
Strategic market planning for value-added natural beef products:
A cluster analysis of Colorado consumers
Dawn D. Thilmany1,*, Wendy J. Umberger2
and Amanda R. Ziehl3
Abstract
In the past decade, sales of meat products labeled as natural (minimally
processed) and produced without antibiotics and hormones have increased
dramatically.
In response to growing demand for meat products differentiated by various
production attributes, many smaller-scale beef enterprises are considered
direct marketing of their beef products to end-consumers as a viable
approach to sustaining their family farming operations.
This research uses survey data from Colorado consumers, and factor
and cluster analysis to determine market segments for various (varied
by production protocols and other meat attributes) natural beef products.
Findings from the cluster analysis indicate that there are multiple
segments of consumers who are likely to purchase natural beef, and that
different segments are motivated by different factors.
The most important factor explaining almost two-thirds of the differences
among consumer responses relates to consumers’ perceptions of
the importance of meat attributes related to production practices (e.g.
use of antibiotics, hormones and environmentally friendly grazing).
Interestingly, the two consumer segments that are willing to pay a
significantly higher premium for natural, local beef are motivated by
different aspects of the meat and its intrinsic production attributes.
One segment, representing 12.5% of consumers, ranked the importance
of all production attributes significantly lower than the sample average.
Consumers in this segment appear to be motivated by their perceptions
of the extrinsic quality of natural beef products. The other segment,
13% of consumers, appears to be altruistic, ranking all production attributes
such as ‘no antibiotics’, ‘no hormones’, and
‘humane treatment’, significantly higher than all of the
other clusters.
These results indicate the potential strength of production methods
(and marketing of such quality differences) as product differentiation
criteria. This paper illustrates the type of market research that may
be useful for beef producers seeking value-added marketing opportunities,
and portrays the types of consumers who are fueling the growth in natural
meats in the United States. Such market analysis can facilitate producers’
ability to effectively develop product concepts, labeling and promotional
strategies targeted at the most receptive consumer segments, and illustrates
that there is more than one type of consumer interested in purchasing
products differentiated by sustainable production methods.
Source
Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems: 21(3); 192-203 2006 DOI: 10.1079/RAF2005143.
Accepted 08 October 2005 Research Paper
1Associate Professor, Department of Agricultural and
Resource Economics, B313 Clark Building, Colorado State University,
Fort Collins, CO 80523-1172, USA.
2Associate Professor, Department of Agricultural and
Resource Economics, B313 Clark Building, Colorado State University,
Fort Collins, CO 80523-1172, USA.
3Marketing Specialist, Center for Profitable Agriculture,
University of Tennessee, P.O. Box 1819, Spring Hill, TN 37174-1819,
USA.
*Corresponding author: thilmany@lamar.colostate.edu
Posted April 2007