In the survey the respondents were given 82 food categories and were asked how often they consumed each category and why.
The results showed that although convenient products aimed at busy city workers, they were becoming increasingly popular amongst over 55s, as 17.1% of their consumption was motivated by this need. According to Canadean, manufacturers who only targeted the busiest consumers were missing a large proportion of potential customers.
“At the moment there are very few global products targeted directly at older consumers and these tend to be more functional,” said Kirsty Nolan, analyst from Canadean.
No need to be patronising
As old age is often accompanied by a loss of strength and dexterity in hands and wrists, some producers aimed to make their products more accessible to older consumers.
A packaging of nut assortments from Emerald now had indents to improve grip and a shortened rotation required to open the products. Similarly, Cheddar Cheese biscuits from United Biscuits had a horseshoe tab which could be pulled to tear open the pack.
“While this packaging has been designed for elderly consumers, it is not mentioned at all on the packaging itself,” Nolan told Food Navigator.
“The key thing is that products are not seen to patronise older consumers by specifically referencing them (particularly if positioned around disease maintenance) – instead references need to be subtle,” she added.
Convenience is not just on the outside
While packaging was important, the food itself should had to be convenient and easy-to-eat.
“Products that are ready-to-eat allow on-the-go consumption, whilst those that are pre-prepared offer older consumers more free time to spend on their most favoured activities.
“The most convenient foods are those that take little preparation time. However, if we are considering older consumers they have other pressing need stakes like a demand for healthy and tasty food,” said Nolan.
“The supermarkets private label brands in the UK have been successful in targeting this with products such as fresh prepared vegetables that are suitable for microwave cooking, or assortments fully prepared and ready to add to a casserole or stew,” she added.
The research was conducted across ten countries: UK, US, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Brazil, China, Russia and India and involved 750 people per country.
“By encompassing the most important economies worldwide, and approximately half of the global population, we believe that this data provides a robust view of consumer trends globally,” said Nolan.