Candles Are Favorite Choice for Home Fragrancing
Nearly Seventy Percent of Americans Bought Candles in Past
Year
Stevens,
PA April 5, 2005 - While the market for home fragrance products
booms, candles remain consumers' top choice for fragrancing their
home. With sales reaching $3.7 billion in 2004, candles accounted
for just under half of the total $8.3 billion home fragrance market.
"Some 80 percent of American households use some form of home
fragrance product," explains Pam Danziger, president of Unity
Marketing and author of Let Them Eat Cake: Marketing Luxury to
the Masses - as well as the Classes. "Scented candles are
the first choice in home fragrance, while other types of home fragrance
products are becoming more widely available at mass retailers and
in grocery stores."
In today's candle market, scent is everything. Some 70 percent of
candle consumers agree with the statement, "I buy candles mostly
for the scent, so the fragrance, not the style or design, is the most
important factor when I buy candles."
But while fragrance is the most important reason why people buy candles,
their influence on mood is another significant motivator for candle
purchase. The majority of candle consumers agree with the following,
"I regularly burn candles to help me relax from the stress of
my life."
"While consumers today have many different options for adding
fragrance to their home, including electric plug-ins, diffusers, scent
disks, sprays, potpourris, incense and bed linens sprays, candles
alone are multi-sensory, imparting both scent to the home and a beautiful,
romantic glow that hearkens back to an earlier time," Danziger
says. "Candles have a metaphysical quality that electric diffusers
or room sprays will never approach."
About the insights contained in the Home Fragrance and Candle Report
2005
Based upon research conducted in February 2005 among 954 recent home
fragrance consumers, this report focuses on market opportunities available
to candle and home fragrance manufacturers and retailers to help them
deliver products and services that satisfy the consumers' craving
to fragrance their homes.
With a focus on the consumer, their buying behavior, needs, desires
and preferences, this study includes research data and statistics
about:
-
Home
fragrances and candle market size and growth, including candles,
home fragrance products, candle and lighting accessories and air
purifiers
-
Demographics
of the home fragrance market
-
Home
fragrance buying behavior, including what they buy, where they shop,
how much they spend, their favorite scents and brands
-
Psychographic
profiles and segmentation of the home fragrance market
The
Home Fragrance & Candle Report, 2005, can be ordered online
as a downloadable
PDF file, or as a paper
copy
For media,
Unity Marketing can make tables, charts and graphs available to the
media upon request.
Contact:
Pam Danziger, 717-336-1600
About
Pam Danziger and Unity Marketing
Pamela
N. Danziger is a nationally recognized expert in consumer insights
for luxury marketers, whether they sell luxuries to the masses or
the 'classes.' She is president of Unity Marketing, a marketing consulting
firm she founded in 1992 to unite marketers with their target markets
through consumer insights. She taps consumer psychology to advise
clients such as Lenox, Cartier, Herend, Crystal Cruises, Spring Air,
Sears, The World Gold Council, The Conference Board and American Express.
Her latest book, Let Them Eat Cake: Marketing Luxury to the Masses
- as well as the Classes, (Dearborn Trade Publishing, $27, hardcover)
was published in January 2005. She also authored Why People Buy
Things They Don't Need: Understanding and Predicting Consumer Behavior
(Chicago: Dearborn Trade Publishing, 2004).
She has appeared on CNN's In the Money, CNN International, NBC's Today
Show, CNBC, CBS News Sunday Morning, Fox News' Your World with Neil
Cavuto, ABC News Now, NPR's Marketplace and is frequently called upon
by the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, American Demographics,
Women's Wear Daily, Forbes, USA Today, Associated Press, Los Angeles
Times, Chicago Tribune for insight.
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