Title: Household Panel Data Reference
1Household Panel Data Reference
2Household Panel Data Analyses
The types of analyses that can be done with
Household Panel data can be broadly classified
to address the following issues
- Understanding Basic Purchase Behavior
- Market Summary Reports
- Purchase Dynamics
- Deal Measures
- Identifying Key Target Groups
- Demographics
- Purchase Behavior
- Heavy/Light
- Loyal
- Deal Sensitive
- Evaluating New Product Introduction
- Trial Repeat
- Source of Volume
- Other Diagnostics
- Combination Purchasing
- New/Lost/Retained Buyer Flow Analysis
- Shopping Expenditures
- Market Structure/ Segmentation Study
3Basic Applications
- Market Summaries
- Purchase Distributions (H/M/L)
- Demographic Profiles
4Market Summary Report
- Applications/Questions
- How many households purchase this category ? My
brand ? - Is my brand at a disadvantage in terms of
purchase size or purchase frequency ? - How deal-reliant are my buyers ?
- How deal-reliant are my competitive buyers ?
- How have things changed over time ?
- Report Model
- Provides either a comprehensive snapshot or a
dynamic look at consumer purchasing behavior for
a category, its major segments and brands. - Aids in identifying appropriate marketing
strategies and tactics.
5Market Summary Basics
Consumer behavior data complements sales and
share measurement data. Sales of Buyers
x Amount Purchased per Buyer
Penetration x Buying Rate
Occasions per Buyer x Units per Occasion
(Purchase Frequency x Purchase Size)
6Household Measure Definitions
- Penetration - of total U.S. households making
at least one purchase of the specified item. - Volume per Buyer - (Buying Rate) How much the
average buyer purchases in a given time frame. - Volume per Occasion - Average volume purchased
per household each time a purchase was made. - Occasions per Buyer - Average number of times the
specified item was purchased. - Share of Requirements - (Loyalty) Percent of the
specified items buyers total category volume
accounted for by the specified item. - Elapsed days - (Purchase Cycle) Average number of
days between purchases among buyers of the
specified item who made two or more purchases. - of One Time Buyers - of all the specified
items buyers who purchased the item only once.
7Household Measure Definitions
- Volume on Total Deal - Proportion of all volume
purchased on a consumer perceived coupon,
feature, display, TPR. - Volume with Coupon - of volume purchased on a
deal specified by panelist as coupon. - Average Price - Average price paid
- Average Non-Deal Price - Average price paid when
no consumer perceived deals were present. - Average Deal Price - Average price paid for
purchases made on a consumer perceived deal. - Volume Purchased by Outlet Type - of
specified items volume that was purchased in
each outlet. - Buyers Projected - Number of households
purchasing the specified item. - Raw Buyers (N ) - (Sample Size) Unprojected
panel households purchasing the specified item.
8Marketing Tools Affecting Consumer Purchase
Components
- Purchase Components
- Penetration
- Buying Rate
- Purchase Frequency
- Purchase Size
- Tools for Change
- Advertising
- Product Offering
- Couponing, Features, Displays
- Trial Packs
- Product Sampling, Distribution
- Competitive Activity
- Smaller Package Sizes
- Couponing
- Displays
- In-Pack/On-Pack Promotions
- Sweepstakes/Contests
- Advertising Alternative Uses
- Two-For Deals
- Bonus Packs
- Trade Deals
- Displays with Larger Sizes
9Common Errors or Cautions in the Interpretation
of Market Summary Analysis
- As a general rule, none of the base measurements
are additive ! - Buying rate, purchase frequency and purchase
size, represent average - behavior and should not be taken literally !
- Average purchase frequency can not be used to
calculate purchase cycle. - Example 365 days divided by average annual
category frequency of 10 times does not equate to
a purchase cycle of 36.5 days. - Reason Average purchase frequency includes
households who make only one purchase during the
given time frame and, therefore, do not have a
purchase cycle. This measure can only be
calculated among households with a purchase
frequency of greater than one. - Loyalty (Share of Requirements) measurements over
shorter time periods will almost always lead to
higher figures. - Penetration-based marketing efforts can have a
negative impact on loyalty. The more new brand
buyers that are brought in, the greater the
likelihood that total brand loyalty will erode.
The reverse is also true. - Declines in penetration levels almost always lead
to increased loyalty levels.
10Demographic Profiles
- Applications/Questions
- What types of households typically buy my
products ? - Is my product positioned (through advertising and
promotion) to reach these buyers? - How do the buyers of my brand compare to buyers
of my competitors ? - Should I target my advertising to buyers of their
products ? - Should I introduce a product similar to my
competitors to appeal to a different customer
profile ? - How has the profile of my buyers changed ?
- Did my line extension bring in a different type
of buyer ?
- Report Model
- Identifies those demographic groups which make up
the largest portions of a brands total buyer
base as well as a disproportionate share of
sales. - Provides a complete picture of the
characteristics for brand buyers and other groups
of interest.
11Demographic Definitions
What are the demographic characteristics that we
most commonly utilize in analyses?
- Household Income
- Household Size
- Female Head Age
- Age/Presence of Children
- Female Head Employment
- Female Head Education
- Household Head Occupation
- Race/Origin
- Household Lifestages
- Household Affluency
- County Size
- Census Regions
12Demographic Profile Definitions
- Household Lifestages
- Young Singles - Households with one member under
35 years old. - Childless Younger Couples - 1 member households,
under 35 years old with no children under 18. - New Families - Households with children under 6
years old only. - Maturing Families - Households with children aged
6-17 years old. - Established Families - Households with children
aged 13-17 years. - Middle-Aged Singles - Households with one member
aged between 35-54 years old. - Middle-Aged Childless Couples - 1 member
households, aged between 35-54 years old, with no
children under 18. - Older Singles - Households with one member over
55 years old. - Empty Nesters - 1 member households, aged
between 55-64, with no children under 18.
13Demographic Profile Definitions
- Per Capita Income Definitions
- HHs are Defined by Poor Getting By
Comfortable Affluent - 1 Member Income 0-9,999 10-19,999
20-39,999 40,000 - 2 Member Income 0-11,999 12-24,999
25-49,999 50,000 - 3 Member Income 0-14,999 15-29,999
30-59,999 60,000 - 4 Member Income 0-19,999 20-39,999
40-69,999 70,000 - 5 Member Income 0-24,999 25-49,999
50-99,999 100,000
14Common Errors or Cautions in the
Interpretation/Use of Demographic Profiles
- Use caution when examining demographic profiles
among buyer groups that contain less than 200 raw
(unprojected) sample households. - Use caution when interpreting results from any
demographic segment in which the raw buyer count
is less than 30 households. - Analyses of indices can be misleading without
also examining the relative size of a demographic
segment. High volume or high buyer indices may
not offer much potential if a segment accounts
for a small percentage of the population.
15Comparing Household and Store Level Data
- Projected volume from the household panel can be
compared to universe estimates from scanning data
or shipment data. - While projected volume should not be expected to
match exactly, the data should be directionally
similar in terms of brand shares and trends. - An estimated 10 of Scantrack volume is purchased
for use outside the home and, therefore, would
not be reported by the panel. - The two services are sampling different
universes - Scantrack 2MM Grocery Stores
- Household Contiguous U.S. Households
- Scantrack samples scanning stores only
- Household collects purchase data from all stores
- Sampling ratios are more robust for Scantrack
than Household - Scantrack 1 in every 11 stores is a sample store
- Household 1 in every 2400 households is a
panelist (40,000 household panel)
16Issues to consider when comparing Panel and
Scantrack data
- Scantrack measures all volume moving through
2MM grocery stores. - Household measures volume consumed by households
usually in the home. - Some consumer purchases never make it into the
home (i.e. candy bars, canned soda, single-serve
snacks, travel size HBAs) - Industrial purchases at retail (laundromats,
day care centers) would not be captured. - Basis for volume projection is different
- Scantrack projects to all commodity volume
- Household projects to Total U.S. population based
on household type incidence. - Outlet types are self-classified by panelists
(given guidelines) - Snantrack sample stores and organizations are
specifically identified in the Scantrack sample.