresh Segment for Beef And Sweets: Canned Veg2 Frozen Desserts2 Grocery Cookies Frozen Veg BEEF BEEF Empty Nesters Less Educated Couples Hispanic-skew Fresh/Center Moderates Gen X to Boomers Affluent Higher Education HH with older children Fresh Enthusiasts Empty Nesters and HH w older children Affluent Comfortable country Fresh Enthusiast Gen X Less educated Young families Mid-income Hispanic Fresh Potatoes Fresh Cakes Boomers and older Lower education levels Couples Hispanic-skew (Similar to Canned Veg) Rural Fresh Focused Small and young families Mid-income to affluent Hispanic Fresh Enthusiasts Sources: 1- Nielsen Total Store Connectivity Study sales correlation modeling, preliminary findings as of July 2014 ; 2- Nielsen Homescan Total Shopper View Specialty Panel, latest 52 weeks ending 3/29/14


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