Consumers Going for Private v Name Brands

In Michigan we would switch to garden variety vegetables in Summer as there were plenty of truck farms around and you could get the veggie fresh. In Arizona, those small fruit and vegetable stands do not exist.

“We find that taste is positively correlated with the decision to choose brand-name foods over cheaper substitutes,” Balagtas said. Consumers perceive brand-name beverages to taste better than generics and thus are more likely to purchase branded products even at a premium. But fewer consumers believe that brands are associated with better taste in the meat and fruit and vegetable aisles, and thus fewer are willing to pay a premium for those products.

“Across all food categories, most consumers do not believe that brand-name foods are more nutritious or made from better ingredients or safer than store brands,” Balagtas said. “Our finding that taste is the main driver of consumers’ valuation of brand names is consistent with results from our food values survey questions, where respondents consistently rank taste as the most important attribute when shopping for food.”

While taste may be better with Brand names, the rise in pricing for food products has caused people to look for alternatives. In this case it is canned goods which are packaged under different names other than Libbys, etc. Is the taste the same? Some people would say there is no difference. Article by Quartz says peole have found the taste to be similar. Read on . . .

“Private label brands have gone from black-and-white to technicolor,” Michael Zakkour, founder of consulting firm 5 New Digital, told Quartz in an interview.

Zakkour argues these products were previously “relegated to the bottom shelf,” often viewed as lower-quality alternatives to big-name brands. Today, however, many private-label offerings are just as good, if not better, than their branded counterparts.

The way consumers view private labels has also evolved, especially in recent years. “Consumers no longer perceive private labels as inferior or generic,” Elizabeth Lafontaine, director of research at foot-traffic analytics firm Placer.ai, told Quartz in an interview. Retailers such as Trader Joe’s have helped shift this perception, she notes.

According to Numerator’s report, Aldi leads the pack by ratio of private-label sales; its house brands account for 80% of total sales. Trader Joe’s follows closely in second place at 70%, while Costco takes third with 35%.

The recent rise of private labels is more than just a trend – it’s a fundamental shift in how we shop and perceive value, says Motif Brands’ Newman. As these products continue to offer better quality at comparably lower price points, consumers will likely continue to embrace them, especially if they “address a need or a reason” in the market.