Vegetarian Market Research: What Category Leaders Do

Étude de marché végétarienne

Études de marché et stratégie internationales SIS

L’étude de marché végétarienne donne un aperçu d’une industrie composée de divers produits et services destinés aux personnes qui suivent un mode de vie végétarien, qui exclut généralement la viande, la volaille, le poisson et d’autres ingrédients d’origine animale. Ce marché comprend des produits alimentaires, des boissons et des suppléments végétariens, ainsi que des articles non alimentaires tels que des vêtements végétariens, des cosmétiques et des produits ménagers.

Segmentation de l’industrie des études de marché végétariennes

L’industrie végétarienne englobe une grande variété d’entreprises qui proposent des produits et des services aux personnes qui mènent un mode de vie végétarien, qui interdit souvent de manger de la viande, du poulet, du poisson et d’autres aliments d’origine animale. Les données et les stratégies des sources d’études de marché végétariennes incluent un certain nombre de segments, tels que les aliments et boissons végétariens, les suppléments, les biens non alimentaires et les services.

Aliments et boissons

The vegetarian industry’s food and beverage sector is made up of companies that manufacture, supply, and market vegetarian food items. This covers plant-based substitutes for meat, dairy, eggs, and other items originating from animals. Fruits, vegetables, grains, legumes, nuts, seeds, plant-based sources of protein, dairy substitutes, meat substitutes, and other vegetarian food items can all be considered vegetarian food products. Often, these items are promoted to flexitarians, vegans, and vegetarians.

Suppléments

Le segment des suppléments est composé d'entreprises qui créent, commercialisent et vendent des vitamines et des compléments alimentaires adaptés aux végétariens. Contrairement aux suppléments traditionnels, qui utilisent fréquemment des substances d’origine animale comme la gélatine, ces suppléments sont principalement fabriqués à partir de sources végétales. Les multivitamines, les minéraux, les acides gras oméga-3, les poudres de protéines et autres compléments alimentaires peuvent être vendus aux végétariens et aux végétaliens qui peuvent avoir des besoins nutritionnels particuliers en raison de leurs limitations alimentaires en tant que compléments végétariens.

Articles non alimentaires

The non-food items category within the vegetarian industry includes businesses that produce, distribute, and sell non-food products that cater to vegetarians. This may include vegetarian clothing, footwear, accessories, cosmetics, personal care products, household products, and other non-food items that are certified as cruelty-free, vegan, and free from animal-derived ingredients. These products are typically marketed to environmentally conscious consumers, ethical consumers, and those who follow a vegetarian or vegan lifestyle.

Prestations de service

Le secteur des services de l'industrie végétarienne est composé d'entreprises qui offrent des services associés au végétarisme, tels que des restaurants végétariens, des services de restauration, des cours de cuisine, la planification de repas, des conseils en nutrition végétarienne et d'autres entreprises qui répondent aux exigences et préférences alimentaires des végétariens et des végétaliens. . Ceux qui vivent un mode de vie végétarien ou à base de plantes et recherchent des services spécialisés qui complètent leurs préférences alimentaires sont souvent le public cible de ces services.

Vegetarian Market Research: How Category Leaders Win the Plant-Forward Consumer

The vegetarian consumer has changed. Two decades ago, the buyer was ideological. Today, the buyer is flexitarian, calorie-aware, label-literate, and unwilling to trade flavor for virtue. That shift rewrites the brief for vegetarian market research.

The category opportunity is real, but the win condition is narrow. Products that clear sensory parity with their animal-based reference perform. Products that rely on ethical positioning alone stall after trial. The firms gaining share understand the difference and structure their research accordingly.

What Vegetarian Market Research Now Measures

Vegetarian market research has moved past attitudinal surveys and trend reports. The serious work happens in central location tests, descriptive analysis panels, and home-use trials that benchmark plant-based SKUs against the animal protein they intend to displace.

Three measurement disciplines separate category leaders from category entrants. Hedonic scaling on a nine-point scale exposes whether overall liking matches the meat or dairy reference. JAR (just-about-right) scales on saltiness, juiciness, chewiness, and creaminess identify the specific attribute driving rejection. Penalty analysis quantifies how much each off-target attribute costs in mean liking, which tells R&D where to spend reformulation budget.

According to SIS International Research, the most predictive single metric for plant-based repeat purchase is not stated purchase intent but the gap between blind and branded liking scores, a tell for whether the product is carrying the brand or the brand is carrying the product.

The Flexitarian Is the Real Buyer

Strict vegetarians and vegans are a small share of category volume in most developed markets. Flexitarians, consumers who reduce but do not eliminate animal protein, drive the majority of plant-based dollar growth. Beyond Meat, Oatly, and Impossible Foods built their early scale on this buyer, not on the vegan core.

This has a research implication that is often missed. Recruiting only self-identified vegetarians for concept-product fit testing produces favorable scores that do not replicate at retail. The flexitarian benchmarks against beef, chicken, and dairy. The strict vegetarian benchmarks against tofu and existing meat analogs. These are different reference frames and they yield different verdicts.

Sample design has to reflect the volumetric reality. A defensible vegetarian study weights flexitarians at 60 to 70 percent of the cell, vegetarians and vegans at 20 to 30 percent, and includes a meat-eater control to pressure-test parity claims.

Sensory Parity Is the Category Gate

The plant-based shakeout in recent years was not a demand failure. It was a sensory failure. Products that scored adequately in concept testing failed in repeat because the eating experience did not hold up across cooking methods, temperatures, and second-bite fatigue.

Triangle tests and duo-trio tests reveal whether trained panelists can distinguish a plant-based product from its animal reference. Temporal dominance of sensations (TDS) tracks how flavor and texture perceptions evolve from first bite to swallow, which is where most plant-based proteins lose the consumer. Accelerated shelf-life testing (ASLT) on plant matrices behaves differently than on meat or dairy because lipid oxidation pathways and protein denaturation curves diverge.

SIS International’s qualitative work with flexitarian households across North America and Western Europe indicates that texture, not flavor, is the dominant rejection driver for plant-based meat, while mouthfeel and aftertaste dominate rejection in plant-based dairy. Reformulation budgets are frequently misallocated to flavor systems when texture is the binding constraint.

Clean Label and the Ingredient Trust Gap

Clean label consumer perception has tightened. Methylcellulose, soy protein isolate, and natural flavors trigger hesitation even among buyers who cannot define them. CATA (check-all-that-apply) methodology and napping exercises map how consumers cluster ingredients into trust tiers, which informs both formulation and front-of-pack claim hierarchy.

The category names that have held shelf position, including Oatly, Califia Farms, and Tofurky, share a common trait. They communicate ingredient simplicity even when their formulations are technical. Research that tests claim hierarchy in isolation from ingredient panel disclosure overstates claim power. Sequential monadic designs that pair concept boards with full ingredient declarations produce more honest purchase intent.

Private Label Is the Underestimated Competitor

Trader Joe’s, Aldi, Kroger’s Simple Truth, and Tesco’s Wicked Kitchen have moved from price-fighter positioning to credible quality alternatives. Private label taste parity testing against branded plant-based references is now a category-defining exercise, not a margin exercise.

Research Stage Méthodologie Decision Supported
Concept screening Sequential monadic with flexitarian-weighted sample Portfolio prioritization
Formulation Descriptive analysis (QDA), JAR, penalty analysis Reformulation targeting
Validation Blind vs branded CLT, triangle test against animal reference Launch go/no-go
In-market Home-use trial, repeat-purchase tracking, ASLT Range extension and SKU rationalization

Source: SIS International Research

Geography Changes the Brief

Études de marché et stratégie internationales SIS

Vegetarian market research does not travel cleanly across borders. India’s lacto-vegetarian base is structural and centuries old, which makes it a reformulation market rather than a conversion market. Germany leads Western European per capita plant-based consumption and rewards sustainability claims. The United States is a flavor and texture market where the meat reference is dominant. Brazil and Mexico are early-stage flexitarian markets where price gap to animal protein is the binding constraint.

A multi-country brief that uses identical screeners and identical concept boards across these markets produces noise. The defensible approach calibrates sensory references, claim language, and reference price points to local category structure while holding the core sensory protocol constant for cross-market read.

The SIS Position

Études de marché et stratégie internationales SIS

SIS International Research has run consumer panel recruitment, central location tests, and ethnographic kitchen observation across plant-based, dairy alternative, and flexitarian categories in more than 30 countries. The pattern across that work is consistent. Brands that win the category treat sensory parity as a gate, not a goal, and they design vegetarian market research around the flexitarian buyer who actually moves volume.

For Fortune 500 food and beverage leadership weighing portfolio expansion, acquisition targets, or reformulation investment, the question is not whether the plant-forward consumer is real. The question is which SKUs clear the sensory gate, in which markets, against which animal references, and at what price gap. That is what disciplined vegetarian market research answers.

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.

Photo de l'auteur

Ruth Stanat

Fondatrice et PDG de SIS International Research & Strategy. Forte de plus de 40 ans d'expertise en planification stratégique et en veille commerciale mondiale, elle est une référence mondiale de confiance pour aider les organisations à réussir à l'international.

Développez-vous à l’échelle mondiale en toute confiance. Contactez SIS International dès aujourd'hui !

parler à un expert