Technomic reveals restaurants' preferences in manufacturer versus distributor brands

CHICAGO (March 24, 2011 - Business Wire)—How do food manufacturers protect and promote their brands while co-existing with distributor brands? The answer seems to depend on the food product in question and where it is being served, according to recent research from foodservice consultants Technomic.

Across the board, however, the competitive environment between distributors and branded manufacturers has never been more intense, particularly in today's environment, where cost pressures coupled with soft sales have squeezed margins to the point where operators are interested in any kind of cost savings. 

"In today’s environment, operators are much more open to considering distributor brands. The perceived lower cost and improving quality of these products have increasingly positioned them favorably against manufacturer branded products in the eyes of operator purchasers and users," says Joe Pawlak, Vice President of Technomic.  

The Status and Outlook for Distributor Brands study explores brand awareness and loyalty, brand switching, quality perceptions, value definitions, and segment analysis. Where possible, results are compared to prior research. Key findings include:

  • Distributor brands have consistency increased their share of the foodservice market, and are expected to continue to do so moving forward.
  • While operators maintained their loyalty to manufacturer brands used front-of-house, their preference for use of manufacturer brands for back-of-house prepared foods and commodities dropped 12 percentage points since 2007.
  • Awareness of distributor specialty brands is increasing, and many operators do not necessarily associate these brands with specific distributors. Rather, they are often viewed as an alternative manufacturer brand.

The Status and Outlook for Distributor Brands examines various food categories (frozen French fries, steak sauce, canned vegetables, etc.) based on client specifications, and provides data for different user groups, including limited- and full-service restaurants (independents and chains) and foodservice operators in the travel and leisure, business and industry, schools, colleges and healthcare industries.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Financing

The finances of younger consumers have taken a nosedive this year

The Bottom Line: Unemployment among younger Americans has soared, as have student loan delinquency rates, while average rent keeps going up. No wonder restaurant traffic is awful.

Financing

Restaurant franchisors should put the brakes on share buybacks

The Bottom Line: Publicly traded companies often spend their extra cash to buy back shares. But franchisors of struggling chains might be better off investing that cash in the restaurants.

Financing

Key takeaways from the recent round of restaurant company earnings

The Bottom Line: Full-service restaurant chains are winning, slightly, in a weak overall market. Brands are rethinking unit count, focusing on service and pushing a lot of value.

Trending

More from our partners