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Whole Foods Market Research: Millennials Like To Pay More

Whole Foods Market may just have come up with the most novel way yet to combat its image as overpriced, releasing new research that proves millennials are happy to pay more for groceries.

The Austin, Texas-based supermarket chain has long wrestled with its “Whole Paycheck” nickname, as well as lawsuits about ways it overcharges customers. Its survey results say 80% of millennials value quality when food shopping and nearly 70% say they are willing to spend more for that quality.

They’re also looking for greater transparency, with 65% saying food sourcing matters to them, especially for meat and seafood. And more than half are willing to pony up for products that have animal welfare standards and are responsibly sourced.

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The online survey finds that half say they buy more organic products than they did five years ago. Seventy percent read labels more closely, while 60% fret more about additives and growth hormones. 

The survey, conducted for Whole Foods by YouGov, is based on more than 1,000 adults, aged 22 to 37.

Whole Foods’ report comes at a time when all eyes in the grocery world are trained on Amazon’s designs on the $840 billion grocery market. It acquired Whole Foods for $14.3 billion back in 2017 and seems poised to pounce in multiple directions.

But increasingly, Whole Foods seems less like the crown jewel of Amazon’s grocery ambitions. Growth has slowed, and earlier this year, it put the kibosh on its 365 stores, a poorly received attempt to woo millennials with lower prices.

Meanwhile, Amazon has been aggressively focusing on delivery, expanding the number of markets where it now promises delivery in a one- and two-hour time frame.

Earlier this year, The Wall Street Journal  reported Amazon was signing leases on dozens of grocery stores in U.S. cities, expanding its physical operations beyond the Whole Foods footprint. This summer, The New York Times said Amazon was closer to an even more ambitious new chain, offering plenty to buy in-store, as well as pickup and delivery items that complement Amazon’s growing prowess in online groceries. 

And while Amazon didn’t comment, those reports led to all kinds of juicy speculation about Amazon’s latest take on Whole Foods. They had headlines like "Are Amazon, Whole Foods divorcing, or just working on their marriage?"

And "Amazon is struggling to convince Prime members to go to Whole Foods."."

2 comments about "Whole Foods Market Research: Millennials Like To Pay More".
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  1. Ronald Kurtz from American Affluence Research Center, September 12, 2019 at 11:46 a.m.

    Whole Foods should be very careful about accepting these survey results literally. Our prior research indicates there is a limit to how much more even the affluent are willing to pay for the "good stuff". That limit is around 10% for most consumers. Perhaps millennials are looser with their expenditures, but I doubt it. 

  2. Paula Lynn from Who Else Unlimited replied, September 12, 2019 at 3:58 p.m.

    On top of that, as millenials age they take on more responsibilities and debt with money not going as far as they would like. Kids get older and need/want a lot more. Parents may require more attention - financial, time, tax increase - state and local underlining local and the unexpected things their parents experienced. 25% or more for groceries at Whole Foods will be cut from some to all. 

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