Today's Turbulence Has Many Thinking Past Perfect

Jul 14, 2008 12:00 PM, By DAVID ORGEL Editor-in-Chief david.orgel@penton.com


         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines

The present has you down? Economic malaise? Food safety nightmares? The rush of technology? Overflow of information? Not to worry, you can always recapture the past, which is exactly what more people seem to be doing.

David Orgel

It's not just the current crop of movies that evoke successful story lines from the past, such as “Get Smart,” “The Incredible Hulk” and “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.”

In the music world, a small backlash against CDs has a number of retailers, reportedly including Fred Meyer, testing reintroductions of vinyl LP records, which some find to have a more realistic sound. Vinyl isn't about to threaten digital, but it's building a small, dedicated fan base.

In the workplace, an overload of emails and other electronic communications has some worrying about a digital disconnect. Judy Spires, president of Acme Markets, Malvern, Pa., recently took a small step backward. She enacted a policy requiring managers to make a phone call once a day instead of sending an email, according to a recent SN story. Her policy won't transform modern communications, but it will make people think.

Economic hard times are leading consumers to re-embrace other practices that seemed to have been abandoned long ago. Consumers are stocking pantries with food purchased on sale — which some refer to as a Depression mentality, and others as the shopper equivalent of retailer forward buying. Consumers are also abandoning restaurants in favor of more eating at home, with many re-embracing cooking. But does anyone know or remember how to cook? Retailers need to step into this void by playing educator.

On the global front, surging demand for food and tighter food supplies are leading some poorer nations to rethink policies that switched their economies from local farming into playing specialized roles in the industrial or service sectors. Those initiatives were intended to build wealth by attracting foreign money, but all of a sudden food is the more important priority.

In the U.S. and other developed countries, mounting reports of food safety problems have many consumers wishing for the days before the nightly news was filled with recall information. Initiatives such as traceability and local foods attempt to recapture a time when people knew where their food was produced. Yet many wonder if these campaigns are realistic today on a global scale.

Meanwhile, the organic movement is still transporting consumers back to a period before the food industry was changed by modern growing and processing techniques. The success of organics has created new challenges, however, including a lack of adequate supply at a time when the trend is catching fire worldwide.

It's hard, if not impossible, to turn back the clock, but that won't stop many from trying, particularly when they perceive the past as better. Marketers focused only on the new and exciting will miss this important trend of consumers holding up stop signs to today's events.

Subscribe / Renew to Supermarket News

Supermarket News

The most reliable source of industry news and insight...in print and online.

Most Viewed News

Read More News

Retail Analytics
Brian Ross

View All Questions

Refresh: A Whole Health Blog

Bob Vosburgh

Bob Vosburgh:

Read More Refresh

Articles by Market
Retail/Financial
Executive Changes
Grocery/Center Store/
Brands
Health & Wellness
In-Store Bakery/Deli/Meals
Logistics
Marketing
Meat/Seafood/Dairy
Nonfoods/Pharmacy/HBC
Produce/Floral
Specialty/Ethnic
Technology
Key Issues
Food Safety/Recalls
Legislation/Regulations
Sustainability/Green
Resources
Profiles & Rankings
Webinars
White Papers/Studies
Whole Health Blog

Back to Top

Subscribe to SN

Latest Cover

IRI Fast Trends

Not much remains the same in the food-distribution industry, whether it's the marketing of supermarket departments, the advent of new formats or rapidly changing consumer preferences. See what's changing now in the latest IRI Time and Trends report.

SN Daily Update

newsletter image

The food trade’s leading daily news service. Register Here

Upcoming Events

Natural Products Expo East,
Oct. 15-18, 2008,
Natural Products Expo East, Boston Convention and Exposition Center; 303.939.8440.

PMA Fresh Summit,
Oct. 24-27, 2008,
Produce Marketing Association,
Orange County Convention Center,
Orlando, Fla.; 302.738.7100.

View All Upcoming Events

Jobs/Classifieds

View All Classifieds

Premium Content

Tesco

Tesco: F&E Results ‘Encouraging’

The first reported financial results of the fledgling Fresh & Easy chain revealed heavy losses and modest but improving sales, officials of parent company Tesco here said last week.

Supermarket News Secret's Out

Sign of the Times

Let's say Wal-Mart Stores wants to sell more carbonated soft drinks.

 

Supermarket News Sharper Image

Fresh Insights

The produce industry is once again gearing up for the Produce Marketing Association's annual Fresh Summit International Convention & Exposition, which will be held this year Oct. 24-27

 

Supermarket News Show Stoppers

Hot Item

As the fastest-growing demographic group in the United States, Hispanic shoppers have had the attention of food retailers for years now.

Supermarket News 
Green Pledge

Green Pledge

Driven by the need to cut energy costs, as well as by a desire to improve the environment, many food retailers have embraced a wide assortment of “green” strategies in recent years.