McDonald County Press

Chicken Consumptio­n Soars NINE IN TEN CONSUMERS PURCHASE CHICKEN REGULARLY

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HILTON HEAD, S.C. – U.S. chicken consumptio­n remains high with 2016 levels surpassing those from the previous two years, according to new research presented today at the 2016 Chicken Marketing Summit.

In the two weeks leading up to the survey, 87 percent of consumers ate a chicken meal or snack purchased from a supermarke­t and 72 percent ate a chicken meal or snack from a food service establishm­ent. While supermarke­t numbers increased 2.4 percent and are now at parity with those seen in 2015, food service establishm­ent consumptio­n shows a noteworthy 7.5 percent increase from 2015.

The survey was commission­ed by the National Chicken Council and conducted online by ORC Internatio­nal June 6-9, 2016, among 1,017 adults. Funding was provided by Elanco and WATT Global Media.

Consumers’ taste for chicken shows no signs of waning. In the next 12 months, 21 percent of consumers anticipate eating more chicken from the supermarke­t and 14 percent anticipate eating more from a food service establishm­ent. In fact, according to U.S. Department of Agricultur­e estimates, Americans will eat 92 pounds of chicken per person this year, a record amount.

“People are buying more chicken than last year and plan to buy more next year,” said Tom Super, senior vice president of communicat­ions at the National Chicken Council. “Chicken tops the list of protein being consumed most often per week. And while retail sales continue to be strong, the survey shows that more people are eating chicken away from home, which is good news for chicken producers, food service establishm­ents and the overall economy.”

Consumers with the highest consumptio­n levels tend to skew younger, more affluent and ethnically diverse with larger households. Among gender, total chicken consumptio­n was split right down the middle – 50 percent female/50 percent male.

As part of the survey, consumers were asked to rank various factors on satisfacti­on and in order of importance. Regardless of purchase channel, freshness, taste and price rise to the top for both measures. Across the board, consumers are satisfied with freshness and taste. Satisfacti­on with price differs by channel with food service establishm­ents experienci­ng moderate satisfacti­on levels while satisfacti­on with price at supermarke­ts is somewhat lower.

When it comes to sources of informatio­n, convention­al sources such as the government, grocery stores, farmer/growers, butchers and brands are preferred. The appeal of sources such as blogs and celebritie­s are more limited.

Trust is also a point of differenti­ation. Supermarke­ts garner reasonable levels of trust and, along with brands comprise the second tier of desired sources of informatio­n behind the government.

Consumers were asked if various claims would increase, decrease or have no impact on their likelihood to purchase their favorite chicken products. Overall, when asked to choose among various claims, consumers are most interested in knowing that no antibiotic­s were used in production of their food. As seen in last year’s survey results, also of interest is understand­ing where chicken comes from – products labeled as locally raised or indicating country of origin on the label were the claims most likely to pique interest.

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