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The Consumer Market for Gifts and Home Decorative Accents Has Enjoyed Vibrant Growth in the Past Five Years, but Will the Growth Continue?

A new study of the giftware market identifies key opportunities for future growth

Stevens, PA March 11, 2008 --  The market for gifts and home decorative accents reached $65.2 billion in 2007.  This is according to a new in-depth study of the market conducted by Unity Marketing.  Overall this market grew 72 percent from 2002, rising from $37.9 billion five years ago.  But giftware marketers cannot sit back and relax.  Continued growth for individual retailers, manufacturers and brands depends upon careful analysis of the trends in the marketplace.

In the first study of this market since 2002, Unity Marketing reports that the giftware segment grew at a faster rate than home decorative accents in the past five years.  The market for giftware, defined as items that are designed and manufactured to be bought and given as a gift or collectible items that are designed and manufactured specifically for the purpose of collecting, grew at a compound annual growth rate of 14.7 percent from 2002 to 2007, while home decorative accents rose at a compound rate of 9.4 percent in the intervening five years.

"One of the most powerful findings of the  new research study of the giftware market is how dramatically it has changed from 2002,"  says Pam Danziger, president of Unity Marketing and author of Shopping:  Why We Love It and How Retailers Can Create the Ultimate Customer Experience

"The giftware market has completely reinvented itself in the past five years.  What was hot five years ago has gone frigidly cold.  And what is hot today was barely measurable five years ago.  The most successful giftware marketers have stayed on top of the trends, moving as the consumers' interest changed and their shopping destinations shifted. 

"The key for success in the giftware market is for giftware companies to continually offer new, distinctly different products to a consumer market that is hungry for product concepts that are new, unique and distinctly different from anything they have seen before.  Plus marketers need to make sure these innovative new concepts are available in the widening range of destinations where giftware shoppers turn," Danziger explains.

Where consumers shop for giftware has changed dramatically in the past five years

The new Unity Marketing Gifts and Decorative Accents Report 2008 is based upon both qualitative and quantitative research methodologies.  It includes a survey among 1,644 recent buyers of one of 26 product categories (average income $75,100; age 42.4 years and 68 percent female/32 percent male).  

Danziger says, "Where people shop for giftware has changed dramatically in the five years since we did our last study.  The most notable change is how often shoppers are turning to the Internet to make purchases of these goods.  In 2007 the Internet was the second most important venue for giftware shopping, trailing only discount department stores." 

Giftware shoppers, on the other hand, are turning less often to specialty gift and card stores for their purchases.  In 2007 the gift specialty stores accounted for only 7 percent of the overall giftware product sales.  Not surprisingly, the study reports that the number of specialty gift shops have declined  21 percent in the past five years, from 75,102 stores in 2002 to 59,032 today.  

"This study provides important research-based recommendations to help giftware companies be more successful in today's rapidly changing consumer marketplace.  The key for success for both manufacturers and retailers of giftware is to stay out in front of the consumer, offering them products that are out of the ordinary, new, fresh and special. 

"The giftware business is in a very real sense a fashion business and companies are rewarded primarily for innovating and offering something new into the market place.  Retailers need to merchandise their store with this in mind, as well.  In this class of goods, nobody wants the 'same-old, same-old' displays featuring stacks of the same item.  Rather they want something fresh, new and different that will make a memorable and emotionally compelling gift.  That is the ultimate key to success in the giftware market," Danziger concludes.

About Unity Marketing's  Gifts & Decorative Accents Report 2008: Who Buys Gifts and Home Decorative Accents, What They Buy and Why They Buy 

Unity Marketing's Gifts and Decorative Accents Report 2008 is the definitive study of consumers' buying and spending habits related to giftware and home decorative accessories, written by Pam Danziger, the nation's leading expert on the gifts market and based upon the kind of in-depth consumer research for which Pam Danziger and Unity Marketing are known. 

This report provides vital market size, growth and demographics for anyone and everyone that sells giftware and home accents, from marketers, advertisers, retailers, service providers. The Gifts & Decorative Accents Report 2008 an essential tool to understand the dynamics of this market, today and into the future.

This important new study of the gifts and home decorative accents market provides the results of a series of focus groups among highly active recent purchasers of various giftware and home accent products.  The focus group respondents were also people who enjoyed shopping for these items in specialty gift and home stores.

This report is compiles detailed statistics collected in a survey among 1,644 recent buyers of one or more of the 26 giftware and home accent products included in the survey. (See product list below) The average income of survey respondents was $75,100; average age 42.4 years; and 68 percent female/32 percent male.  Also included in the survey was a special investigation into the shopping preferences for consumers of these goods.

Special Investigation:  Consumers' shopping preferences for gifts and home decorative accents

The value of this report is enhanced for product marketers and retailers through its special investigation into the shoppers' preference and attitudes related to specific types of stores where gifts and home accents can be found.  Stores included in this special investigation are:

  • Department stores
  • Discount department stores, mass merchants, dollar stores and/or warehouse and membership clubs
  • Direct selling and party plans
  • Internet websites
  • Jewelry stores and/or luxury boutiques
  • Mail order catalogs and/or direct mail brochures
  • Specialty card and gift stores
  • Specialty home furnishings stores
  • Television shopping channels

Products included in the survey
Details about purchases of these 26 products were included in the most recent survey.  Comparative statistics are drawn from Unity Marketing's Gift and Decorative Accents Report, 2003.

Home Decorative Accents

  • Art & Wall Decor
  • Boxes, Tins & Music Boxes
  • Candles & Accessories
  • Clocks
  • Crystal Figurines and Art Glass/Decorative Accessories
  • Desk Accessories
  • Dinnerware & Tabletop Items
  • Figurines & Sculpture (Decorative/Not Collectible)
  • Garden Decoratives
  • Home Textiles & Decorative Linens
  • Italian-Imported Home Furnishings
  • Kitchen Gadgets & Cooks Tools
  • Lamps & Lighting
  • Picture Frames
  • Seasonal Decorations
  • Stemware, Barware, Wine & Beer Accessories
  • Vases & Urns

Giftware

  • Baby & Infant Giftware
  • Character/Licensed Merchandise
  • Collectible Figurines
  • Collegiate Licensed Merchandise
  • Inspirational/Religious-Themed Gifts
  • Occasion-Specific Gifts
  • Personalized Gifts
  • Pet Gifts
  • Souvenirs & Novelties

Special Pre-Publication Offer:  Unity Marketing is offering a special pre-publication price of $3,500 for this report through April 30, 2008. Thereafter, it will be offered at its published price of $3,995.

For Media:  Charts, tables and graphs are available upon request.

About Pam Danziger and Unity Marketing

Pamela N. Danziger is an internationally recognized expert specializing in consumer insights, especially for marketers and retailers that sell luxury goods and experiences to the masses or the 'classes.' She is president of Unity Marketing, a marketing consulting firm she founded in 1992.

Advising such clients as PPR, Diageo, Stearns & Foster, Waterford/Wedgwood, Lenox, Prudential Fine Homes, Orient-Express Hotels, Marie Claire magazine, Italian Trade Commission, The World Gold Council, The Conference Board and American Express, Danziger taps consumer psychology to help clients navigate and master the changing luxury consumer marketplace.

In recognition of her ground-breaking work in the luxury consumer market, Pam received the Global Luxury Award presented by Harper's Bazaar for top luxury industry achievers in 2007.

Her latest book is Shopping: Why We Love It and How Retailers Can Create the Ultimate Customer Experience, published by Kaplan Publishing in October 2006.   Her other books include Let Them Eat Cake: Marketing Luxury to the Masses—as well as the Classes, (Dearborn Trade Publishing, $27, hardcover) and Why People Buy Things They Don't Need: Understanding and Predicting Consumer Behavior (Chicago: Dearborn Trade Publishing, 2004). 

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