Biscuits Market Recherche

Les études de marché sur les biscuits impliquent l’accumulation, l’analyse et l’interprétation systématiques de données et de stratégies dans les études de marché sur les biscuits, telles que les tendances du marché, le comportement des consommateurs, le paysage concurrentiel et d’autres facteurs pertinents. Il aide les entreprises à comprendre l’état actuel et les prévisions futures du marché des biscuits, ainsi qu’à identifier les opportunités et à réduire les risques. En utilisant des techniques de recherche primaires et secondaires telles que des enquêtes, des entretiens, des groupes de discussion, des analyses de données et des rapports de marché, on peut réaliser des études de marché sur les biscuits.
Biscuits market research provides insights into the industry and plays a crucial role in helping businesses gain a competitive advantage in the biscuit industry. By conducting comprehensive research, businesses can gain insights into key areas such as the size and growth potential of the market, consumer preferences, and the competitive landscape. With data and strategies in biscuits market research, businesses can develop effective ways to optimize their operations.
Aperçu du marché des biscuits
Un biscuit est un petit pain plat cuit au four, croustillant ou moelleux, et souvent sucré ou salé, généralement composé de farine, de sucre et de beurre ou d'huile. Il peut se présenter sous différentes formes, tailles et saveurs et peut contenir d'autres ingrédients tels que des pépites de chocolat, des noix, des raisins secs ou des épices. Les biscuits sont couramment consommés comme collation ou avec du thé/café et sont un aliment populaire dans le monde entier.
Biscuits Market Research: How Leading Manufacturers Win Shelf and Share
The global biscuit category rewards manufacturers that read consumer signals faster than competitors and translate them into reformulation, pack architecture, and channel strategy. Biscuits Market Research has shifted from tracking sales to predicting which textures, claims, and price points will hold shelf space across regions with very different palates.
The category looks mature on the surface. It is not. Premiumization in Western Europe, protein-fortified snacking in North America, ghee and millet variants in South Asia, and digestive health platforms in East Asia are pulling the same product form in different directions. Manufacturers that segment by occasion rather than SKU are capturing disproportionate growth.
Why Biscuits Market Research Now Drives Category Strategy
Biscuits sit at the intersection of indulgence, convenience, and increasingly, functional nutrition. That intersection makes the category unusually sensitive to claims, ingredient narratives, and shelf adjacency. Mondelez, Britannia, Parle, Yildiz Holding, and Ferrero each compete on different axes inside the same aisle.
The manufacturers gaining share are running concept-product fit testing earlier in the development cycle. They validate the claim, the texture, and the price tier before tooling is committed. The result is fewer line extensions that cannibalize and more launches that recruit new buyers from adjacent categories such as cereal bars and crackers.
According to SIS International Research, biscuit buyers across mature markets evaluate a new SKU in under four seconds at shelf, and pack architecture explains more variance in trial than advertising recall. That finding has reshaped how leading manufacturers brief design agencies and sequence pre-launch CLTs.
The Insider Vocabulary of the Category
Sophisticated category teams work in a specific language: hedonic scaling, JAR (just-about-right) scale analysis, penalty analysis on sweetness and crunch, descriptive analysis panel calibration, and accelerated shelf-life testing for fat bloom and moisture migration. These are the levers that decide whether a biscuit holds texture through monsoon humidity in Mumbai or summer heat in Riyadh.
The Sensory Methods That Separate Winners From Followers
Most biscuit failures are sensory failures dressed up as marketing failures. A concept tests well, the launch underperforms, and the post-mortem blames media weight. The actual cause is usually a texture or sweetness profile that scored acceptable in central location tests but fell outside the JAR window for the priority consumer segment.
Leading manufacturers run triangle tests and duo-trio tests against the closest competitor before locking the formula. They use temporal dominance of sensations to map how flavor evolves from first bite to swallow, then align that curve to the occasion. A breakfast biscuit and an afternoon indulgence biscuit require different TDS profiles even when the base recipe is similar.
QDA panels, properly calibrated, allow R&D to translate consumer language (“not too sweet,” “satisfying crunch”) into measurable attributes engineers can dial. Without that translation layer, reformulation cycles stretch from months to years and competitors close the gap.
Where the Growth Is Concentrated
Four pockets are pulling category growth across regions. Each requires a different research design.
| Growth Pocket | Primary Driver | Research Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Premium indulgence (Western Europe) | Cocoa origin, butter content, gifting occasions | Concept-product fit, packaging semiotics |
| Protein and functional (North America) | Snacking displacement of cereal bars | CATA methodology, claim hierarchy testing |
| Heritage and regional (South Asia) | Ghee, millet, atta, regional sweet profiles | Sensory benchmarking against home-style |
| Digestive and low-sugar (East Asia) | Aging consumers, gut health platforms | Penalty analysis on sweetness reduction |
Source: SIS International Research
The pattern across all four is that consumers no longer accept trade-offs they tolerated a decade ago. A protein biscuit that tastes like a protein bar will not recruit biscuit buyers. A reduced-sugar digestive that loses its characteristic snap will lose loyalists faster than it gains new ones. The research question is no longer “do they like it” but “where is the penalty threshold.”
Private Label and the Taste Parity Question
Retailer private label has moved from price play to quality play in the biscuit aisle. Tesco, Carrefour, Aldi, and Costco are running their own sensory programs and closing the taste gap with national brands on core formats such as digestives, shortbreads, and cream sandwiches.
SIS International’s qualitative work with category buyers across European and Gulf retailers indicates that private label taste parity is now achieved on roughly two-thirds of mainstream formats, with the remaining gap concentrated in chocolate enrobing quality and filling cream stability. National brands defending share are shifting investment from line extensions toward proprietary process technology that private label cannot easily replicate.
The strategic implication is direct. Marque equity alone no longer protects shelf position. Manufacturers that commission regular blind taste parity studies against private label benchmarks identify erosion early and reformulate before listings are lost.
Channel Economics and the E-Commerce Pack Problem
Biscuit pack design was optimized for shelf for a century. E-commerce broke the assumptions. Crush rates in last-mile delivery, the loss of impulse cues, and the shift to multi-pack purchasing have rewritten the brief for packaging engineers.
Manufacturers winning in online grocery are running ethnographic research on unboxing, not just shelf. They are testing pack architecture for thumbnail visibility on Amazon, Tmall, and Instacart, and reformulating where necessary to survive a hot warehouse and a thrown box. The biscuits that travel best are not always the biscuits that sell best at shelf, and the portfolio choice has real margin consequences.
The SIS Approach to Biscuits Market Research

SIS International Research applies a layered methodology to the category: descriptive analysis panels for sensory baselining, central location tests for consumer validation, B2B expert interviews with category buyers and ingredient suppliers, and ethnographic research on consumption occasions in the home. The combination produces decisions that survive contact with the P&L.
Across SIS engagements with biscuit and broader sweet snack manufacturers in Europe, the Gulf, South Asia, and Latin America, the highest-return interventions have consistently been pack architecture redesign informed by shelf-eye-tracking, and reformulation guided by penalty analysis on the two attributes most correlated with repeat purchase in each market.
Key Questions for Category Leadership

Three questions separate manufacturers extracting growth from those defending share. Where is the penalty threshold for sugar and fat reduction in each priority market? Which formats are most vulnerable to private label parity in the next planning cycle? Which occasions are being lost to adjacent categories, and what sensory profile would recruit those occasions back?
Biscuits Market Research, applied with discipline, answers all three before the competitor does.
À propos de SIS International
SIS International propose des recherches quantitatives, qualitatives et stratégiques. Nous fournissons des données, des outils, des stratégies, des rapports et des informations pour la prise de décision. Nous menons également des entretiens, des enquêtes, des groupes de discussion et d’autres méthodes et approches d’études de marché. Contactez nous pour votre prochain projet d'étude de marché.

