A London-based, integrated marketing agency,
along with the University of Bath asked customers about the
particular brands they felt most passionately about –
rather than those which simply sell the most. The study surveyed
875 housewives via an online questionnaire.
For each supermarket category, they were asked to name their
favourite brands, their level of disappointment and concern
if they were unavailable, and their willingness to try other
ones instead. The frequency with which respondents mentioned
a brand was calculated and then used to rank the brands from
the most to the least commonly identified. The results then
enabled the agency to rank the UK’s top supermarket
brands by how widely desired they are and what the nation’s
favourites truly were throughout the year.
The findings showed that just five companies provided over
half (52.5%) of the top 100 brands. These were: Unilever,
Proctor & Gamble, Heinz, Pepsico and Tesco (own label).
An interesting finding was that eight of the top 100 preferred
brands in the UK were Tesco own label products, including
Tesco Cheese which at number 50 beat Diet Coca-Cola at number
52 and Weetabix at number 70. At the same time, Tesco own
label ranks ahead of giants such as Nestle, Kellogg’s
and Masterfoods in terms of ‘preference points’.
However, there is little evidence to suggest that large brands
are the most preferred. For example, Sarsons vinegar was ranked
number 12; Colmans mustard number 14 and Branston Pickle,
number 20. These are all relatively small brands yet come
ahead of giants such as Ariel (number 31), Mars Bars (number
44) and Diet Coke (number 52). Sarsons Vinegar was only just
beaten by Coca Cola at number 11. |