The simplest definition of snacking is consuming food between main meals — but snacking has a bad reputation sometimes, because we choose the wrong snack, the easy snack, the snack that satisfies a craving and leaves us less nourished. Often, a snack can be empty calories, with little or no nutritional value.
But, wait, what about fresh fruits and vegetables?
The late-summer and early fall season is ripe with fruit-snacking options, and retailers have become creative with product and packaging options to delight the senses. They’re appealing to the consumer who may not even be thinking about snacking at the time of purchase. By its very nature, snacking is a spur-of-the-moment decision. Most of us don’t give much thought to when we will snack. Many of us go for what’s closest, easiest and, all too often, the least healthy option.
On the road
How many times have we been driving along from point A to point B, and we feel a hunger pang, so we turn off the road to a convenience store? The first thing we see are shelves filled with salty snacks, chips, processed meat items and snack cakes. Literally, they are labeled “snack” cakes. You probably know the brand, and they are all snack cakes. So, we make the easy decision to get one or even two snacks. For me, I usually grab a salty and sweet snack because my taste buds like something salty followed by something sweet. For those convenient stores that do offer fresh fruit or vegetable snacks, the refrigerated case is usually near the back or middle of the store. It’s not always well maintained. And because most convenience stores don’t have coolers to keep back-stock, once the limited options are gone, they’re really gone until the next delivery. It’s a missed opportunity.
At the supermarket
For many of us, we head to the supermarket with a list in hand. We put into our baskets the primary items we need from our shopping lists, plus some extra items, which are often snacks. The produce department can provide a wealth of impulse snacks, and retailers make it quite easy for us to choose the offerings. At the best-in-class retailers, fresh-cut produce is the top-selling category, with the profits to go along with it. Many retailers’ fresh-cut category penetration rates comprise 15%-20% of total department sales. But we know all fresh produce snacks do not come from the fresh-cut section. Don’t overlook these other, very viable snack options in whole produce.
Decision time
Consider the moments we usually go for snacks at home: mid-morning, afternoon and after dinner. Understanding these snacking moments can help retailers build strategies to help their customers identify not just snacking options, but also when it’s the right time for certain snacks at certain intervals of the day. Build out a suggested time for snacks. Identify which items to choose, alternating between fruits and vegetables. Post those ideas at the point of sale, on your digital storefront and even in print ads.
Read more: This article was originally published in the July/August issue of PMG magazine. Read more from this issue in the digital edition.
The out-of-hand snack
How many times have you seen a sign at the grocery shelf that says, “Great for snacking”? Now, how many times do we see that message on fresh produce? It’s more than we used to, but do consumers recognize it? There are so many whole fruit items that are great for eating out of hand in summer. Table grapes, cherries and pears are summer favorites, along with the year-round items such as berries, apples, citruses and bananas. And I would add kiwis. Oh, and stone fruits, too! I enjoy eating a juicy, sweet peach, nectarine, plumcot, pluot or the occasional plum so much I hold onto that pit and clean off every fibrous morsel. What, no melons? Well, melons are more complicated when it comes to snacking on out of hand, but they're not insurmountable. Fresh-cut melons are a huge contributor to snacking, but mostly for snacking at home.
Snacking and the upside to overall volume
With persistent inflation and retailers working overtime to develop strategies to keep customers in the produce aisle, snacking should be front of mind as a way to increase volume and overall tonnage. Where in-store sampling has returned, it can have a significant impact on purchase decisions, as well. Increasing volume was one of the prevailing themes at the June 9-10 Retail Conference in Schaumburg, Ill., hosted by the International Fresh Produce Association. It’s especially tricky, as consumers try to stretch their food dollar. The way retailers market and promote produce during these inflationary times will have a direct impact on increasing demand for fruits and vegetables. But with an 84% share of the fruit and vegetable dollar going to fresh, the opportunities are ripe. Capitalizing on a consumer’s need to snack could be a winning formula over the next several months.
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Joe Watson has spent 30-plus years as the director of produce for Rouses Markets and was named Produce Retailer of the Year and honored as one of The Packer 25, both in 2014. Watson now serves as vice president of retail, foodservice and wholesale for the International Fresh Produce Association.