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HomeNewsCaribbean NewsPelotons and Penny-Pinching: How COVID-19 pulled US consumers toward new extremes of...

Pelotons and Penny-Pinching: How COVID-19 pulled US consumers toward new extremes of splurging and saving

NEW YORK, USA – With the end of the pandemic finally in sight, one of its lasting legacies may be pulling American consumers toward new and seemingly contradictory directions of behavior.

A new report from The Conference Board, Consumer Behaviors and Business Opportunities in the COVID-19 Era, maps the convergence and divergence of three key trends.

First, a year of shutdowns and job losses has sparked a renewed focus on frugality, with many consumers switching to value-priced products, services, and brands. Yet even as this economic anxiety-fueled vices like drinking, gambling, and overeating, COVID-19 also spurred a segment of Americans to spend more on health, wellness, and self-care including pricey connected exercise bikes. In fact, digital convenience is the third key driver of consumer behavior, with the crisis-fueled all-digital lifestyle heightening expectations for what technology should deliver.

“For American consumers, COVID-19 has accelerated pre-existing trends and crystallized new preferences and priorities,” said Denise Dahlhoff, senior researcher, consumer research at The Conference Board. “The three trends promoted by the pandemic digitally-enabled convenience, frugality, and health and wellness will continue to drive consumers’ behavior as the pandemic subsides. The most successful brands will be those that address these needs, ideally offering solutions for consumers that don’t force trade-offs but rather balance these three at-times divergent priorities.’”

Among the key insights from the new report:

Pandemic stress drove unhealthy behaviors but also strengthened consumers’ focus on health, personal wellbeing, and self-care:

  • Infection fears aside, the economic insecurity and social isolation forced by COVID-19 has unleashed a “mental health tsunami.” Many consumers turned to familiar coping mechanisms: drug and alcohol usegamblingless healthy diets, and under-exercising all rose during the pandemic. For trending “vices” like legal cannabisand online gambling, COVID-19 may prove to be a turning point toward broader consumer adoption.
  • At the same time, the health crisis and home-centered way of life brought on by the pandemic motivated many Americans to focus on healthier lifestyles. Regardless of where people fall on the spectrum of current health behaviors, the longer-term legacy of COVID-19 may be that healthwellness, and selfcare needs play an even bigger role in consumer decision making.
  • This trend creates opportunities for businesses to cater to people’s health needs. It has already fed sharply higher sales in natural productsfresh produce, and anti-anxiety products and services from medication to meditation, CBD, and aromatherapy.
  • Already growing categories before the pandemic, digital health and fitness have also surged from exercise apps and devices to telehealth counseling and therapy solutions.

Greater frugality and value-seeking forced on consumers by COVID-19’s economic shock may endure beyond the pandemic in significantly altered spending patterns:   

  • At the peak of the pandemic, 64 percent of US consumers reported actively cutting back on spending, according to The Conference Board® Global Consumer Confidence Survey. After a drop in late 2020, it was back up at 62 percent in Q1 2021. Frugality will continue to reign for many consumers, especially if the jobs recovery remains sluggish if and when government fiscal support recedes.
  • BlackLatino, lower-paidand less-educated workers bore the brunt of lost jobs and wages. In January 2021, over 40 percent of consumers in each of these demographics reported having difficulty meeting regular household expenses.
  • Nearly 1 in 5 grocery shoppers in a national survey last September reported buying more private-label goods to stretch their dollars during the pandemic. As in previous downturns, this change in spending patterns may be slow to reverse, with many likely to stick to cheaper products and sales channels over name brands even after their finances recover.
  • Consumers’ focus on frugality will reward companies that invent novel offerings and business models catering to more frugal wallets. These include secondhand markets, rental services, and “sharing economy” businesses all likely to be facilitated by digital features.

The pandemic accelerated the move to digitized lifestyles, permanently raising expectations for convenience:

  • Faced with pandemic lockdowns, consumers have become accustomed to digital capabilities that save time and effort in every stage of the customer journey. In both consumer and B-to-B industries, brands will need to meet new standards: “anytime–anywhere” access; real-time information; high-quality filtering, search, and review functions; and responsive support across multiple channels.
  • E-commerce surged during the pandemic, peaking at 16.1 percent of total retail sales in Q2 2020. This figure a metric of where a purchase took place dramatically understates digital’s true influence, though. Consumers now expect digital convenience at every stage of the shopping experience, even if the final sale occurs in a brick-and-mortar outlet.
  • Mobile devices have become the “remote controls” of our lives a decade-long trend intensified by the pandemic. As 5G networks proliferate, the centrality of mobile will only become more entrenched and must shape all business decisions in the post-pandemic economy.
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