Healthy Badania rynku żywności i napojów

Healthy food and beverage market Research can be understood more if one understands the Science of Healthy food. Healthy food is more than just a buzzword or a trend but is now becoming more of a lifestyle. As one learns more about nutrition and its impact on our health, a lot are discovering just how important it is to make informed choices about what to eat.
Below are some key factors that make up the science of healthy food.
- Macronutrients: the protein, carbohydrates, and fat that make up the bulk of our diets. These nutrients provide the energy we need to function, but not all sources are created equal. For example, plant-based sources of protein are usually lower in saturated fat and high in fiber than animal-based sources, making them a healthier choice overall.
- Micronutrients: the vitamins and minerals that our bodies need in smaller amounts. These nutrients are essential for everything from bone health to immune function, and getting enough of them is critical for maintaining good health. Fruits and vegetables are great sources of micronutrients, making them an essential part of a healthy diet.
- Nutrient Density: this refers to how many nutrients a food contains relative to its calorie content. For example, a cup of spinach contains far more nutrients than a cup of soda, even though they may have similar calorie counts. By choosing nutrient-dense foods, we can get more nutrition from our diets without overloading on calories.
- Balance and moderation: While it’s important to choose healthy foods, it’s also important to avoid being too restrictive or depriving ourselves of the foods we enjoy. A healthy diet is one that provides all the nutrients we need while still allowing us to enjoy our favorite treats in moderation.
Healthy Food Beverage Market Research: How Category Leaders Build Winning Portfolios
Healthy food beverage market research has shifted from claim validation to portfolio architecture. The category no longer rewards brands that translate functional ingredients into shelf presence. It rewards brands that decode how consumers reconcile health intent with hedonic expectation, then engineer products that resolve the tension at the molecular and emotional level.
The opportunity is structural. Functional sodas, protein-fortified dairy alternatives, adaptogenic beverages, and clean-label snacks have moved from natural channel curiosities to mainstream grocery anchors. Olipop, Poppi, Athletic Brewing, and Liquid Death built nine-figure businesses by treating sensory parity with indulgent incumbents as a non-negotiable design constraint, not an aspiration. Legacy CPGs are now buying their way in. The question for VP-level operators is which signals predict the next wave of category winners.
Why Sensory Science Now Drives Healthy Food Beverage Market Research
The defining failure mode in better-for-you launches is taste compromise disguised as health positioning. Consumers tolerate it once. Repeat purchase collapses. The brands scaling fastest invest in descriptive analysis panel calibration I QDA (quantitative descriptive analysis) before claim development, not after.
According to SIS International Research, the better-for-you brands that achieve durable repeat rates run triangle test discrimination studies against indulgent benchmarks early in formulation, and treat parity gaps above a defined threshold as a stop-ship trigger rather than a marketing problem to solve later. This inverts the conventional sequence. Concept testing follows sensory adequacy. It does not precede it.
Hedonic scaling methodology alone is insufficient. Liking scores compress in healthy categories because consumers self-edit against virtuous cues. JAR (just-about-right) scale analysis paired with penalty analysis reveals which attributes drag overall acceptance, and by how much. Sweetness, mouthfeel, and finish typically dominate penalty load in functional beverages. Aroma and texture dominate in plant-based protein.
The Repeat-Purchase Architecture Behind Category Winners
Trial is a marketing problem. Repeat is a product problem. The healthy food beverage market research programs that move portfolios use sequential monadic design in central location tests (CLTs) to isolate fatigue effects, then validate with in-home use tests across a four-to-six week window. A single sip in a CLT booth predicts almost nothing about week-three consumption.
SIS International’s qualitative work with R&D technologists at functional beverage companies indicates that the highest-performing SKUs in carbonated functional categories optimize against a specific sensory signature: low astringency at the finish, controlled sweetness above 6 Brix, and carbonation retention through the second pour. Brands that target these parameters explicitly outperform those that brief on flavor descriptors alone.
Temporal dominance of sensations (TDS) is becoming standard practice in adaptogenic and prebiotic categories where bitterness and earthy notes appear mid-palate. CATA (check-all-that-apply) methodology captures the emotional and contextual associations that drive occasion fit. Together they answer the question marketing teams cannot answer alone: does this product earn a second purchase, and on what occasion.
Clean Label Perception and the Ingredient Credibility Stack
Clean label is not a regulatory category. It is a perceptual hierarchy that consumers construct from front-of-pack signals, ingredient list length, recognizability, and process language. Clean label consumer perception studies consistently show that consumers rank ingredients on a credibility ladder where chicory root fiber outperforms inulin despite being chemically identical, and cane sugar outperforms “evaporated cane juice” despite the inverse perception a decade ago.
The implication for portfolio design is direct. Reformulation decisions made on supply chain logic alone leave revenue on the table. Functional ingredient positioning has to be tested at the panel level before procurement locks specifications. The cost of a perception study is a rounding error against the cost of a relaunch.
| Research Lever | Decision It Informs | Stage |
|---|---|---|
| Triangle test vs indulgent benchmark | Sensory parity gate | Pre-formulation lock |
| JAR + penalty analysis | Attribute optimization priority | Formulation iteration |
| Sequential monadic CLT | SKU selection within line | Pre-launch |
| In-home use test (4-6 weeks) | Repeat-purchase prediction | Pre-launch validation |
| CATA + occasion mapping | Channel and pack architecture | Go-to-market |
Source: SIS International Research
Private Label Taste Parity Is the Quiet Disruption
Whole Foods 365, Trader Joe’s, Kirkland Signature, and Aldi Simply Nature have closed the sensory gap with branded better-for-you incumbents in several subcategories. Private label taste parity is now a board-level threat for mid-tier branded players who relied on quality differentiation as their moat.
The defensive play is not heavier marketing spend. It is sharper sensory differentiation validated through paired comparison analysis against the specific private label SKU stocked in the retailer where the brand earns most of its revenue. Brands that run this analysis quarterly catch parity erosion before it shows up in scan data. Brands that do not, learn from the velocity report.
Concept-Product Fit Is Where Innovation Pipelines Break
The pattern across failed healthy launches is consistent. The concept tests well. The product tests well. The combination tests poorly. Concept-product fit testing isolates this gap by exposing consumers to concept and product in controlled sequence, then measuring the delta between concept-only purchase intent and post-trial purchase intent.
Across SIS International’s B2B expert interviews with food and beverage R&D leadership in the United States and Western Europe, the most consistent predictor of launch success is a tight concept-product fit score combined with sensory parity against the indulgent reference, not concept top-box alone. Top-box concept scores have repeatedly led teams to greenlight products that fail in market because the concept promise outran the formulation reality.
The SIS Healthy Beverage Research Stack

SIS International conducts grupy fokusowe, ethnographic in-home studies, descriptive analysis panel calibration, CLTs with sequential monadic design, and structured B2B expert interviews with beverage technologists, category buyers, and quality assurance leadership across North America, Europe, and Asia. The work spans accelerated shelf-life testing (ASLT) sensory validation, napping/projective mapping for portfolio whitespace, and competitive teardown of incumbent and challenger brands.
The strongest healthy food beverage market research programs treat sensory, claim, concept, and channel as a single integrated system. They do not commission them as discrete projects. The portfolios that compound share over multiple cycles are built by teams that hold this system together and refuse to ship products that fail any single gate.
Key Questions

O firmie SIS International
SIS Międzynarodowy oferuje badania ilościowe, jakościowe i strategiczne. Dostarczamy dane, narzędzia, strategie, raporty i spostrzeżenia do podejmowania decyzji. Prowadzimy również wywiady, ankiety, grupy fokusowe i inne metody i podejścia do badań rynku. Skontaktuj się z nami dla Twojego kolejnego projektu badania rynku.

