Although economic recovery finally seems to be taking root in the U.S., consumers remain cautious when it comes to spending their money. And many analysts believe that shopping behavior that has changed during the recession is permanent. One factor backing up that premise is the continued upswing in coupon use after years of declines.
As we previously noted, consumers have re-embraced coupons as a way to get more for their money. In the third quarter, year-to-date coupon redemption was up 26 percent to 2.4 billion redemptions, making it the fourth consecutive quarter of growth, according to new research from Inmar in collaboration with The Nielsen Company. During 2006-2008, coupon redemption stagnated at 2.6 billion each full year. Inmar, which provides logistic management solutions to retailers, wholesalers and manufacturers in the consumer goods and healthcare markets, is forecasting that 3.2 billion coupons will be redeemed this year, marking a significant increase over recent years.
But while food coupons have typically driven activity, non-food coupons for general merchandise, household items and personal care drove growth in the third quarter, up 45 percent over the same period last year (food items were up 26 percent over the same period last year). While supermarkets remain the traditional coupon redemption channel, representing 64 percent of redemptions, the dollar/discount/variety and mass merchandiser channels are up at a faster rate.
“It’s clear that coupons have increasingly become an important way for consumers to save some money when shopping. Digital coupons are driving a huge increase in redemptions but still represent a small percentage of distributed and redeemed coupons. Meanwhile, freestanding inserts account for almost 90 percent of distributed coupons, but just over half of redeemed coupons,” said Todd Hale, Senior Vice President, Consumer and Shopping Insights at Nielsen. “Moreover, coupon enthusiasts buy more products per trip and generally have a higher spend per trip in the grocery and supercenter channels. The fact is, coupons can yield a significant return on investment, and savvy consumer goods manufacturers should seriously consider how they may be able to play a role in driving sales.”






Loved your column on coupons. As an older American citizen now, I have the time to clip and use coupons…..wow….what a savings….especially when they advertise double up to $2…that really saves on the grocery bill.
Our church is recycling coupons….what we don’t use for our own personal use in buying….we clip and sort and send to our servicemen overseas for their families to use and save money. All the ads and what is left after we take the coupons, we recycle to a “newspaper drop station” for them to recycle. If anyone is interested in the coupon for our servicement program….go to ocpnet.org and read about it. I found it to be very interesting and feel we have a wonderful mission to help our servicemen and their families while they are helping us to be free in America. Last month we sent 39,747 coupons to an Air Force Base in Germany for them to use in the PX or Commissary….join us and use those coupons.
How are you defining coupon? Traditional newspaper coupon, online print-out, coupon/discount code (no print-out required)? It’s also interesting that supermarkets represent the majority of coupon redemption (64%); I’m curious if it suggests an opportunity for them to push online grocery purchases via online coupons.
[...] Nielsen, Nov. 6, 2009 – From: http://blog.nielsen.com/nielsenwire/consumer/coupon-use-continues-resurgence/ [...]
[...] demonstrating that coupon use has evolved beyond the grocery list.That finding is supported by similar research from Inmar and The Nielsen Company which found that non-food coupons for general merchandise, [...]
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