Rural American households spent more than twice as much on canning and freezing supplies, 47% more on automotive products, and 38% more on tobacco and accessories than average American households during the 52 weeks ending June 28, 2008, according to Nielsen.
“Plain Rural Living” households — a Nielsen Spectra lifestyle segment that includes households in small towns and rural areas with the lowest population densities — account for 21% of all American households. These households represented 43% of canning/freezing supplies product dollar sales, 31% of automotive product dollar sales, and 29% of tobacco and accessories product dollar sales.
Other categories skewing to rural households include insecticides, pesticides, and rodenticides, as well as fresh meat, flour, sugar/sweeteners, pet food, and carbonated beverages.
| Rank (by highest index) |
Top 10 Categories: Rural Households |
Dollar Volume Index |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Canning, Freezing Supplies | 204 |
| 2 | Automotive | 147 |
| 3 | Tobacco and Accessories | 138 |
| 4 | Insecticides/Pesticides/Rodenticides | 128 |
| 5 | Flour | 128 |
| 6 | Sugar, Sweeteners | 126 |
| 7 | Fresh Meat | 124 |
| 8 | Pet Food | 118 |
| 9 | Carbonated Beverages | 115 |
| 10 | Charcoal, Logs, Accessories | 113 |
| Source: The Nielsen Company (June 30, 2007 – June 28, 2008). | ||
| *Note: “Dollar Volume Index” is a demographic segment’s share of dollar sales, divided by a segment’s share of U.S. households, multiplied by 100. | ||
Nielsen’s Marketing Tip:
Retailers targeting rural households may want to promote these categories (above) with feature ads, displays, and product assortments. Manufacturers should consider cross-promoting and cross-couponing items in these categories.
Nielsen’s Dollar Volume Index identifies demographic groups that account for above or below average dollar volume purchases for a given product category.
Data for the index was collected via Nielsen’s Homescan consumer panel, a nationally representative sample of U.S. households that provides a stratified, proportionate, non-biased representation of the U.S. population. Homescan panelists scan all of their UPC coded purchases after every shopping trip, allowing Nielsen to capture their complete shopping and buying behavior.








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