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Consumers in Europe turn to tech to work, eat and entertain

  • Writer: Smart Solutions
    Smart Solutions
  • Apr 23, 2020
  • 3 min read

From week March 9th to April 5th (weeks 11 to 14), GfK retail sales figures track how consumers have progressed through different stages of shifting demand – from the frenzy of stockpiling, during which refrigerators and freezers were purchased to the reality of working and schooling at home which leads to growing sales of IT hardware and equipment. More hours at home together than ever before triggers the demand for TVs and Gaming Consoles/PCs/Notebooks, satisfying the need for entertainment at home. Despite the rise of e-commerce, as many stores are closed, online sales cannot fully offset the significant losses in Europe’s big five markets – Great Britain, Germany, France, Spain and Italy. These are GfK's findings for the global Technical Consumer Goods market.

GfK has been tracking sales of tech and durable items during the lockdown, revealing some fascinating shifts in buying behavior. As Pavlin Lazarov, GfK expert for global market insights says: “We’ve seen soaring sales for products that help people organize their life in terms of working, studying, consuming and entertaining. As consumers move from reacting to the initial shock of lockdown to adapting to a life solely at home, their shopping patterns are revealing how they are coping with this extraordinary time. For retailers and manufacturers is essential to understand what purchases are preponed and what postponed in order to secure the relevant and essential assortment, and to prepare for the moment, when the “new normal” will become a reality.”

Extraordinary sales spikes:

Working at home has driven up sales of monitors (+120 percent), printers (+68 percent), notebooks (+62 percent) and keyboards (+61 percent) in five major European markets. Webcams have seen the largest sales growth peak at +297 percent. April 22, 2020 Julia Richter Public Relations T +49 911 395 4440 public.relations@gfk.com 2 Eating at home sent consumers into a stockpiling mindset and they rushed to buy freezers and refrigerators to store extra food. Between March 9th - April 5th, freezer sales in Great Britain grew +317 percent Year-on-Year. In Germany, these increased +185 percent and also France saw a growth of +44 percent.

Entertainment at home has accelerated tech sales too. At the start of lockdown, sales of media sticks and boxes rose by +50 percent in some markets. In Great Britain, sales of TVs rose +31 percent between March 9th - April 5th as consumers added cheaper extra TVs to cope with different viewing habits. Gaming consoles also benefitted, with sales units up +259 percent in Great Britain, +139 percent in Germany, +132 percent in France, +108 percent in Spain and +65 percent in Italy in weeks 11 to 14. Gaming notebooks also profited from the play-at-home trend and achieved a robust double-digit growth during the same period, ranging between 33 percent (Italy) and 92 percent (Spain). In Germany, France and Spain the gaming notebooks outperformed the nongaming one in terms of unit growth rates.

A huge surge in online sales – but it’s not enough to compensate store losses Online sales grew almost +100 percent in week commencing 30th of March in Europe’s five biggest markets (Great Britain, Germany, France, Spain and Italy). However, even that huge leap couldn’t compensate for the losses in physical retail stores and the overall market still decreased by -14 percent. In fact, GfK’s analysis shows that sales made online would need to quadruple to offset complete store closures, and purchases are a long way off that figure. In Italy for example, ecommerce wins have compensated for only about 30 percent of the losses of traditional retailers.


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