CPG

Connecting with Female Consumers During Fall & Halloween

Connecting with Female Consumers During Fall & Halloween

Making the Most of the Fall Season Amongst American Shoppers

Autumn is almost here! We encourage our clients to think of seasons and major holidays, like Autumn and Halloween, as a series of “mini events” in an effort to stretch out the season and create more purchase opportunities

Stretching Halloween Marketing Into an Entire Season

Stretching Halloween Marketing Into an Entire Season

Making the Most of the Fall Season Amongst American Shoppers

Autumn is almost here! We encourage our clients to think of seasons and major holidays, like Autumn and Halloween, as a series of “mini events” in an effort to stretch out the season and create more purchase opportunities

Shopper Marketing this Fall

Shopper Marketing this Fall

Making the Most of the Fall Season Amongst American Shoppers

Autumn is almost here! We encourage our clients to think of seasons and major holidays, like Autumn and Halloween, as a series of “mini events” in an effort to stretch out the season and create more purchase opportunities

New Report | Consumers Prepare for Winter

New Report | Consumers Prepare for Winter

We recently asked our panel of consumers how they envision their lives changing come winter, as well as what products they anticipate buying and stocking up on. Many of them are expecting the transition to cold weather and more time at home and indoors to be difficult.

Understanding Consumer Needs this Winter

Understanding Consumer Needs this Winter

What will your consumers expect of your brand this fall?

How will your brand show consumers how to use your products to embrace comfort at home this fall season? Work with us to conduct virtual shopper research now to get the insights you need to craft the best marketing messaging and imagery to resonate with them this autumn. Learn more about our research below.

Halloween is Not Cancelled

Making the Most of the Fall + Halloween Shopping Season Amid the Pandemic

Autumn is almost here and Halloween is our next major holiday. I know a certain segment of our population here in the USA is keen to cancel just about everything, but rest assure many consumers will still be celebrating Halloween this year.

We encourage our PR clients to think of seasons and major holidays, like Autumn and Halloween, as a series of “mini events” in an effort to stretch out the season and create more purchase opportunities.

autumn food marketing pumpkins PR

Even in a pandemic, here are just a few of the “mini events” (and buying opportunities) you can still build shopper marketing around.

Build Shopper Marketing Around These ‘Mini-Events’ Leading up to Halloween

  • Front door decor - People are already eager to embrace fall. Bring on the pumpkins, pumpkin spice lattes, and all the fun home decorations that can help us keep our spirits up during this challenging year. Fall decor at front doors is an American tradition, whether someone has a big house or a tiny apartment. We need all the cheer we can get during 2020; I expect people to keep decorating their doorways and I hear some plan to be even more elaborate since we’re all spending so much more time at home these days.

  • Pumpkin picking - Picking pumpkins outside is still a fun activity most people can feel comfortable participating in.

  • Halloween home decorations - In addition to the fall door decor, which typically comes fairly early on in the season (September,) we expect more people to take their home decoration for Halloween even more seriously. We’re not just talking jack-o'-lanterns, but also larger-than-life, inflatable ghosts & pumpkins, projections onto houses, and anything else to amuse and entertain.

  • Costume shopping - Although many will need to wear a face mask on top, it sounds like everyone is still keen to dress up, either buying new costumes or perhaps recycling some from years past.

  • Halloween grocery haul - In addition to purchasing Halloween candy (probably quite a bit less than usual,) many plan to do a big grocery shop just ahead of the holiday to make a special dinner and sweet treats at home. Since trick or treating may not be possible, many people we’ve spoken with are planning to make the holiday special by staying home and making special treats for their immediate household, or with friends, at a safe distance.

  • Halloween treat bags - Instead of traditional ‘trick or treating,’ several folks we’ve conducted research with are planning to offer individually wrapped treat bags (at a distance) to others they know personally. Many are even planning small gatherings, Halloween treat meet & greets, outside to share candy and enjoy seeing costumes with neighbors.

Fall door decor found at American’s homes

If your brand produces products, like Halloween candy, that are ideal for fall and Halloween, be sure to show consumers safe and socially-distanced ways to incorporate your products into a 2020 type of Halloween experience.

Halloween Holiday Merchandising

Here is a Halloween end cap we spotted recently at a Whole Foods Market store. Have you noticed or produced any creative holiday merchandising for Halloween this year?

halloween_whole_foods_market_shoppers

Speaking of holidays, Green Purse PR is now producing a monthly calendar, a list of holidays (major holidays and marketing holidays) to help guide your PR and social marketing programs. Subscribe to our monthly e-newsletter, #GetInHerCart, here to get access.

- Lisa Mabe-Konstantopoulos, Founder, Green Purse PR

PR Campaign for Winter at Home | Seasonal Marketing

PR Campaign for Winter at Home | Seasonal Marketing

Seasons and holidays fuel the shopping and spending machine here in the USA.

We are offering a winter seasonal campaign, all around the theme of comfort at home to drive sales of your products this upcoming fall season. Work with Green Purse PR to keep your brand top-of-mind and get more of your products into American consumers’ shopping carts this winter.

Comforts of Home | Understanding Consumer Needs this Fall & Winter

Comforts of Home | Understanding Consumer Needs this Fall & Winter

What will your consumers expect of your brand this fall & winter?

How will your brand show consumers how to use your products to embrace the ‘comforts of home’ this fall & winter? Work with us to conduct virtual shopper research now to get the insights you need to craft the best marketing messaging and imagery to resonate with them. Learn more about our research below.

PR Campaign for Fall at Home | Seasonal Marketing

PR Campaign for Fall at Home | Seasonal Marketing

Seasons and holidays fuel the shopping and spending machine here in the USA.

We are offering a seasonal campaign, all around the theme of comfort, wellness and “comfort food,” to drive sales of your products this upcoming fall season. Work with Green Purse PR to keep your brand top-of-mind and get more of your products into American consumers’ shopping carts this fall.

Understanding Consumer Needs this Fall

Understanding Consumer Needs this Fall

What will your consumers expect of your brand this fall?

How will your brand show consumers how to use your products to embrace comfort at home this fall season? Work with us to conduct virtual shopper research now to get the insights you need to craft the best marketing messaging and imagery to resonate with them this autumn. Learn more about our research below.

Coronavirus is Changing Everything | Those Who Know Their Consumers Best Positioned to Thrive

Coronavirus is Changing Everything

Those Who Know Their Consumers Best Positioned to Thrive

Now that we are in the pandemic times, consumer behavior has dramatically changed from what it was just a few months ago. Answer this — how are your target consumers learning about your brand and products now? How are consumers shopping for your products? How are they using your products in their home? All of these areas of consumer behavior have changed and are still evolving.

Photo source: Getty Images

Photo source: Getty Images

Shoppers are now much more intentional about what they plan to buy.

Many of the folks I've interviewed so far, since the COVID-19 lockdown, (see our recent shopper research looking ahead to Summer) are what I call "mission shoppers" - consumers who are looking to get what's on their list and get out ASAP.

Since the pandemic started, I’ve had several clients and new clients hire us to conduct virtual research for them as they seek to keep a constant pulse on how their consumers think, behave and buy during these changing times. Our clients are testing marketing concepts, everything from TV spots to social media posts, and how to announce things like new product launches, all to ensure the messaging and imagery resonates, and is not perceived as inappropriate for the times.

Food & grocery, beverages (alcohol & non-alcoholic,) household products (like disinfectants and cleaning products,) and children’s products (educational, food & entertainment) have been the categories we’ve conducted the most research for recently.

As you may know, we most often focus on in-person, qualitative research, in the form of shop-alongs inside stores or inside consumers’ homes. For the foreseeable future, all of our shopper interviews will be conducted virtually.

amazon shopper

Conducting Consumer Research to Better Adapt to Evolving Needs & Expectations

During difficult economic times, we often see the bigger, better-known brands perform the best. While there are certainly many factors that play into why that is, one of them is certainly research. The likes of Procter & Gamble, Kimberly-Clark, Reckitt Benckiser Group, Johnson & Johnson, The Clorox Company and The Coca-Cola Company are constantly keeping a pulse on how their target consumers are learning about, shopping for and using their products. Knowing your consumer, not just guessing, is always important, but now more than ever. If you want to survive, or better than that, thrive, during this new age, you better be a few steps ahead. In order to do that, you must know what your consumer is thinking and doing now so you can adapt and best serve their needs.

Contact us to stop the guessing game and get real insights about your consumers that you can start putting into practice now. We can leverage our own panel of consumers, recruit your consumers or help you build your own consumer panel.

Making the Most of Fall + Thanksgiving

Making the Most of Fall + Thanksgiving

Want to make the most of the Fall season leading up to Thanksgiving? See these shopper marketing ideas to use this season.

Making the most of the Fall + Halloween Shopping Season

Making the Most of the Fall + Halloween Shopping Season

I’m a big fan of using holidays (major holidays and even the so called made up marketing holidays) and seasons as a basis for planning your shopper marketing activities, in places like social media and inside stores. Have you thought of considering the Fall + Halloween season as a series of “mini events” in an effort to stretch out the season and create more purchase opportunities?

You may be tempted to think of some holidays as just a one-day events, but in reality most holidays are made up of several mini events that we can leverage in our shopper marketing. How many mini events can you think of for the Fall + Halloween season? Turns out, there’s a lot and some depend upon age and life phase. For example, to connect with parents of young children around Halloween season, here are just a few of the “mini events” (and buying opportunities) you can build shopper marketing around:

Build Shopper Marketing Around These ‘Mini-Events’ Leading to Halloween

  • Home decorating (for fall and then again for Halloween) – 2 encouraging people to have the best house on the block.

  • Pumpkin picking.

  • Booing (and also the adult version, “boozing.”)

  • Costume hunting.

  • Trick or treating.

  • School parties.

  • Neighborhood parties (suburban.)

  • At-home parties (pizza is super popular.)

My favorite from this list is booing. If you’re located in the USA and live in a suburban area + have young children, you probably know about this trend. According to a case study presented by Mars at the 2018 Shopper Marketing Conference, 7% of Americans currently participate in booing. For retailers located in suburban areas, this is a ripe opportunity just waiting to be picked.

When my house was “booed” last year

Some Halloween merchandising at Whole Foods Market

Fall door decor found at American’s homes

Here are some ways that retailers can connect with parents in suburban areas around the mini event of booing.

  • In-store shopper marketing like end caps that invite shoppers to boo their neighbors. For a limited time, curate a special selection of products ideal for booing – boo bags, tags, candy. Because you usually only boo a few houses (we do two) and because you’re likely to boo peoples’ homes that you know well, you can encourage better quality, more expensive candy for these, than candy given out in much larger amounts for trick or treating.

  • Educational signage that offers guidance on booing, why to do it and what to include in your boo bag.

  • Host a Halloween prep in-store event one weekend sampling healthier candy and sweets options + educate on fun ways for families to celebrate the season.

  • Website landing page and accompanying social media and email marketing driving people to a site all about making their boo bag the best on the block.

In fact, Green Purse PR creates an annual list of holidays, specifically for food companies. It’s called our Holidays List for Food Marketing. It’s a social media planning resource available here (stay tuned for the 2020 version coming out soon.)

Halloween merchandising at The Market inside The Twitter Building, San Francisco, California

Target’s Halloween section, Hyde and Eek!

Teal Pumpkin Project for Halloween at Target

Halloween signage at Target

- Lisa Mabe-Konstantopoulos, Founder, Green Purse PR

Creating “Mini-Events” for Holidays + Celebrating Female Leadership | Recap from the Path to Purchase Expo

Creating “Mini-Events” for Holidays + Celebrating Female Leadership | Recap from the Path to Purchase Expo

I attended a shopper marketing conference and trade show, the Path to Purchase Expo, by the Path to Purchase Institute for the first time this year. It was held in Minneapolis, Minnesota during the first week of October and was attended by a lot of big consumer packaged good (CPG) brands, retailers, creative agencies, and technology service providers. The likes of retailers such as Walmart and Kroger, brands like Coca-Cola and The Clorox Co. and service providers like Volta and Aha!ogy were there. I noticed a few from the natural products industry – Organic Valley and the Fair Trade Association. There were a few from the meat industry as well – Hormel, Superior Farms (lamb) and the American Lamb Board.

I’ve been reading the Path to Purchase Institute’s trade publication, Shopper Marketing Magazine, for years, - I’ve even had my work featured in it before, but this was my first time attending one of their conferences and I’m glad I went. I attended mostly because I want to learn – learn what big CPG brands and mass retailers are doing to understand and connect with shoppers, both from a research and shopper marketing perspective.

While there, I also participated in the inaugural When Women Lead Symposium made up of other female leaders who work in shopper marketing. Helping to promote female leadership in my industry (the natural products industry) is naturally something I’m an advocate of. As a female entrepreneur and thought leader, I’m fortunate to have the opportunity to share my expertise with companies around the world on the topic of marketing to women.

Lisa of Green Purse PR participating in the When Women Lead Symposium. Photo source: Path to Purchase Expo.

I’ve had the opportunity to work with several clients that have female CEOs and leadership. In fact, nearly all of the clients Green Purse PR has worked with have excellent track records (in my opinion) of valuing the opinions of women and ensuring their voices are heard, recognized and celebrated at the highest levels.

One of the female leaders that immediately come to mind is Dalene Wray of OBE Organic, a leading organic, grassfed beef company from the Outback of Australia. Dalene works in a male-dominated industry – agriculture and meat, but is continuously ‘kicking glass’ as we like to say. She’s become one of the most recognized female voices in Australian agriculture and is now sought out and awarded for her unique expertise by Government and industry bodies. It’s not uncommon to find Dalene on a speaker panel or in a working group at an industry event in Australia, Hong Kong, New York City or Saudi Arabia where she is the only female on the stage sharing her voice. In addition to sharing her own voice in a big way, Dalene is a champion for others – for other women (like me,) for promoting diversity in general within Australian agriculture and also reconciliation for indigenous peoples of Australia. In fact, OBE Organic was one of the first Australian agribusinesses to adopt a Reconsilation Action Plan, a plan to create social change and economic opportunities for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples through relationships, respect and opportunities.

Even though the CPG industry as a whole is mostly ran by men at the upper levels, we’re seeing more and more women take up leadership roles. I’m happy to have connected with a group of women and men here in the USA who are dedicated to helping create, encourage and celebrate female leadership across CPG, retail, and in my case, shopper marketing and the natural products industry.

Finally, I do want to share a few key takeaways that I learned from the conference portion of the Expo from my unique #GetInHerCart perspective.

I’m a big fan of using holidays (major holidays and even the so called made up marketing holidays) and seasons as a basis for planning your shopper marketing activities, in places like social media and inside stores. Some folks from Mars Wrigley Confectionery gave a presentation focused on the Halloween holiday and how to think of it in terms of several “mini events” in an effort to stretch out the season and create more purchase opportunities.

You may be tempted to think of some holidays as just a one-day events, but in reality most holidays are made up of several mini events that we can leverage in our shopper marketing. For example, Mars shared a case study for the current, 2018 Halloween season that’s in market right now. Companies like Mars are launching their Halloween shopper marketing campaigns as early as August now.

How many mini events can you think of for the Fall/Halloween season? Turns out, there’s a lot and some depend upon age and life phase. For example, to connect with parents of young children around Halloween season, here are just a few of the “mini events” (and buying opportunities) you can build shopper marketing around:

  • Home decorating (for fall and then again for Halloween) – 2 encouraging people to have the best house on the block.

  • Pumpkin picking.

  • Booing (and also the adult version, “boozing.”)

  • Costume hunting.

  • Trick or treating.

  • School parties.

  • Neighborhood parties (suburban.)

  • At-home parties (pizza is super popular.)

My favorite from this list is booing. If you’re located in the USA and live in a suburban area + have young children, you might know about this. The case study that Mars shared indicated that just 7% of Americans currently participate in booing. For retailers located in suburban areas, this is a ripe opportunity just waiting to be picked.

My house just got booed this week!

Some Halloween merchandising I noticed recently at a Whole Foods Market

Here are some ways that retailers can connect with parents in suburban areas around the mini event of booing.

  • In-store shopper marketing like end caps that invite shoppers to boo their neighbors. For a limited time, curate a special selection of products ideal for booing – boo bags, tags, candy. Because you usually only boo a few houses (we do two) and because you’re likely to boo peoples’ homes that you know well, you can encourage better quality, more expensive candy for these, than candy given out in much larger amounts for trick or treating.

  • Educational signage that offers guidance on booing, why to do it and what to include in your boo bag.

  • Host a Halloween prep in-store event one weekend sampling healthier candy and sweets options + educate on fun ways for families to celebrate the season.

  • Website landing page and accompanying social media and email marketing driving people to a site all about making their boo bag the best on the block.

In fact, Green Purse PR creates an annual list of holidays, specifically for food companies. It’s called our Holidays List for Food Marketing. It’s a social media planning resource we created for the first time for 2018 and we just released our 2019 edition. Click here to download our 15-page list of holidays for food marketing.

Halloween merchandising at The Market inside The Twitter Building, San Francisco, California

Target’s Halloween section, Hyde and Eek!

Teal Pumpkin Project for Halloween at Target

Halloween signage at Target

Lisa of Green Purse PR meeting with exhibitors at the show. Photo source: Path to Purchase Expo.

Lisa of Green Purse PR listening to one of the workshops. Photo source: Path to Purchase Expo.

- Lisa Mabe-Konstantopoulos, Founder, Green Purse PR