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Release Date: 2008-02-27
Report Length: 37 pages
Market Coverage: US Market
Methodology: The quantitative findings in this report are based on the results of a survey fielded through Hartman Interactive, in December 2007, with a sample size of 796. Qualitative findings are based on contextual language analysis, which examines themes in hundreds of statements made by shoppers as well as online discussions about the topic of what buying local means to consumers.
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What does the term “buy local" mean to today's consumers?
“Local" has become a quality distinction marker for food consumption as well as environmental causes. While “buy local" is a phrase that continues to grow in popularity, the specifics of what such a term means to consumers is hazy. Many mainstream consumers are just beginning to think about the idea in terms of everyday products and practices.
Pulse Report: Consumer Understanding of Buying Local is designed to provide a current view on where “buy local" is at with consumers and how this acquired knowledge translates into marketing opportunities.
Like organic products in the late 1990's, the fervor for all things “local," ranging from farm stand goods to civic involvement, seems to be everywhere today. On the surface, the rising interest among consumers in local products might be misconstrued as a growing fascination with fresh produce culled from the explosive growth of farmers markets in the U.S. To be sure, fresh agricultural goods and romanticized notions of family farms are a key part of what make up local products in the minds of consumers, yet consumers are also avidly interested in supporting local businesses and producers that they believe reflect their community's values.
What's Inside
The issues surrounding consumer involvement with the concept of “buying local" will only continue to grow in complexity. This report is your guide to understanding consumer perceptions of what “buy local" means to consumers in the context of products, brands, retailers, restaurants and businesses. The report examines:
Key Features
Consumers are influenced by a range of factors to purchase local products. These influences range from notions of freshness to curiosity about product narratives to beliefs that buying local benefits local economies and environments. This report examines a variety of potential methods that marketers, retailers and restaurateurs can utilize to better align themselves with communities in which they sell or operate.
Many factors are currently at play to influence the current and future picture of organic consumption. Our research clearly reveals that while organics are still an important cue to millions of consumers for products that contribute to healthy lifestyles, conventional culture is now including organic as but one of many symbolic distinctions of equal importance beneath the overall moniker of “quality.” Specifically, this report shows where organic now resides in terms of importance in consumers’ minds.
As consumers and companies navigate the turbulent waters of a difficult economy, the findings contained within The Many Faces of Organic bears new economic and cultural significance that cannot be ignored by manufacturers, marketers, retailers and other stakeholders.
What You Can Expect
The Many Faces of Organic 2008 explores how far into the mainstream organic has reached—representing ever more ideas and practices to a wider audience—and how any changes in behavior will influence further innovation.
This report integrates new primary quantitative and qualitative research to update the consumer perspective on the World of Organics with a longitudinal perspective that allows us to see into the future of organic by understanding its past. It provides a present-day, consumer-centric account of the world of organics and what lies beyond organic.
The Hartman Group is a part of The Hartman Group, Inc.
Copyright 2008. All rights reserved.