Recent affluent consumers articles
Nielsen’s survey of more than 18,250 affluent individuals across 35 Indian metro areas, initiated a new method of defining affluence.
[read more]Like many industrialized nations, the face of the United States is changing. An aging population, a declining birth rate combined with growing ethnic diversity will pose new challenges for the economy. Along with these demographic changes will come shifts in consumer spending, and consumer goods marketers will have to adjust tactics, focus and products if they hope to capitalize on what will be the new reality.
So what will be different in terms of consumer spending in just 11 years? A weakened Social Security system and underfunded private pension plans will …
Todd Hale, Senior Vice President – Consumer & Shopper Insights
A fellow Nielsen associate recently sent me an article she had received from a client about how private label was receiving high acceptance among even affluent American households. While I am a huge fan of the attitudinal insights from consumer survey data, I am also a huge fan of the behavioral insights from consumer panel data. The best of both worlds is when we get to integrate both data types in our analytical work in the consumer packaged goods industry. But …
According to Nielsen, trips to U.S. retail outlets decreased by 1.4% in the third quarter of 2008, compared with Q3 2007.
Declines were especially steep during the last four weeks of the quarter, which saw the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the near-collapse of Merrill Lynch, and the government bailout of AIG.
Traditional mass retailers (excluding supercenters), department stores, and office supply stores saw the most dramatic declines in the number of shopping trips last quarter vs. a year ago. Trips to mass retailers dropped by 9.1%, trips to department stores were down …




