| 2001 News & Magazine
Articles
HISPANICS
SPEAK OUT; STUDY MEASURES HOW ACCLIMATED THIS ETHNIC
GROUP IS TO FROZEN FOODS -- ENGLISH-LANGUAGE HOUSEHOLDS
BUY MORE, STRICTLY SPANISH SPEAKERS LESS.
By
BARBARA MURRAY
07/02/2001
Supermarket News
23
Copyright 2001 Gale Group Inc. All rights reserved.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Fairchild Publications, Inc.
ACNielsen,
Schaumburg, Ill., has done a two-pronged study showing
that, contrary to popular food retailer opinion, Hispanic
shoppers buy more of certain frozen products than
do the general market shoppers. In addition, delving
more deeply into Homescan results, the study shows
that, in general, the more acculturated they are,
the more likely Hispanics are to purchase frozen foods.
With
the researcher's Scantrack ethnic service, stores
are clustered in areas with a 50% or greater Hispanic
population, based on U.S. Census data, said Matt Bell,
spokesman for ACNielsen. Product sales from those
stores are compared against such sales in stores in
the general market, and indices are generated. An
index of 100 means it's the same as the general market.
An index of 258 for frozen grape juice, for example,
which was the top-indexing item in Los Angeles stores,
means the shoppers are more than two and a half times
as likely to buy that item than is a shopper from
the mainstream.
Six
markets were tapped: Chicago, Miami, Houston, New
York, Los Angeles and San Antonio.
In
addition, the Homescan report of consumer behavior
drilled deeper into the Los Angeles market, for the
period from Dec. 26, 1999, to Dec. 23, 2000. Using
Universal Product Codes scanned in 1,300 households
of Hispanic origin, it found an index of only 46 for
the frozen food department among those who spoke Spanish
only, increasing to 71 among bilingual shoppers and
reaching 99 for those who spoke English only or preferred
English.
In
addition, the dollar-volume index showed the same
pattern, but actually rose higher than the mainstream
for the most acculturated group. The non-Hispanic
dollar volume indexed at 105. The group that prefers
Spanish only indexed at 40, by contrast. Those comfortable
in both languages indexed at 72, while the English-only
group registered an index of 138.
Isabel
Valdes, a partner in Santiago Valdes Solutions,
San Francisco, worked with ACNielsen on this study,
which tracked 1,200 categories. Comparatively speaking,
she told SN, the frozen food industry has been a little
shy in targeting the Hispanic market. "They don't
know what we can do with sales, unless they have a
well-designed campaign," said Valdes, who was
born in Chile but is now an American citizen and has
lived here 27 years. "In the beginning, it didn't
occur to me to get things like frozen pastries, pasta,
waffles and other things I didn't know existed. If
they had been advertised on Spanish-language television,
I would have known."
Valdes
said among the focus groups she worked with, women
would be cooking at home while the television played
the novellas, or soap operas. "When the commercials
come on, they stop cooking and look at the television.
It's the opposite of here [American behavior]. This
is an information-hungry consumer. They want to learn."
Among
the frozen food industry, Pillsbury -- with its Doughboy
-- stands out, she said, for reaching out to the Hispanic
consumer.
The
frozen juice category, however, indexed highest: at
136 among the newest arrivals speaking Spanish only.
It dropped to 131 among bilingual shoppers and dropped
to 82 as English was preferred. The opposite happened
with six other categories. Frozen breakfast foods,
for example, got an index of 50 among Spanish speakers,
while bilingual speakers bought this category at an
index of 83, topping at 132 for those who spoke or
preferred English only. This was the trend among the
other frozen categories as well, which were ice cream
novelties, unprepared meat or poultry, pizza, snacks
and hors d'oeuvres, vegetables and prepared foods.
Numbers started out low, increased to the middle group
and peaked as English was preferred.
In
the individual cities, SN gleaned several comments
on the market-specific results.
Eladio
Corral, owner of Casa Del Pueblo, an independent store
in Chicago, said Hispanic shoppers usually buy fresh
food rather than frozen, "except for maybe corn
on the cob, mixed vegetables, maybe frozen cakes and
waffles." Waffles didn't make the Top 12 in Chicago,
although they did in Los Angeles. No orange juice,
no frozen meat, Corral continued down the list, no
lima beans, but French fries, which were only among
the Top 12 in San Antonio. "Ice, everybody buys,"
Corral said. Ice turned up on the Chicago survey in
sixth place, while it was 10th in Houston and fourth
in Los Angeles. It didn't appear among Miami's Top
12 at all.
Morrie
Notrica, owner of the 32nd Street Market in Los Angeles
and four other stores in the region, said he had 196
feet of frozen doors but recently took out 96 feet
and replaced it with coffin cases going down the middle
of the frozen aisle, selling ice cream out of them.
"Our sales tripled," he said. First-generation
Hispanics will buy mainly ice cream, among frozen
products, he said, but the ACNielsen study pinpoints
only two markets, Miami and San Antonio, where bulk
ice cream ranks in the Top 12.
Notrica
agrees that the second generation and beyond "eat
like you and me. They are Americanized. This is the
difference between the 1970s, the 1980s and now,"
he said. "Anything featured on TV will fly. You
don't have the little old ladies shopping so much.
Wives are working, husbands are working, everybody`s
working. They eat a lot better today."
He
buys ice cream in 5-quart pails and sells 22 pallets
of it every week. It used to sell at $2.99 on sale,
$3.99 every day, until the butterfat content went
up and now it's $4.99 every day, $3.99 on sale. "We've
had Breyers, Dreyers and Haagen-Dazs. The higher the
prices, the quicker it sold," he said.
He
buys frozen yucca root and sells cases of it, and
paletas, frozen bars of fresh fruit on a stick featured
in a recent (June 21) New York Times story about the
Mexican influence on food in New York, in bags of
10 or 12. "It all depends on what part of town
you are, and the ethnic mix." Although the Hispanic
presence in L.A. has always been mostly from Mexico,
now there are Puerto Ricans and Ecuadoreans, Notrica
said.
Ken
Greenberg, vice president of ACNielsen Homescan, presented
the results at a meeting for retail executives held
this spring by the National Frozen Food Association,
based in Harrisburg, Pa.
"I
think it's important to understand all the categories,"
Greenberg told SN.
"This
measure is an important identifier of products that
are purchased more by Hispanic consumers, and it gives
the retailer the chance to inquire, why is this category
doing well?" he said. "Maybe there is a
brand in that category that has really spent, trying
to develop the category.
"In
some cases you have some big brands that are well
developed in Latin countries. In other cases, they
move to the U.S. and have never seen the whole category
before." Valdes told SN about the first time
she saw bottled salad dressing, and mistook it for
hair tonic, because salad dressing at home was made
on the spot out of vinegar or lemon juice and oil.
"Some
marketers take it for granted that consumers understand
the category or brand," said Greenberg. "Frozen
is beginning to emerge, beginning to evolve. A very
large group did not have refrigerators at home, and
forget microwaves. Now, everybody has microwaves.
Pictorials, visuals are universal."
Scanning
the UPC codes "is the first time ever in the
history of Hispanic marketing in the U.S. that we
have a scientific, consistent way to gather data.
Before, we had guess-timates. Now in some cases they
have margins of error of plus or minus 30% to 40%,"
said Valdes, who said she studied statistics at Stanford
University, Palo Alto, her alma mater.
Using
home-scanned data means it does not matter where the
item was purchased. "We even got data from products
from over the border. In the past, there was no way
to get that.
"Secondly,
this is a very rigorous scientific sample," she
added. "We traveled like crazy to get senior,
mature Spanish households, those over 60. ACNielsen
was willing to do it right, willing to send people
many miles to find them. When you work with migrants,
[who are] arriving and moving and leaving at such
a different pace, if you don't have a way to manage
that, the data is useless. Someone who arrived yesterday
has nothing to do with someone like me, here 27 years,
or someone born here and lived here all his life."
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