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The forces shaping Gen Z’s snack and beverage consumption

The forces shaping Gen Z’s snack and beverage consumption
The forces shaping Gen Z’s snack and beverage consumption


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The Coca-Cola booth at the 2024 National Restaurant Association Show was a flavor endurance run. 

Between the sub varieties of Powerade Sours, Body Armor Zero Sugar, Spiced Coca-Cola, Sprite Chill, Gold Peak Zero Sugar Iced Tea, Dasani Refreshed, Topo Chico Sabores, Topo Chico Mixers and Hubert Lemonade, it was easy to find oneself drowning, figuratively, in a rush of sweet, vaguely fruity, brightly colored drinks.

To hear brands and suppliers tell it, this onslaught of sweet, but not necessarily sugary, snacks and drinks is a key element of restaurants’ efforts to reach Gen Z consumers. 

“Gen Z loves new flavors, really exciting, new, colorful, vibrant, flavors,” said Brian Jackson senior manager, channel and customer strategy with Coca-Cola.

Younger consumers want new looks, old flavors

Although Gen Z is keen on visual novelty — the kind that invites lots of Instagram posts — these consumers are mostly interested in flavors they already know, according to Robert Byrne, principal at Technomic.

“Just 12% of Gen Z say that they actively seek out new flavors,” Byrne said. “Many of them are only recently coming into adulthood and out of childhood; their preferences skew sweet and spicy.”

Byrne said Gen Z’s favorite flavors may eventually become more complex, but at present they opt for strong, familiar flavors.

“Bold and boring is a way to look at it,” Byrne said. “Fruity and sweet flavor preferences find a natural home on a beverage menu, specifically.”

Lynwood Mallard, chief marketing officer for J&J Snack Foods, said the desire for known but still differentiated flavors among younger generations is benefiting particular types of snack foods, like churros.

“In our last quarter, our churro business grew more than 27%,” Mallard said. “Churros are a bullseye for dessert snacks: Bite size, very consumable, fun, somewhat exotic.”

J&J also makes a long-lived, sweet, brightly colored beverage platform: the Icee. By combining the Icee’s well-known format with specific tie-ins — the brand has collaborated with the Smurf Movie and Ghostbusters — J&J wants to give consumers “permission to be a kid again,” Mallard said. 

That direct connection back to childhood flavors could be useful when marketing to a demographic that’s still young, Byrne noted. At the NRA Show, J&J was showing off a Froot Loops flavored Icee that managed to attain an uncanny flavor resemblance to the breakfast cereal.

Speaking to Restaurant Dive in an interview in June, Caribou Coffee’s chief brand and marketing officer, Erin Newkirk, said the brand has seen younger consumers move away from hot coffee toward cold brew, and now towards sweeter, fruitier energy drinks. In May, Caribou introduced a line of energy drinks with a high caffeine content and a base of soda water, or lemonade.

Seven different fruity drinks and donuts and a cake pop from Caribou Coffee

Caribou Coffee’s 2024 summer menu includes Fruit Shakers and energy drinks, flavors that appeal to Gen Z consumers. 

Courtesy of Caribou Coffee

 

Caribou’s summer drinks have performed about twice as well as the company was expecting, she said. 

“People are looking for something other than coffee-based beverages in the afternoon,” Newkirk said. “[They’re] wanting something a little bit sweeter.” 

In the afternoon, Caribou sees a higher consumption of fruity drinks and energy drinks, rather than coffee, which remains mostly a breakfast drink.

The combination of bold and boring flavors was in evidence at the Coca-Cola booth and elsewhere on the showfloor, like the Frappes at Ghirardelli’s booth, and off the show floor at CosMc’s. McDonald’s, looking to balance the margins beverages traditionally offer against the operational complexity of customized drinks, is testing a whole host of boldly boring beverages a forty-minute drive from downtown Chicago, including its highly caffeinated Churro Cold Brew Frappe, one of the best-selling items at CosMc’s.

Healthy-ish snacking

Concerns about nutritional content could lead to shifts in the popularity of beverages, Bret Thorn, senior food and beverage editor at Nation’s Restaurant News, said during a panel discussion.

“Everyone’s focused on nutrition that they enjoy,” Thorn said. “I would expect us to see more nutrient dense things like berries [added to beverages].” Coca-Cola’s profusion of unsweetened or zero sugar options seemed to be designed to appeal to the market segments interested in perceived healthier snacks.

Mallard said Gen Z’s desire for healthy-seeming menu items extends from beverages to snack foods.

“In the mainstream [of snacking], you’ll see migration to healthier snacks,” Mallard said. “Whether that means protein inclusions, calorie reduction [or] portion control.” 

The same principle extends to drinks, Kelleigh Gamble, senior director of brand at Tractor Beverage Company said during a discussion on Gen Z’s drinks preferences.

“They’re more conscious about what they’re putting into their body,” Gamble said, leading to a greater adoption of non-alcoholic cocktails.

For Coca-Cola, this has meant the introduction of new SKUs, like the Powerade Sours, a zero-sugar option designed especially to appeal to health-conscious Gen Z consumers.

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