- As Consumers Lose Their Appetite, Food Brands Fight to Keep . . .
As Consumers Lose Their Appetite, Food Brands Fight to Keep Wall St Happy Packaged food companies are struggling to adjust — and profit — as tastes, waistlines and wallets change
- There are signs consumers are losing their appetite for big . . .
It’s the latest consumer food company to lower its sales outlook for the year Campbell’s and Kraft Heinz expect business to slow down, as well
- From Pepsi to Chipotle, big brands are worried about U. S . . .
Economists have noted that a long stretch of low unemployment and rising incomes have helped Americans keep shopping Makers of our food and home essentials, including Pepsi and Procter Gamble,
- US consumers fight back by shifting from name brands to store . . .
Fed up with prices that remain about 19%, on average, above where they were before the pandemic, consumers are fighting back In grocery stores, they’re shifting away from name brands to store-brand items, switching to discount stores or simply buying fewer items like snacks or gourmet foods
- The value-seeking consumer | Deloitte Insights
With persistent inflation and consumer seeking more value for money, competitors could lose out to brands offering more than low prices
- Why Brands Keep Letting Us Down—And Why We Keep Falling for It
How brands lose credibility, why consumers have wised up, and what it means for the future of marketing and business
- Shrinkflation: Are brands losing customers in this covert . . .
Brands have been quietly shrinking the size of some products for a while but consumers are getting wise to this moneysaving trick and voting with their wallets
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