美國寵物用品市場的品牌樹立 是由出版商Packaged Facts在2006年11月所出版的。
這份英文市場調查報告書包含125 pages 價格從美金1800起跳。
身為消費者製品市場調查的領導者且具有30年以上經歷的美國市調公司 Packaged Facts (總公司:紐約) ,詳盡地調查與分析美國寵物用品市場的品牌樹立狀況,並有系統地出版綜合報告書 "Brand Building in the U.S. Pet Products Market" 。
此報告書針對美國寵物用品市場內品牌樹立的概要、各製品的最新動向、企業活動等,進行一連串地探討。此報告書的概略架構如下所示。
第1章 導入
- 市場定義
- 方法論
- 寵物市場的環境
- 品牌為重要的一環
- 消費者對健康相關製品的關心支撐品牌
- 天然•有機製品
- 零售的傾向
- 自我品牌
- 人口統計的變化
- 製品範疇與各品牌的消費者態度
- 對品牌製品線與品牌名的消費者意願
第2章 製造者的品牌樹立
- 寵物食物的主要品牌
- 食品以外的寵物主要品牌
- 廣告支出的現況
- 市場革新者
- 範疇的重複
- 通路的樹立
- 名流品牌
- Del Monte的「計劃品牌」
- Munchkin/Bamboo的案例
- 革新與高級化
- 與店品牌的競爭白熱化
- 革新與品牌的再定位
- 網路與實驗性行銷
- 店頭行銷
第3章 自我品牌
- 品質與價格的均衡
- 品牌忠誠度與商店忠誠度
- 自我品牌製造者的角色
- 自我品牌的業績(線數、SKU、各範疇•區塊的販賣額)
- 寵物市場的滲透
- 影響要素
- 寵物專店的自家品牌樹立
- 各家的店品牌
- 自我品牌的風險與課題
- 未來展望
第4章 證照品牌的樹立
- 擬人化與小孩為促進要素
- 新證照的寵物商品業績(線數、SKU)
- 許可制的是非
- 各家的活動
- 未來的展望
Abstract
Consumer demand for premium, natural/organic, and health-related pet products,
the high degree of interest in pet care services, sales growth in
non-traditional retail channels, and an influx of new competitors including
powerful human brands are driving marketers of pet products and services to
bolster existing brands and create new ones. The much-touted strong growth
prospects of this market have attracted the attention of a broad range of
company types, from innovative pet specialty start-ups determined to make
their mark with new-generation products and brands (e.g., Greenies, Bamboo),
to marketers of well-known human brands seeking to parlay their clout into
suitable pet categories (e.g., 3M, Disney). Upping the competitive ante even
further is the determination of many retailers to develop and compete upon
compelling store brands, making it all the more important for manufacturers to
keep their brands at the leading edge of product innovation and quality. Some
of the most familiar brands in the U.S. pet market are, in fact, not those of
marketers, but of PetSmart, Petco, and etailer PetMed Express, which together
spent over $235 million on national consumer advertising in 2005, and whose
private-label programs continue to expand. Brand Building in the U.S. Market
for Pet Products and Services, a groundbreaking Packaged Facts pet trends
report, examines branding strategies in the following areas- manufacturer
brands, private-label brands, and licensed/human brands- and identifies the
pet market labels most (or least) important to U.S. consumers, as well as
those brands currently increasing their household penetration rates. It
provides case histories of successful marketing initiatives, charts the most
powerful and innovative brands, and predicts which brands will thrive and
expand across category lines in the years to come.
Packaged Facts' Pet Products and Services Collection
Packaged Facts is the leading source of market intelligence for pet products
and services. No other market research publisher offers the breadth and depth
of coverage in this lucrative, fast-growing industry. Other titles include Pet
Food in the U.S., Oral Care Products for Pets, Pet Products in Nontraditional
Outlets, The U.S. Pet Insurance Market, Pet Supplements and Nutraceuticals,
Natural, Organic and Eco-Friendly Pet Products, and Pet Care Services in the
U.S.
What You'll Get in this Report
Brand Building in the U.S. Market for Pet Products and Services offers unique
perspective on this burgeoning market. No other market research report
provides the analysis and trends coverage that this report offers. Plus,
you'll benefit from extensive data, presented in easy-to-read and practical
charts, tables and graphs.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction
- Market Definition and Methodology
- Report Methodology
- The Pet Market Environment
- Why Brands Matter
- Table 1-1a: U.S. Pet Industry Sales by Segment, 2003-2009 (in billions of
dollars)
- Table 1-1b: U.S. Pet Industry: Average Annual Growth by Segment, 2003-2009
(percent)
- Humanization Factor Spurs Product Upscaling
- Interest in Health-Related Products, Services Supports Branding
- Interest in Natural/Organic Products Opens New Branding Doors
- Table 1-2: Number of Natural and Upscale Pet Products by Package Tag,
1999-2006
- Table 1-3: Dog and Cat Food Brand Leaders in Pet Specialty Stores,
2002-2004 (percent)
- Retail Trends
- Big-Box Consolidation
- Private-Label Growth
- Growth of Non-Traditional Outlets
- Premium Demographic Shifts
- Figure 1-1: Share of U.S Pet Food Expenditures by Income Bracket: 1994,
1999, 2004 (percent)
- Figure 1-2: Two-Adult Households/No Kids as Pet Owners, 2003 vs. 2005
(percent)
- Household Usage Rates and Consumer Attitudes by Pet Product Category and
Brand
- Household Penetration Rates Static for Most Brands
- Consumer Attitudes about Pet Products and Brands
- Table 1-4: Household Penetration Rates for Selected Branded Pet Products
by Type, 2004-2006 (U.S. households)
- Table 1-5: Household Penetration Rates for Selected Pet Product Brand
Lines, 2004-2006 (U.S. households)
- Table 1-6: Consumer Indices for Use of Pet Products by Type by Agreement
with Statement, "I Always Look for Brand Names": Any Agree or Any Disagree,
2006 (U.S. adults)
- Table 1-7: Consumer Indices for Use of Branded Pet Product Lines by
Agreement with Statement, "I Always Look for Brand Names": Any Agree or Any
Disagree, 2006 (U.S. adults)
- Table 1-8: Consumer Indices for Use of Branded Pet Products by Type by
Agreement with Statement, "I Always Look for Brand Names": Any Agree or Any
Disagree, 2006 (U.S. adults)
Chapter 2: Building Manufacturer Brands
- Introduction: An Environment Ripe for Compelling Brands
- Top Pet Food Brands
- Top Non-Food Pet Brands
- Top Brands in Pet Services Include PetSmart and Petco
- National Pet Brand Common Denominators
- Billion-Dollar-Plus Human Product Cross-Overs
- Table 2-1: Pet Product Marketers with Total Company Revenues of More Than
$1 Billion, 2006 Newell Rubbermaid Drops Off List
- New Breed of Human Cross-Overs May Pose New Branding Threat
- Playing the Consumer Advertising Card
- Table 2-2: How Pet Owners Usually Becomes Aware of New Pet Products: By
Species of Pet Owned (percent)
- Figure 2-1: Share of Pet Market National Advertising Spending by Segment,
2003-2005 (percent)
- Table 2-3: Pet Market National Advertising Spending by Segment, 2003-2005
(in thousands of dollars) Pet Food Advertising Spending at $277 Million
- Figure 2-2: Marketer Shares of National Advertising Expenditures for Pet
Food: 2003-2005 (percent) Non-Food Pet Supplies Advertising
- Table 2-4: Share of National Advertising Expenditures on Non-Food Pet
Supplies by Marketer and Brand, 2003-2005 (percent)
- Veterinary Product Advertising Spending
- Pet Retailers' Advertising Spending on the Ups
- Pet Specialty Brands Rely Mainly on Promotions, Advertising
- Masterbranding Existing Brands
- Figure 2-3: Most Advertised Pet Food Brands, 2005 (percent)
- Acquiring Market Innovators
- Crossing Category Lines
- Mass to Specialty Cross-Over, and Vice Versa
- Channel Exclusivity
- Professional Endorsement and "Pro-Branding"
- Kong Line Embraced by Professional Trainers
- Celebrity Branding
- Brand "Stabling" Gives Central Garden & Pet and Spectrum Brands Broad
Cross-Category Presence
- Del Monte Launches "Project Brand"
- Less Traditional Brand Development Approaches Include Blogging and
Licensing
- McKinsey Report Highlights Breakthrough Brands
- The Case of Greenies
- The Case of Munchkin/Bamboo
- Other Pet Product and Service Brand Success Stories
- Looking Ahead
- Innovation and Premiumization
- Pending Acquisition?
- Cross-Over Opportunities for Pet Food Giants
- Increasing Competition from Store Brands
- Innovation and Brand Repositioning
- Internet and Experiential Marketing
- In-Store Marketing
Chapter 3: Building Private-Label Brands
- Introduction: Overall U.S. Market Perspective
- Balancing Quality and Value
- Brand Loyalty vs. Store Loyalty
- The Role of Private-Label Manufacturers
- Natural/Organic's Mainstream Thrust Extends to Private-Label
- Private-Label Penetration Lags in Pet Market
- Table 3-1: Number of New Private-Label Pet Product Lines, 2002-2006
- Table 3-2: Number of New Private-Label Pet Product SKUs, 2002-2006
- Figure 3-1: Private-Label Share of IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Products by
Category, 2000 vs. 2005 (percent)
- Table 3-3: IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Products by Category and Segment:
Total vs. Private-Label, 2000-2005
- Why the Slower Going?
- Figure 3-2: Factors Influencing Purchasing of Pet Food: 2006 (percent)
- Positive Prospects and Pockets of Growth
- Manufacturers Buying into Private-Label
- Mars Acquires Doane Pet Care
- Dad's Bets on Corporate Brands/Treats
- Wal-Mart Out Front in Mass-Market Private Label
- Target Also Coming on Strong
- Natural/Organic at Front of Supermarket Push
- Pet Specialty Retail Leaders Build Own Brands Through Heavy Consumer
Advertising
- Table 3-4a: National Advertising Spending by Leading Pet Product
Retailers, 2003-2005 (in thousands of dollars)
- Table 3-4b: Share of National Advertising Spending by Leading Pet Product
Retailers, 2003-2005 (percent)
- Table 3-5: Independent Pet Specialty Store Advertising Spending by Type of
Media, 2004 (in dollars and percent)
- PetSmart's Private-Label and Brand-Building Initiatives
- Table 3-6: PetSmart Store Brands by Trademark Name, Usage, and Filing Date
- Petco's Private-Label and Brand-Building Initiatives
- Table 3-7: Petco Store Brands by Trademark Name, Usage, and Filing Date
- PetMed Express and Drs. Foster & Smith
- Independent Pet Shops Also Pushing into Private Label
- Private-Label Risks and Challenges
- Success Stories
- Boutique Private-Label Initiatives
- Private-Label Pet Products Also Catching on in Non-Pet Retailers
- Looking Ahead
- Room to Grow
- Premium Private Label
- A New Private-Label Experience?
- Tiered Private Label and Increased Retailer Involvement
Chapter 4: Building Licensed Brands
- Humanization and Kids Are Key Market Drivers
- Table 4-1: Number of New Licensed Pet Product Lines, 2002-2006
- Table 4-2: Number of New Licensed Pet Product SKUs, 2002-2006
- Figure 4-1: Share of U.S. Pet-Owning Households with Child Under 18 in
Household: By Type of Pet, 2004 (percent)
- Pet Market Licenses Cover All Bases
- Table 4-3: Total U.S. Licensing Revenues By Property Type, 2004 vs. 2005
(in millions of dollars and percent)
- Licensing Pros...
- ...and Cons
- The SpongeBob Phenomenon
- Classic Media Parlays Lassie into Pet Food Brand
- Licensed Dogsters Line Taps into Fast-Growing Frozen Pet Food Niche
- 4Kids Entertainment Reps American Kennel Club and Cat Fanciers Association
- Jakks Pacific Unleashes Flood of Licensed Brands
- Pet Pals Acquisition Includes AKC License
- New Deals with MGA Entertainment (Bratz) and Marvel (Spider-Man Et Al)
- The Cat Fanciers Association Deal
- The Meow Mix Deal
- Company Signs on with Snoop Dogg
- Pet Brands Banking on Milk-Bone and 9 Lives Licenses
- Cardinal Creates Own Character License: Crazy Pets
- Kroger's Private-Label Dog Food Based on Disney's Old Yeller
- Additional Forays Into Licensed Pet Products
- Looking Ahead
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