Friday, 10 August 2018

Private brands sell well

Private brands are owned and marketed by retailers and other channel members

Private brands traditionally sell well during periods of economic recession. That certainly was the case after the 2008 financial crash that led to a global financial downturn, when more expensive national and global brands saw price-conscious consumers switching to less-expensive private brands for many categories of purchases.

In fact, premium private brands have been part of the reason for consumers to switch away from other brands. These provide a 'halo effect' to help boost the image of all the private-brand products in the marketer's portfolio and make these products look more appealing in the eyes of consumers.

Private brands reportedly outperform national brands in four European nations, according to one source. They are strongest in the UK grocery market; research shows consumers consider the quality to be equal to that of national brands (and some consumers say the quality of private brands even exceeds that of national brands).

Many UK supermarket shoppers are admittedly looking for value. The rise of deep-discount grocery chains like Aldi and Lidl is due, in part, to the attractiveness of private brands that provide price-conscious consumers with quality alternatives to national brands.

This post updates private brand coverage in Chapter 6 of my Essential Guide to Marketing Planning, 4e.