Current:Home > reviewsLess is more? Consumers have fewer choices as brands prune their offerings to focus on best sellers -ProfitClass
Less is more? Consumers have fewer choices as brands prune their offerings to focus on best sellers
View
Date:2025-04-25 21:30:59
NEW YORK (AP) — How much choice is too much?
Apparently for Coca-Cola, it’s about 400 different types of drinks.
That’s why the beverage company recently decided to discontinue half of them, shedding brands like Tab, Zico coconut water, Diet Coke Fiesty Cherry and Odwalla juices but still leaving about 200 others to choose from.
It’s a move that other businesses are making as well, reducing the variety of offerings from mayonnaise to cereals to cars and instead focusing on what they think will sell best.
Stew Leonard’s, a supermarket chain that operates stores in Connecticut, New York and New Jersey, now has 24 cereal flavors or types, down from 49 in 2019. Edgewell Personal Care Co., the maker of Schick blazers and Banana Boat suntan lotion, has trimmed certain varieties of its anti-bacteria wipes Wet Ones, among others. And Dollar General, based in Goodlettsville, Tennessee, used to stock six different kinds of mayonnaise on its shelves and is now looking to drop a couple of them.
“The consumer is not going to know the difference,” Todd J. Vasos, CEO of Dollar General, told analysts in December. “Actually, it’s going to make her life a little simpler when she goes to the shelf.”
Just a year ago, Kohl’s store in Clifton, New Jersey had tables stacked high with sweaters and shirts in a rainbow of colors as well as dress racks crammed with a wide assortment of styles. Now, it boasts a more edited approach — tables have slim piles of knit shirts that focus on fewer colors, and many dress racks have been reduced to just three or four styles.
Under its new CEO Tom Kingsbury, Kohl’s has been cutting back on the colors and variations of sweaters, jeans and other items, while sending their buyers into the New York market more frequently to bring in fresh trendy merchandise.
“We would go out, and we would buy a lot of goods and it would come in 12, 14 months later, and it didn’t perform very well,” Kingsbury told analysts in a call in November. “We’re going to be using the marketplace, so that we can react to the business quickly, getting into trends.”
Some customers like the changes so far.
“It’s pretty organized,” said Kimberly Ribeiro, 30, who was at the Kohl’s store on a recent Friday. “If it’s not so cluttered, then you don’t get overwhelmed.”
Even in the auto world, shoppers are finding fewer choices. Both General Motors and Ford have been touting how they are limiting the number of option combinations customers can get on their vehicles to reduce manufacturing and purchasing complexity.
That’s a reversal from a few years ago when there was an explosion of choices, encouraged in part by online shopping that paid no mind to space constraints. But that didn’t always lead to sales so companies started pruning selections a year or two before the pandemic.
During the pandemic, the pruning only accelerated, with companies focusing on necessities as they wrestled with supply chain clogs. But even after the pandemic, when goods began moving freely again, many businesses decided less was better and justified the limited selection by asserting shoppers don’t want so much choice. It’s also more profitable for companies because they’re not carrying over as many leftovers that need to be discounted.
Overall, new items accounted for about 2% of products in stores in 2023 across categories such as beauty, footwear, technology and toys, down from 5% of items in 2019, says market-research firm Circana.
Eric O’Toole, president of Edgewell’s North America division, noted the pandemic presented “a really valuable stimulus” for reassessing assortment.
“We avoid jumping on fads, as the supply chain and retailer costs required to support getting to shelf typically don’t generate a return in the end,” O’Toole said. “A tighter, more curated portfolio supports healthy profit management. ”
Many think they’re also doing shoppers a favor, with studies showing that fewer choices, not lots of variety, actually encourage shoppers to buy more.
In 2000, psychologists Sheena Lyengar and Mark Lepper published a study that showed limited selection is better for the shopper. In their experiment, Lyengar and Lepper found consumers were 10 times more likely to purchase jam on display when the number of jams available was cut down from 24 to 6 even though they were more likely to stop at the display offering more selection. Subsequent studies have confirmed this phenomenon.
“Retailers are recognizing that they have to be respectful of shoppers’ time,” said Paco Underhill whose company, Envirosell, studies consumer behavior.
Still, retailers can’t just slash products willy-nilly, said David Berliner, who leads the business restructuring and turnaround practice at BDO.
“You want to make these cuts so they’re not even aware of it, and you want the store to still look full,” Berliner said. “If you do it too much, you might scare some away.”
Berliner also believes reducing variety may also hurt smaller brands who relied on retailers to offer different products — and will send shoppers like Brian Friedman to other competitors.
The 49-year-old communications consultant from Little Falls, New Jersey said that for years, his go-to barbecue sauce has been Open Pit. But Friedman noticed that over the past few years, his local grocers hadn’t been carrying it, and he’s since turned to Amazon to buy it. That means those local stores not only lost out on Open Pit sales to Friedman but all the other purchases he used to make while shopping for his favorite barbecue sauce.
“I really don’t love the idea of a retailer telling me what I should and should not be interested in,” Friedman said. “I like variety. I like specific brands.”
___
Associated Press Business Writers Dee-Ann Durbin and Tom Krisher in Detroit contributed to this report.
Follow Anne D’Innocenzio: http://twitter.com/ADInnocenzio
veryGood! (4782)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Anne Hathaway says she missed out on roles due to 'toxic' Hathahate backlash
- Colorado university hires 2 former US attorneys to review shooting, recommend any changes
- You're throwing money away without a 401(k). Here's how to start saving for retirement.
- Plunge Into These Olympic Artistic Swimmers’ Hair and Makeup Secrets
- Olivia Colman slams Hollywood pay disparities and says she'd earn more if she were a man
- Watch Princess Kate's video statement revealing her cancer diagnosis
- Walmart employee fatally stabbed at Illinois store, suspect charged with murder
- NCAA hands former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh a 4-year show cause order for recruiting violations
- Will anybody beat South Carolina? It sure doesn't look like it as Gamecocks march on
Ranking
- RFK Jr. closer to getting on New Jersey ballot after judge rules he didn’t violate ‘sore loser’ law
- Kevin Hart accepts Mark Twain Prize for humor, says committing to comedy was a 'gamble'
- Storms sweep the US from coast to coast causing frigid temps, power outages and traffic accidents
- Texas man dies after becoming trapped while cleaning a Wisconsin city’s water tank, police say
- 9/11 hearings at Guantanamo Bay in upheaval after surprise order by US defense chief
- A mother killed her 5-year-old daughter and hid the body, prosecutors in Syracuse say
- What are the 10 largest US lottery jackpots ever won?
- 18 dead frozen puppies discovered in Oregon home were meant as snake food, officials say
Recommendation
Boy who wandered away from his 5th birthday party found dead in canal, police say
New Jersey first lady Tammy Murphy suspends run for U.S. Senate
Laurent de Brunhoff, Babar heir who created global media empire, dies at 98
Justin Fields 'oozes talent,' but Russell Wilson in 'pole position' for Steelers QB job
Daughter of Utah death row inmate navigates complicated dance of grief and healing before execution
'American Idol': Former 'Bachelor' Juan Pablo Galavis makes surprise cameo for daughter's audition
A Colorado dentist is accused of his wife's murder. Did he poison her protein shakes?
Fareed Zakaria decries the anti-Americanism in America's politics today