Sector Insight: Bath and shower products - Reinvigorating formula
Luxury and functional innovations are helping manufacturers find growth in a saturated market.
THE BACKGROUND
The market for bath and shower products has benefited in recent years
from British shoppers' growing desire to pamper themselves, even if only
for a few minutes in the shower each morning. This trend toward treating
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mass-market bathing brands emphasise their luxuriant qualities and add
functional, spa-treatment and aromatherapy ingredients to their
products. Bathtime, in particular, is now being widely promoted as an
indulgent treat for women, rather than an everyday event for anyone.
The bathing products sector is under tremendous price pressure.
The multiples have been cutting prices as they attempt to build market
share in the category at the expense of the pharmacies, and in response,
the bigger pharmacy chains such as Boots and Superdrug have been trying
to maintain share with heavy discounts; buy one get one free promotions
have been particularly prevalent.
So while the sector's growth was healthy up to 2004, it is expected to
slow to about 1% in value terms to £670m this year, according to
Euromonitor.
Bodywashes, shower gels and liquid soaps have performed best.
Euromonitor says that while the value of these will continue to rise,
this growth will be balanced by the decline in more traditional products
such as bath additives and bar soap.
In 2004 volume sales of bodywash and shower gel grew by 27%, while
liquid soap rose 18% on 2003. While this volume growth has been
impressive, the pressures on price mean bodywash and shower gels value
sales are expected to grow by only 7%.
Shower gels are being bought more often for two main reasons: lower
prices and a rise in the number of households with showers - penetration
is now 85%.
Functional products
Manufacturers have further boosted this sector with new product
development that has seen added benefits such as exfoliating, firming or
moisturising become the norm. Another trend has been the use of natural
or food-based ingredients such as milk, rice and fruits considered
beneficial to the skin.
The discounting of liquid soaps has meant consumers who previously
considered them too expensive have been converted. Liquid soap
dispensers, at an average price of £4.50 a litre, now cost the
equivalent of a twin-pack of bar soap. Their convenience and added
benefits such as anti-bacterial qualities also appeal to shoppers.
But this has meant bar soap volume sales in 2004 were down 4% on the
previous year, as consumers switched format of soap rather than use
more.
PZ Cussons is the leading manufacturer in the liquid soap category, with
a 17% value share. Its leading brands are Imperial Leather and
Carex.
In 2002 it bought the Original Source brand, which had £11m sales
in 2003.
Imperial Leather has expanded from its original bar soap format to
include shower gels and creams, bubble baths (under the Bath Moments
brand) and more recently Foamburst - a shower gel that turns into
lather. Its ads play heavily on its heritage and uses the strapline
'Everyone deserves a little bit of luxury'.
Beyond the kitchen
Last year Cussons extended kitchen handwash brand Carex into bathroom
products with new fragrances and packaging. The activity was supported
by an ad campaign using the animated Squirts characters used in previous
Carex work.
Sara Lee Household & Body Care is close behind Cussons with an estimated
16% value share, an increase of 2% on 2003. Its growth is driven mainly
by the market-leading Radox brand. The company's portfolio also includes
Sanex, Badedas and children's brand Matey.
The Radox bath range relaunched in autumn 2004 with a reshaped bottle
and amended formulations. The range consists of six herbal baths and
four Aromatic Bath Essences. The relaunch was supported by a £4m
ad campaign featuring a woman bathing after a busy day, the events of
which were performed in front of her as a musical. In May, Radox put
£5m into the relaunch of its Shower range with a translucent
pack.
Beauty focus
Unilever manages several brands in this market, of which Dove is the
best performer. The brand was introduced to the UK 12 years ago as a
beauty soap, but has extended into other areas, including bodywashes. In
2004 it launched a firming range, which was supported by the message
that 'Real beauty comes in all shapes and sizes'.
The launch garnered huge media attention because the Ogilvy & Mather
advertising featured 'real women'. Dove sales increased 700% in the
first half of 2004.
Dove has also shifted its focus to the indulgent aspects of bathing,
launching its Calming Night Bath and Relaxing Tranquillity Bath, which
contain essential oils and active moisturisers.
Liquid growth
The future performance of this market is predicted to be one of steady
growth, with some subsectors faring better than others. By 2009 the
category will be worth £693m, of which bodywash and shower gels
will be the main component at £366m, according to Euromonitor.
Bodywash and liquid soap sales will continue to grow, but the rate of
growth will slow as sales reach saturation levels. Volume growth will be
driven by increased use and discounting.
As products continue to be developed around the concept of bathing as a
treat, the decline in bath additives will slow. The categories
performing least well will be bar soap (sales are predicted to fall 23%
from 2004 to 2009) and talcum powder, which is seen as
old-fashioned.
Euromonitor predicts a major rationalisation of mass-market bar soap
brands, which may see only half those on-shelf now still around in
2009.
BATH AND SHOWER BRANDS BY MARKET SHARE (%)
Brand Company 2004 2003 2002 2001
1 Radox Sara Lee 13.7 12.3 12.1 11.1
2 Imperial Leather PZ Cussons 10.1 10.0 9.4 n/a
3 Dove Lever Faberge 8.0 7.8 7.4 6.8
4 Johnson's pH 5.5 Johnson & Johnson 5.5 5.7 6.0 6.1
5 Oil of Olay Procter & Gamble 5.5 4.8 4.9 4.6
6 Carex PZ Cussons 5.1 4.8 4.3 n/a
7 Boots Boots 4.0 4.5 4.6 5.0
8 Avon Avon Cosmetics 3.5 3.5 4.4 4.2
9 Palmolive Colgate-Palmolive 3.5 2.9 2.8 2.7
10 Lynx Lever Faberge 3.2 3.1 2.9 2.6
11 The Body Shop Body Shop 2.9 2.9 3.5 3.7
12 Garnier Nutralia Laboratoires Garnier 1.7 1.7 1.7 1.7
13 Sanex Sara Lee 1.7 1.4 1.2 1.0
14 Simple Accantia Health 1.3 1.4 1.6 1.6
& Beauty
15 Johnson's Baby Johnson & Johnson 1.3 1.4 1.4 1.3
16 Palmolive Aromatherapy Colgate-Palmolive 1.3 1.3 1.2 1.1
17 Palmolive Nourishing Colgate-Palmolive 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.7
18 Badedas Sara Lee 0.8 0.9 1.1 1.3
19 Lux Lever Faberge 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.9
20 Adidas Coty UK 0.6 0.7 0.6 0.6
21 Own-label n/a 10.1 10.5 10.8 12.0
22 Others n/a 14.0 16.8 16.6 30.8
Total 100 100 100 100
Source: Euromonitor
ADVERTISING SPEND ON BATH AND SHOWER BRANDS BY COMPANY
Company £1 Unilever 10,589,295
2 Sara Lee Household
& Personal Care 4,656,102
3 Procter & Gamble 3,169,376
4 Colgate-Palmolive 1,985,800
5 PZ Cussons 1,634,261
6 Beiersdorf UK 1,318,740
7 Others 2,038,972
Source: Nielsen Media Research
Note: figures are for year to 30 Sept 2005
ANALYST COMMENT - HANNA FISHER, SENIOR CONSUMER ANALYST, MINTEL
INTERNATIONAL GROUP
Bubble baths and shower gels are no longer the functional commodity
products they once were. Today they offer sophisticated features and
value-added benefits. The sector has distinctly moved toward a holistic
approach to washing, with recent launches taking their cue from broader
trends and catering for the wellbeing of body, mind and soul.
New users are few and far between, so the only realistic growth option
is increasing value through segmentation, targeting specific consumer
groups and needs. In the UK market, which is characterised by constant
price promotions, new product development is key to maintaining and
gaining share.
Segmentation addresses not only function, but also skin type, as well as
formulations, with gels being complemented by oils, creams and
mousses.
Skincare is a key feature in bath and shower products, as simple
cleansing is now taken for granted.
Straightforward shower products now sit alongside those that indulge a
desire for pampering. This reflects changing habits, as consumers take
showers as part of their grooming routine and baths to relax. Many
products have an aromatherapy proposition or offer thermal spa-style
restorative properties.
Drawing on trends in skincare, the range of fragrances on offer has been
greatly expanded and 'natural' ingredients now vary from botanicals to
shea butter, ylang-ylang, vitamins and milk proteins.
In addition to male-specific products, novelty lines aimed at children
and young teens have been another recent growth area.
There is further scope to develop products with more sophisticated
skincare properties, while spa-inspired brands will need to link more
closely to real spa treatments.
Jobs
- STAFFING AGENCY :: INTEGRATED AGENCY, Dylan*
- ,
- CEO, PPA
- Six Figure basic, Central London
- ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE :: EXPERIENTIAL, Dylan*
- Good Benefits, Central London


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