SAO PAULO, BRAZIL--(Marketwired - Jun 3, 2014) - Middle-class and affluent households in Brazil's interior cities are poised to replace those in the country's state capitals and major metropolitan areas as the chief drivers of growth in many consumer-product categories. Yet while such consumers will represent a market of more than $600 billion by 2020, most companies are in a weak position to capture the opportunities, according to a new report released today by The Boston Consulting Group (BCG).
The report, titled Brazil's Next Consumer Frontier: Capturing Growth in the Rising Interior, says that middle-class and affluent consumers in Brazil's interior cities will account for around half of incremental household consumption, or around $130 billion in added spending, through the end of this decade. These consumers will be especially important sources of growth in sectors such as financial services, automobiles, and apparel.
Even though middle-class and affluent households in the interior have nearly 20 percent more disposable income than those in Brazil's major cities, they consume much less in certain categories. Interior households spend 19 percent less on postpaid mobile-telecommunications services and about half as much on air travel, for example. The findings are based on a survey of more than 3,600 middle-class and affluent households in capitals, metro areas, and interior cities of all regions of Brazil by BCG's Center for Consumer and Customer Insight.
"The interior market in Brazil offers some of the world's richest growth opportunities for consumer goods and services," said Olavo Cunha, a BCG partner and coauthor of the report. "Yet this market is vastly underserved by both foreign and domestic companies, whose management still tends not to think much beyond Brazil's major cities and its more developed southern coast."
A lack of access to retail outlets is one reason interior-city consumers spend considerably less on certain kinds of products. A physical retail presence is especially important in Brazil's interior because consumers there prefer to touch and feel products before making purchases. Yet some 1,400 interior cities -- each with more than 5,000 households -- have no supermarkets that belong to Brazil's top 20 chains. Nearly 5,500 cities lack bank branches solely dedicated to offering premium financial services to wealthier customers, even though the premium-banking target segment in these cities is growing much more rapidly than in bigger cities. And 60 of 98 interior cities with more than 5,000 affluent households have no luxury-car dealership.
Inadequate infrastructure and differences in consumer behavior also make it difficult for some companies to penetrate interior markets. Consumers in the interior travel less by air than their big-city counterparts, in large part because airports are too far away and flights to desired destinations are too few. Another reason, the research found, is that interior-city consumers enjoy spending leisure time at home -- and have much less desire to travel by air either domestically or abroad. And even though interior households use the Internet as heavily as big-city consumers, they are more hesitant about buying goods online because deliveries to the interior take so long and it's too hard to get refunds.
"To become leaders in the critical interior market, most companies must substantially increase both their physical and their online presence," said BCG partner Masao Ukon, a coauthor. "They also need to do a better job of getting in sync with interior consumers' needs and purchasing patterns."
In addition to expanding companies' retail reach in Brazil, the authors recommend that companies develop stronger on-the-ground marketing, better e-commerce capabilities, and innovative business models that can cost-effectively reach these growing concentrations of wealth. They should gain clearer insights into the particular consumer-spending patterns and attitudes of the interior. "Most companies require a deeper understanding of the underlying drivers of consumer behavior in interior cities. These drivers often differ from those in capitals," said André Xavier, a BCG senior partner who leads the firm's Financial Institutions practice in Brazil.
Taking a slow and incremental approach to expanding in Brazil's interior will be insufficient. "Millions of middle-class and affluent households already represent a crucial market, and they are forming brand loyalty ties that will likely endure for many years," said Cunha, who leads the firm's Consumer practice and Marketing & Sales practice in Brazil. "The time to establish a leading presence is now."
A copy of the report can be downloaded at www.bcgperspectives.com.
To arrange an interview with one of the authors, please contact Eric Gregoire at +1 617 850 3783 or gregoire.eric@bcg.com.
About The Boston Consulting Group
The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) is a global management consulting firm and the world's leading advisor on business strategy. We partner with clients from the private, public, and not-for-profit sectors in all regions to identify their highest-value opportunities, address their most critical challenges, and transform their enterprises. Our customized approach combines deep insight into the dynamics of companies and markets with close collaboration at all levels of the client organization. This ensures that our clients achieve sustainable competitive advantage, build more capable organizations, and secure lasting results. Founded in 1963, BCG is a private company with 81 offices in 45 countries. For more information, please visit bcg.com.
About bcgperspectives.com
Bcgperspectives.com features the latest thinking from BCG experts as well as from CEOs, academics, and other leaders. It covers issues at the top of senior management's agenda. It also provides unprecedented access to BCG's extensive archive of thought leadership stretching back 50 years to the days of Bruce Henderson, the firm's founder and one of the architects of modern management consulting. All of our content -- including videos, podcasts, commentaries, and reports -- can be accessed by PC, mobile, iPad, Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
About BCG's Center for Consumer and Customer Insight
The Boston Consulting Group's Center for Consumer and Customer Insight (CCCI) applies a unique, integrated approach that combines quantitative and qualitative consumer research with a deep understanding of business strategy and competitive dynamics. The center works closely with BCG's various practices to translate its insights into actionable strategies that lead to tangible economic impact for our clients. In the course of its work, the center has amassed a rich set of proprietary data on consumers from around the world, in both emerging and developed markets. The CCCI is sponsored by BCG's Marketing & Sales practice and Global Advantage practice. For more information, please visit here.
Contact Information:
The Boston Consulting Group
Eric Gregoire
Global Media Relations Manager
Tel +1 617 850 3783
Fax +1 617 850 3701
gregoire.eric@bcg.com