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Chocolate Candy Market in the U.S.examines the market for chocolate candy across the U.S. retail spectrum, and places the market in the larger context of the overall confectionery market, defined as the total U.S. market for chocolate/non-chocolate candy and gum. Retail channels include supermarkets and grocery stores, convenience stores, supercenters/mass merchandisers, gourmet/specialty food stores, warehouse clubs, drugstores, gourmet/specialty food stores, vending, direct-sales channels including catalogs and Internet, candy shops and specialty chocolatiers, and alternative channels such as department stores, kitchenware stores and bookstores.
Excluded from the scope of this report are other products such as chocolate-covered salted snacks, baking chocolate, chocolate cakes and ice cream, health/energy bars, nutritional snacks/trail mixes, fruit snacks, other food product products that may contain chocolate such as hot cocoa, chocolate syrup, and chocolate milk flavoring.
Report Methodology
The information contained in this report was obtained from primary and secondary research. Primary research entailed consultations with confectionery market sources, on-site examination of retail venues, and fielding a proprietary Packaged Facts online consumer survey focusing on chocolate product shopper insights – the Packaged Facts Confectionery Usage Study. Secondary research included extensive Internet canvassing and research- and data-gathering from relevant consumer business and trade publications; company reports including annual reports, press releases, and investor conference calls; company profiles in trade and consumer publications; government reports; and other food and confectionery reports by Packaged Facts.
Sales estimates are based on data from the above sources as well as IRI data for mass-market channels; SPINSscan data for natural supermarkets; published and estimated sales of major market participants; market size estimates from other sources, including those appearing in the trade press; the performance of relevant retail venues; consumer usage rates for confectionery products; and new product introduction activity in the market.
Our consumer analysis draws primarily on two data sources. The first is national consumer survey data from Simmons. Through an ongoing program of telephone and booklet questionnaire surveys of a large probability sample of consumers who represent a statistically accurate cross-section of the U.S. adult population, Simmons is able construct detailed demographic profiles across various consumer product and service markets. The discussion of consumer patterns also draws on the proprietary Packaged Facts Confectionery Usage Survey, which is based on 2,000 U.S. adults who in aggregate are census representative on the primary demographic measure of age, gender, geographic region, race/ethnicity, and presence of children in the household.
Executive Summary
Scope of Report
Report Methodology
Confectionery Sales Rise to $35.8 billion
Table Confectionery Sales in the U.S., 2011-2015 (in billions of dollars)
Table Confectionery Sales in the U.S., 2011-2015 (percent change over previous year)
A World of Candy
Table Share of U.S. Confectionery Sales by Channel: Chocolate Candy vs. Total Confectionery, 2016 (percent)
IRI-Tracked Confectionery Sales
Table IRI-Tracked Sales of Confectionery: Overall and Chocolate Category, 2016 (in millions of dollars)
Premium Chocolate Powers Growth
Table IRI-Tracked Sales of Chocolate Candy: Overall and by Everyday vs. Premium Sectors, 2016 (in millions)
Marketing Trends
Major Brands Dominate in Marketing Spend
Product Trends and Opportunities
Retail Trends
The Competitive Landscape
Packaged Facts Confectionery Usage Survey Results
Table Consumption and Purchase Habits of Chocolate, Non-Chocolate Candy, and Gum, 2016 (percent of U.S. adults)
Where in the Store?
Table Parts of the Store Where Chocolate Candy Is Purchased, 2016 (percent of candy purchasers)
Wrigley, Mars Explore "Transaction Zones"
Looking Ahead
Table Projected Confectionery Sales in the U.S., 2016-2020 (in billions of dollars)
Table Projected Confectionery Sales in the U.S., 2016-2020 (percent change over previous year)
Chocolate Candy in the Confectionery Market Context
Snacking Behavior
Nutritional Value of Snacks
Clean Snacking
Indulgent Taste Prevails
Simple Ingredients, Transparency and No Artificial Colors
No More GMOs
Impact of Clean Label Initiatives
Candy Adjacencies
Opportunities
Indulgence Versus Health
Cross-Fertilization of Global Markets
Functional Benefits
Design Factors
Confectionery Sales Rise to $35.8 billion
Table Confectionery Sales in the U.S., 2011-2015 (in billions of dollars)
Table Confectionery Sales in the U.S., 2011-2015 (percent change over previous year)
A World of Candy
Table Share of U.S. Confectionery Sales by Channel, 2016 (percent)
IRI-tracked Confectionery Sales Show Pockets of Strength
Table IRI-Tracked Sales of Confectionery: Overall vs. Chocolate Candy, 2016 (in millions of dollars)
Looking Ahead
Table Projected Confectionery Sales in the U.S., 2016-2020 (in billions of dollars)
Table Projected Confectionery Sales in the U.S., 2016-2020 (percent change over previous year)
Dynamic Market Environment
Advertising
Major Brands Dominate in Marketing Spend
Snickers Satisfies
Marilyn Monroe
Thematic Packaging
M&M's Sets Bar for Entertainment
"Tainted Love"
"Celebrate with M"
Masterbrand Strategy at Hershey
"Hello Happy"
"Hello Happy: Diner"
"Hello Happy: Caramels"
"Hello from Home"
Reese's Umbrella Campaign
Multiple Brands in Trade Advertising
Digital Media
#all trees are beautiful
Balancing the Familiar and the Unknown
Disruptor Brands and Products
On the Radar
Trending Flavors
Hershey Expansion Strategy
Simple Ingredients
Mars Focuses On Taste Appeal
New Products Target Healthy Snacking
Premium Chocolate Drives Innovation
Accessible Luxury
Artisanal Producers Push Beyond Convention
Non-Chocolate Segment Poised for Takeoff
Cocktail Confections
Sugar-Free Candy
Low-Calorie/ Portion Control
Skinnygirl Targets Candy
Skinny Cow
Seasonal Candy
Novelty
Snacking On the Go
Big Chains Dot Landscape
Hershey Mines Big Data for Retail Insights
Challenges and Opportunities
Candy, Gum and Breath Freshener Consumption Trends
Table Usage of Chocolate and Other Candy, Gum, and Breath Mints/Strips, 2009-2016 (percent of U.S. adults)
Table Consumption and Purchase Habits for Chocolate, Non-Chocolate Candy and Gum, 2016 (percent of U.S. adults)
Brand Preference Trends
Table Chocolate Candy Brand Consumption Trends, 2008-2016 (percent of U.S. adults)
Where in the Store?
Table Parts of the Store Where Candy and Gum Are Purchased, 2016 (percent of adult purchasers)
Wrigley, Mars Explore "Transaction Zones"
Frequency of Candy Consumption
Table Frequency of Chocolate and Non-Chocolate Candy Consumption, 2016 (percent of adult consumers of candy)
Time of Day for Candy Consumption
Table Time of Day for Chocolate and Non-Chocolate Candy Consumption, 2016 (percent of adults consumers of candy)
Where Do You Eat Candy?
Table Where Chocolate and Non-Chocolate Candy Are Eaten, 2016 (percent of adult consumers)
Candy Consumer Demographics
Table Usage Index for Selected Chocolate and Non-Chocolate Candy Brands, 2016 (U.S. adults)
Chocolate Candy Category
Chocolate Sales Rise to $21.6 billion
Table Chocolate Sales in the U.S., 2011-2015 (in billions of dollars and percent)
Pervasiveness of Chocolate Candy
Table Share of U.S. Sales of Chocolate Candy by Channel, 2016 (percent)
IRI-tracked Chocolate Dollar Sales Up, Volume Down
Table IRI-Tracked Sales of Chocolate Candy: Overall and by Segment, 2016 (in millions)
Defining Premium
Table Premium Chocolate Candy Segments by Price ($/ounce & $/pound)
Premium Chocolate Powers Growth
Table IRI-Tracked Sales of Chocolate Candy: By Premium Segment, 2016 (in millions)
Looking Ahead
Table Projected Chocolate Candy Sales in the U.S., 2016-2020 (in billions of dollars)
Dynamic Market Environment
Market Share Concentrated
Table Top Marketers of Chocolate Candy at Food, Drug and Mass Merchandisers, 2015 (in millions)
Hershey and Mars Rule the <3.5-oz Segment
Table Top Marketers of Chocolate Candy: Box/Bag/Bars <3.5-oz, 2015 (in millions)