Campaign India Team
Mar 06, 2009

Starcom, The Key collaborate on study on impact of economic downturn

Starcom and The Key, a qualitative research company, jointly undertook a study on the effect of the economic downturn. Some of the important findings of the study include the fact that SEC A and B behave completely differently towards the downturn.  While only 30% of SEC B households say they have been affected, 70% of SEC A say they have felt affected. Also, the categories that affect the SEC A and SEC B are different.

Starcom, The Key collaborate on study on impact of economic downturn

Starcom and The Key, a qualitative research company, jointly undertook a study on the effect of the economic downturn. Some of the important findings of the study include the fact that SEC A and B behave completely differently towards the downturn.  While only 30% of SEC B households say they have been affected, 70% of SEC A say they have felt affected. Also, the categories that affect the SEC A and SEC B are different.

Elaborating on the study, Sandeep Lakhina, MD, Starcom said, “As the slowdown is now gradually affecting India, we wanted to see how is it affecting the consumers and what are they planning to do in the future. The fieldwork was done in December and January. We spoke to about 500 odd consumers across key cities, both SEC A and B.”

The study is divided into two parts – Spend Drift and Senti Meter. Spend Drift tracks the actual behavioural change in the actual spending habits of consumers across 18 categories and Senti Meter gauges the overall mood and sentiment and outlines broad consumer behaviour trends in the near future.

The categories that will affect the SEC A segment include financial planning and investment, luxury goods, holidays, jewellery and automotive. The categories which will get affected for SEC B include food and beverage, telecom, consumer durables, healthcare and local travel. Says Lakhina, “SEC A is definitely a lot more affected. They are actively looking at where they can save costs. For SEC B, it is more about inflation than the downturn.”

The study also predicts the return of the small store formats. “We are seeing a generic fall in footfalls across the bigger stores. People are stocking up less. However, that won’t be long term. I think we are ready for modern trade,” says Lakhina.

Some of the other trends that were seen in SEC A include cancellation of vacations, postponement of buying things like automotives, people looking for dual income or extra source of income and people spending more time at home rather than going out.

Some of the predictions of Senti Meter include people going back to basics like investing in gold, bonds and Fixed Deposits as the risk factor is going down. Another projection is that self gratification will get reduced and people will look for more do-it-yourself activities and multi-task.

Lakhina adds, “The overall mood about the slowdown is that we are all in it together. Thus there will be a lot more community activity and a lot more chat shows on different media.”

The study also predicts that women are more optimistic about the recession ending earlier than men.

Source:
Campaign India

Related Articles

Just Published

2 days ago

India’s six-pack makes Cannes Lions shortlist jury cut

This year’s Shortlisting Jury panel includes industry expert representations from 79 country-markets across various categories.

2 days ago

Google AI Max and SEO: What it means for brands and ...

Google’s AI Max for Search signals a shift in how information is found, used, and expected to perform—and is raising new challenges for marketers and brands alike.

2 days ago

Monks owner S4 Capital reports 11.4% revenue drop ...

Latest results reveal uneven performance across regions, with Asia-Pacific facing challenges amid shifting client priorities and global cutbacks.

2 days ago

Jab we ‘Met’ Shah Rukh Khan

King Khan’s Met Gala debut exposed a PR and media blind spot—one that marketers must fix if India’s soft power is to land globally.