加油站市場研究

加油站必須能夠快速回應不斷變化的市場趨勢或客戶需求的變化。因此,為了在不斷變化的環境中保持競爭力,加油站業者應優先投資於市場研究,以提供有關客戶需求和行業趨勢的有用資訊。
因此,加油站市場研究可以更好地理解了解這個市場和識別成長機會的重要性。
加油站市場研究:主要市場趨勢與影響因素
加油站產業受到塑造競爭格局和消費者行為的幾個關鍵趨勢和因素的影響。識別和理解這些趨勢對於企業做出明智的決策並保持競爭力至關重要。
Gas Station Market Research: How Leading Fuel Retailers Win the Forecourt
The forecourt is no longer a fuel sale. It is a retail asset, a data node, and a brand impression measured in seconds. Gas Station Market Research is how operators, oil majors, and private equity owners decide where to build, what to sell, and how to convert a gallon into a basket.
The economics have shifted. Inside-store gross profit now exceeds fuel margin at most well-run sites. C-store sales drive site valuation multiples. EV charging changes dwell time from four minutes to twenty. Each shift rewards operators who study the customer rather than the pump.
What Gas Station Market Research Actually Measures
Strong Gas Station Market Research covers four layers: site selection economics, brand image and rebranding cost benchmarks, in-store category performance, and forecourt-to-store conversion behavior. Each layer answers a different capital question.
Site selection draws on traffic count modeling, competitor density mapping, and trade area demographics. Brand image work tests pylon visibility, canopy fascia recognition, and price-sign legibility at highway speed. Category research covers tobacco, packaged beverages, foodservice, and the fast-growing prepared meals segment. Conversion analysis tracks the percentage of fuel customers who enter the store, the basket size when they do, and the triggers that move them inside.
The leading operators run these as a single program. Site, brand, and category insights compound. Studied in isolation, each underdelivers.
The Rebranding Decision: Where Capital Discipline Pays
Rebranding a site to Shell, BP, Chevron, or ExxonMobil image standards is a multi-component capital event. Canopy resurfacing, dispenser decals, pylon and ID sign replacement, column wraps, and shopfront signage each carry distinct material, freight, and installation costs. Compliance with the licensor’s image manual is non-negotiable, which means the cost stack is largely fixed once a brand is chosen.
SIS International Research has benchmarked rebranding cost components for Fortune 500 fuel marketers across Shell, BP, Chevron, and ExxonMobil image programs, separating canopy fascia, merchandising identifiers, dispenser graphics, and pylon ID systems by material, freight, and installation. The pattern that emerges is consistent: brand equity premium at the pump justifies the capital outlay only when paired with a credible inside-store proposition. Operators who rebrand without lifting the C-store rarely recover the spend within the franchise term.
The better question is not “what does the rebrand cost.” It is “what fuel volume lift and inside-store basket lift does the new brand deliver in this specific trade area.” That requires primary research, not a vendor quote.
Where the Margin Lives: Inside-Store Category Strategy
Tobacco volume is declining. Packaged beverages remain the anchor traffic driver. Foodservice, especially proprietary hot food and barista-style coffee, is where the basket grows. Wawa, Sheetz, Buc-ee’s, and 7-Eleven have shown that a forecourt operator can compete with QSR on speed and beat them on convenience.
Category management optimization for gas stations differs from grocery. Shelf space allocation must account for impulse drivers in a 90-second visit. Promotional lift measurement has to separate fuel-driven traffic from destination-store traffic. Assortment rationalization is constrained by cooler door count and back-bar geometry.
In SIS International ethnographic research and shopper journey studies inside fueling sites, the highest-performing operators design the path from pump to cooler as a deliberate sequence: signage at the dispenser, foodservice cue at the entry, beverage cooler at the back wall, and the impulse rack at checkout. The conversion delta between top-quartile and bottom-quartile sites in the same brand network often exceeds twelve points. That gap is a research finding, not a real estate finding.
EV Charging and the New Dwell-Time Economics
A fuel customer spends roughly four minutes at the pump. A DC fast-charging customer spends fifteen to thirty. The math of the C-store changes when dwell time triples. Foodservice attach rates rise. Restroom and seating expectations rise. Loyalty enrollment windows extend.
Forward-looking operators are running concept tests on charging-adjacent retail formats today, ahead of utilization curves projected through the late 2020s. The research questions are concrete: how many stalls, what canopy footprint, what foodservice depth, and what amenity mix support a charging customer who will not tolerate a fueling-era restroom.
Shell’s Recharge build-out, BP Pulse’s hub strategy, and the Pilot-GM-EVgo partnership are visible signals. The sizing question behind each is answered by primary research with current EV drivers, not by extrapolating from fuel data.
Site Selection: Beyond Traffic Counts
Traffic count is necessary and insufficient. Top-tier site selection layers competitor pylon visibility, left-turn accessibility, commuter directionality, and adjacency to grocery, QSR, and big-box anchors. Trade area research tests whether the local shopper treats fuel as a destination or a top-up.
Total cost of ownership modeling for a new build now includes EV charging infrastructure, underground storage tank compliance, stormwater requirements, and the rising cost of canopy steel. The pro forma that ignores these inputs overstates IRR by 200 to 400 basis points.
An SIS Framework: The Forecourt Value Stack

| Layer | Research Method | Decision Supported |
|---|---|---|
| Site Economics | Trade area analysis, traffic and competitor mapping | Build, acquire, divest |
| 品牌形象 | Pylon and canopy recognition tests, rebrand cost benchmarking | Brand affiliation, image refresh |
| Category Performance | Shopper ethnography, CLT for foodservice, basket analysis | Assortment, foodservice depth |
| Conversion Behavior | Pump-to-store path analysis, dwell time studies | Layout, signage, loyalty design |
| Future-State Demand | EV driver interviews, charging utilization modeling | Capex sequencing, format evolution |
Source: SIS International Research
What Separates the Best Programs

The strongest Gas Station Market Research programs share three traits. They tie every study to a capital decision rather than to a dashboard. They combine quantitative traffic and basket data with qualitative shopper ethnography. They benchmark against direct competitors and adjacent formats, including QSR and grocery fuel.
Across SIS International engagements with fuel marketers, c-store operators, and oil majors, the programs that deliver the highest ROI consistently pair B2B expert interviews with site operators and franchisees on one side, and shopper-facing ethnographic research and central location tests on the other. Cost benchmarking alone does not change a P&L. Customer behavior research, paired with cost data, does.
The forecourt rewards operators who treat it as a retail laboratory. Gas Station Market Research is the instrumentation.
關於 SIS 國際
SIS國際 提供定量、定性和策略研究。我們為決策提供數據、工具、策略、報告和見解。我們也進行訪談、調查、焦點小組和其他市場研究方法和途徑。 聯絡我們 為您的下一個市場研究項目。

