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Showing posts with label cheaper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cheaper. Show all posts

Monday, 7 July 2025

Why Shrinking Portions and Downgrading Ingredients Is a Recipe for Losing Customers

In today’s economic climate, many food brands are feeling the pinch, rising costs for raw ingredients, energy, packaging, and transport have created serious challenges for producers of ready meals, cakes, loaves, and other convenience foods. 

But there’s one common response to these pressures that risks doing far more harm than good: quietly reducing portion sizes or downgrading the quality of ingredients.

At first glance, it might seem like a clever cost-cutting solution. Keep the product looking broadly the same, tweak a few details, and most consumers won’t notice, right? Wrong.

Your Customers Are Not Stupid

Let’s be clear—today’s customers are more informed than ever. They check labels, compare products, and share their opinions online. Whether it’s a smaller slice of cake, fewer vegetables in a ready meal, or a once-premium loaf that’s now dry and bland, people notice—and they talk. Social media is filled with side-by-side comparisons, angry rants, and disappointed reviews.

A once-loyal buyer who feels short-changed is far more likely to walk away from your brand than accept the decline as "just how it is."

Shrinkflation and Ingredient Swaps Break Trust

Reducing portion sizes while keeping prices the same, or worse, raising them, has become known as "shrinkflation." Add in the switch from quality ingredients to cheaper alternatives, and you’ve got a perfect storm of consumer resentment.

What these tactics really do is undermine trust. When a brand no longer delivers what it promised, whether it’s in taste, satisfaction, or value, customers feel betrayed. And in a crowded market, they have plenty of other options.

Short-Term Saving, Long-Term Damage

Sure, these changes might protect your profit margin in the short term. But the long-term cost is customer loyalty, and once that’s gone, it’s hard to win back. Reputation is everything in food. If consumers feel a brand has compromised on quality or honesty, they’ll move on, and they might never come back.

Instead of cutting corners, brands need to be transparent, innovative, and value-driven. If costs must go up, communicate it clearly and offer something in return, be it more sustainable packaging, better sourcing, or new product features.

Consumers Want Value, Not Just Cheapness

Let’s not confuse "cheap" with "value". A product that’s £1 cheaper but disappointing isn’t good value, it's just a bad buy. Customers are willing to pay more for food that satisfies, nourishes, and feels worth it. Whether it’s a microwave lasagne, a traybake cake, or a seeded loaf, the principles are the same: quality counts.

If your product no longer delivers the experience your customers expect, they will look elsewhere—and they won’t be shy about saying why.

Conclusion: Don't Alienate Your Customers

Businesses that think consumers are passive or easily fooled are writing their own downfall. Instead of quietly cutting back, brands should focus on honesty, quality, and consistency. Be the name that customers trust—even in tough times.

Because the truth is simple: if your ready meals are smaller, your cakes are drier, or your loaves are no longer satisfying, your customers will notice. And they’ll take their money elsewhere.

Thursday, 21 September 2023

Lidl has officially been named both the cheapest AND most popular supermarket in the UK

Lidl is now officially the cheapest and most popular supermarket in the UK. Lidl topped YouGov’s list of most popular supermarkets and was also named cheapest supermarket in The Grocer’s ‘Super Grocer 33’ –beating the UK’s major supermarkets and fellow discounter, Aldi.

Lidl's unbeatable value has won shoppers’ hearts up and down the entire country. In YouGov’s survey exploring the percentage of shoppers with a positive opinion of a supermarket chain, Lidl nabbed the number one spot. Scoring 79%, placing it ahead of rivals Aldi and M&S.

Meanwhile, The Grocer’s ‘Super Grocer 33’ index, which compares the price of 33 everyday grocery items across the UK’s seven major supermarkets, learned that Lidl was significantly better value than others on a range of products, including fresh fruit and veg. From apples (£1.49 for a six-pack) to aubergines (85p), and cabbages (69p) to carrots (50p for 1kg), Lidl was the cheapest across 26 items in total.

Lidl was exclusively cheapest for its free range eggs (£1.09), with the price accolade coming mere hours after it announced a bold, new approach to boosting British egg production, by offering farmers special financial incentives to move into egg farming.

Even when compared to the traditional supermarkets with discount schemes, Lidl customers found themselves better off. Sainsbury’s shoppers using their Nectar card still paid £6.75 more than they would have if shopping at Lidl, while Tesco Clubcard holders paid £8.09 more.

Premium supermarket Waitrose, which claims it is implementing price cuts, was a massive £15.79 more expensive than Lidl. Rapeseed oil was almost double in price, while a whole chicken was nearly £2.00 more.

Peter De Roos, who is the Chief Commercial Officer at Lidl GB, said: “It’s no surprise when we’re continually shown to be the cheapest supermarket that we’re also topping popularity polls at the same time."

He went on to say: "Our customers, new and old, know shopping with us doesn’t mean they have to compromise on quality. Also, they can be assured we remain committed to keeping our prices low, which we know is more important than ever.” 

For nearly 30 years, Lidl’s unparalleled quality-value combination has been winning customers over from across the country. While the discounter has won The Grocer’s Super 33 five times out of seven, it’s also been named the cheapest supermarket by Manchester Evening News for over seven months in a row.

www.lidl.co.uk