linked in facebook twitter rss

  • Interbrand
  • Brandchannel

your chance!
your chance!
 
 
 
 

 

  Local Markets Grow Roots   Local Markets Grow Roots  Michael Standaert  
         
 
Local Markets Grow Roots Organic branding has gained rapid success over the past few years in the United States as consumers become increasingly aware of their dietary health. For a certain segment of the consumer culture, skepticism about genetically modified foods and foods treated with chemicals has driven the rise in organic labeling. For others, it is the ethical treatment of animals or their strict adherence to diets that prohibit consumption of animal products for health or religious reasons.

Yet there is another social awareness factor that is becoming increasingly important in how certain consumers look at food branding—the terms “locally grown” and “family farm”—are growing in importance, especially in the Midwest.

Rich Pirog, of the Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture at Iowa State University, produced a marketing survey in November 2003 with cooperation from the ISU College of Business. The study examines the terms “locally grown” and “family farm” and finds consumers enthusiastic and yearning to purchase these types of foods from the small family farms that grow them.

 
“We found that these secondary label attributes attract people wanting to support the environment and local farmers,” says Pirog, referring to the survey, which sampled more than 1,600 consumers throughout the Midwest. “Consumers said that if price and appearance were equal, they would choose products with these features over organic options.”

Defining the terms “locally grown” and “family farm” was the first part of the process in formulating the Leopold Center study. For geographic area, regions were defined such as “grown in state” or “grown in the Midwest.” One odd populist twist in the survey shows a higher percentage of respondents that see local as "grown in your state" rather than "grown 25 miles or less from purchase."

 
Part of the study, looking at ecolabels with one simplified tagline on locally grown strawberries, found that 70 percent of respondents say that third-party verification about freshness and other standards is important to them. More then 90 percent of respondents prefer the locally grown label with the “freshness” claim over the label simply stating that the product was grown in the US.

Pirog explains: “They want that guarantee. What we were hearing was—particularly for produce—is that the concept of how far food travels is of more concern. The four things consumers are looking for—taste, freshness, quality, and value—if those four weren’t being met consistently, if the product doesn’t taste good, consumers won’t buy those locally grown foods.”

The survey also finds that 12 to 18 percent of consumers are willing to pay 30 percent more on food items that combine locally grown verification and environmental stewardship. Consumer and producer groups such as Food Alliance, Organic Producers Alliance, and Protected Harvest have certification programs which help improve market access to these foods.

“We feel that the idea of freshness dating is important and more consumer groups should be looking at ways to implement accurate recording of this,” says Pirog. “The organic label should continue to be a fast growing segment as well, and there is also a large segment of folks who aren’t your core consumers that will always go to the highest standard product. If the majority of consumers are looking at food as food, rather than food as fuel, they also start to question where the food comes from, and become more likely to support local efforts.”

Jim Ennis, project director of Midwest Food Alliance, launched in 2000 in St. Paul, Minnesota, is one of those people working to develop guarantees in labeling for consumers to better identify organic and locally grown products. “Research has shown that consumers want to support environmentally-friendly growing practices and local farmers, but they can’t always recognize those products in their supermarket,” says Ennis.

These organizations have aimed their energies at promoting awareness of locally grown brands, and some, such as Local Harvest, even offer maps on their websites for consumers to find out where the nearest producers are located. Not surprisingly, most of these organic producers are located in the Midwest, Northeast and in the fertile valleys along the West Coast. Other campaigns such as "Buy Fresh, Buy Local" coordinated by the Food Routes Network have been connecting freshness and locally grown labeling with freshness dating. While most perishable products have a “use by” date on them, the study shows consumers would also like to know when the product arrived in the store, and from how far away the food has traveled. The survey indicates that phrases such as "from farm to your store's door in 24 hours" or that the farm is "within an hour's drive from your store" evoke perceptions of local and fresh products that originate from nearby farms.

“We often don’t give consumers enough credit,” Pirog says. “We found that consumers had a basic understanding of where their food comes from. Seasonality is more and more important. Combine that with ‘freshness’ labeling. People wanted another way of using freshness dating then what we have now, which basically gives you a date you need to consume the product by. We’re wanting to go beyond [that] concept, to show the time from harvest to time to store. This could have some potential to those producers who are looking for more regional products.”    

[23-Aug-2004]

 
  
  

Michael Standaert currently resides in Illinois.

     
 commenting closed Add Social Bookmark bookmark  print
 suggest topic  recommend ( 9 )  email

  brandchannel home archive   2013  |  2012  |  2011  |  2010  |  2009  |  2008  |  2007  |  2006  |  2005  | 2004  |  2003  |  2002  |  2001
 
 
Dec 20, 2004 Does Your Brand Register Abroad? -- Sergio Beristain
  The trials of naming hinge as much on translation and TM registration as being clever.
   
 
Dec 13, 2004 Does Royalty Lead to Brand Loyalty? -- Emilie Boyer King
  The ultimate celebrity endorsement comes from royal warrants. And you don’t have to pay a king’s ransom for them.
   
 
Dec 6, 2004 Design Shifts Drive Auto Brands -- Dale Buss
  Designers move back into the driver’s seat in automotive manufacturing.
   
 
Nov 29, 2004 Small Step for Man, Giant Leap for Brandkind -- Alycia de Mesa
  Brands shoot for the stars as the space race heats up. Space Adventures, Virgin Galactic, and others hope you’ll book a flight with them.
   
 
Nov 22, 2004 Is De Beers Forever? -- Ron Irwin
  Activists use high-profile brands like De Beers to highlight their low-profile causes.
   
 
Nov 15, 2004 Branding on a First Name Basis -- Erwin Wijman
  Naming trends: As businesses become less personal, they adopt first names to convey friendliness in the brand.
   
 
Nov 8, 2004 Perrier: Nestled in Controversy? -- Joe Ray
  Perrier finds that water runs thicker than French blood as it battles with Swiss-based Nestlé.
   
 
Nov 1, 2004 Great Branding Is Rooted in Strategy -- Vincent Grimaldi de Puget
  The “magic” behind successful brands can be achieved through balancing short- and long-term planning.
   
 
Oct 25, 2004 Sports Brands Play at Life Style -- Alycia de Mesa
  How does a sports brand make the lucrative jump to lifestyle brand?
   
 
Oct 18, 2004 Manufacturing a New Detroit -- Dale Buss
  The city of Detroit embarks on an uphill battle to improve its image.
   
 
Oct 11, 2004 News Outlets Plug into New Markets -- Stephen Gardner
  News outlets seek to grow despite increasingly fragmented audiences.
   
 
Oct 4, 2004 Brands Rise from the Dead -- Alycia de Mesa
  Can brands be resurrected? Atari and Iridium Satellite try for a comeback.
   
 
Sep 27, 2004 Brandsploitation: A New Genre in Film -- Abram Sauer
  The good, the bad, the ugly: A clear-eyed romp through the product placement hype.
   
 
Sep 20, 2004 Born into Luxury -- Alycia de Mesa
  Targeting youth: Ultra-premium fashion brands turn to the diaper-wearing set.
   
 
Sep 13, 2004 Take Pride in Your Brand -- Vivian Manning-Schaffel
  Brands step out of the closet to embrace gay and lesbian customers.
   
 
Sep 6, 2004 Engaging the Aging: Marketing to Europe's Seniors -- Emilie Boyer King
  Are European brands catching on to the potential of aging populations?
   
 
Aug 30, 2004 Auto Ads Drive Brand Awareness -- Edwin Colyer
  Customer driven takes on a whole new meaning when brands advertise on cars.
   
 
Aug 16, 2004 A Global Dose for a Local Market -- Edwin Colyer
  Is there a prescription for implementing global pharmaceutical brands in a local market?
   
 
Aug 9, 2004 Mexican Brands Pepper US Market -- Cristian Salazar
  Mexican brands cross the border through NAFTA to reach Latino populations; but why not reach out to the non-Latinos?
   
 
Aug 2, 2004 Forcing Brands into Early Retirement -- Randall Frost
  Brand portfolio management: What happens when the brand gets turned off.
   
 
Jul 26, 2004 MTV Networks Internationally -- Robin D. Rusch
  How does MTV manage to be the Madonna of the media industry?
   
 
Jul 19, 2004 Noilly Prat: Distilled to Perfection -- Jeremy Josephs
  Noilly Prat neither shakes nor stirs the vermouth segment and yet it continues to grow steadily.
   
 
Jul 12, 2004 Your Product Name: Fame or Shame? -- Alycia de Mesa
  When a product name becomes more valuable than the corporate name, is it time to switch?
   
 
Jul 5, 2004 Street Level Strategy -- Ron Irwin
  Brands take to the street to reach underserved populations.
   
 
Jun 28, 2004 Competing Dialects: Selling English -- Dafydd ab Iago
  English schools worldwide compete for foreign students.
   
 
Jun 21, 2004 Staying Power: Surviving the Limelight -- Randall Frost
  Overexposure: How can celebrities manage their brand beyond its sell-by-date?
   
 
Jun 14, 2004 Setting the Brand to Music -- Dale Buss
  Non-music brands are joining the choir and at the same time changing the face of traditional music brands.
   
 
Jun 7, 2004 Restocking Safeway -- A.K. Cabell
  Can supermarket chain Safeway face down risk?
   
 
May 31, 2004 South Africa Makes it Local -- Ron Irwin
  Proudly South African aims to make it local and make its locality proud.
   
 
May 24, 2004 Brand and Consumers: Who's Seducing Whom? -- Randall Frost
  Is it up to multinationals to satisfy the demands of a select few at the detriment to efficiency and profit? Who does it serve if the consumer seduces the brand?
   
 
May 17, 2004 UPS and FedEx Compete to Deliver -- Vivian Manning-Schaffel
  UPS and FedEx are carrying their new position from employee to customer.
   
 
May 10, 2004 Changing the Face of Private Labels -- Dale Buss
  Estée Lauder enters into an exclusive arrangement that appears to be more than skin deep with US retailer Kohl’s.
   
 
May 3, 2004 Naming Names -- Alycia de Mesa
  Name that product: umbrella brands struggle to identify products and services as part of one family.
   
 
Apr 26, 2004 Trademarking: Senses and Sensibility -- Randall Frost
  To ensure a sensual connection with the brand, companies are trademarking scents, sounds, colors and shapes. Floral smelling thread anyone?
   
 
Apr 19, 2004 Mapping a Country's Future -- Randall Frost
  Branding a country or region is just like a product brand… except way more complex and far less controllable.
   
 
Apr 12, 2004 Stiff Competition: Making a Living with Death -- Stephen Gardner
  Can the traditional funeral industry in Britain survive against larger corporate groups or will it eventually die out?
   
 
Apr 5, 2004 Are You Sick of Viral Marketing? -- Abram Sauer
  Similar to any virus, viral marketing is hard to contain or control. How can you make the most of the buzz?
   
 
Mar 29, 2004 Celebrity Branding -- Alycia de Mesa
  As a star ascends it can take a product or two with it. Similarly, as a celebrity falls from grace, so goes the appeal of the brand.
   
 
Mar 22, 2004 Democracy Rules the Marketplace -- Randall Frost
  Do consumers have more control over what appears in the marketplace than voters do over legislation? What can governments learn from a branding model?
   
 
Mar 15, 2004 The Science of Branding -- Edwin Colyer
  Does branding work? Brain scans reveal powerful proof that we may prefer Pepsi, but we’ll buy Coke.
   
 
Mar 8, 2004 M-Commerce: Is the Line Dead? -- Randall Frost
  Why does mobile commerce work so well in Japan but not in the US? Is there potential for m-commerce among the one billion cell phone users worldwide?
   
 
Mar 1, 2004 How is Porn Penetrating the Mainstream Market? -- Abram Sauer
  The curtain is pulled and the lights are turned on in the adult entertainment industry. As quality rises in risqué entertainment, branding in the industry heats up.
   
 
Feb 23, 2004 How Far Can a Brand Stretch? -- Alycia de Mesa
  Disney and Virgin can, but apparently McDonald’s cannot. What allows one brand to stretch to new businesses, products, and services while others cannot?
   
 
Feb 16, 2004 Spain's Best Brands -- Interbrand
  Spain ranks its best corporate and consumer brands by value; Telfonica y Zara son las marcas más valiosas.
   
 
Feb 9, 2004 Gaining Influence Through Word of Mouth -- Randall Frost
  Can you harness word of mouth to work for you?
   
 
Feb 2, 2004 Google Gets Lucky: Brandchannel's 2003 Readers' Choice Award Results -- Robin Rusch
  Google, Apple, Ikea, Cemex and Sony dominate brandchannel's 2003 Readers’ Choice Awards.
   
 
Jan 26, 2004 Drug Makers Get in the Game -- Edwin Colyer
  American pharma leads the industry in sport sponsorship. Is it the winning play for selling drugs direct to consumer?
   
 
Jan 19, 2004 Delivering the Truth Through PR -- Randall Frost
  Is PR an effective vehicle for communicating the wonders of your brand?
   
 
Jan 12, 2004 Fueling Partnerships -- Edwin Colyer
  Gas stations expand their services to include full shopping opportunities. How does this affect the brand?
   
 
Jan 5, 2004 Which Bud's for you? -- Mark Jarvis
  As Czech Budweiser prepares to launch its first international marketing campaign, the battle between the two Buds is bound to rise to a head.