The trend: Consumer packaged goods (CPG) brands and other companies are expanding their size offerings to stay relevant with increasingly cost-conscious shoppers, per The Wall Street Journal.
- PepsiCo now sells six different sizes of Lay’s potato chips. Mondelez recently rolled out downsized versions of Ritz crackers and Oreo cookies. And Diageo rolled out smaller bottles of Don Julio tequila.
- The goal, as Mondelez CEO Dirk Van De Put stated during the company’s earnings call, is to provide “an array of pack sizes appropriate for each snacking occasion—from bite-sized treats offering a delicious taste of me-time to family sizes designed for sharing.”
The strategy: Smaller-sized packages at lower price points give national brands a foothold at a time when 77% of consumers expect CPG prices to rise and many are trading down to private labels to stretch their budgets. They allow shoppers to stick with familiar names without having to commit to costlier, full-size packaging, while also serving as low-risk entry points for new products.
At the same time, smaller packages often carry higher profit margins, offering a buffer for CPG companies facing rising material costs driven by factors like climate change, tariffs, and global supply disruptions.
Still, the strategy isn’t without some risk. Expanding packaging formats can be costly, and even efficient rollouts face an uphill battle for limited shelf space at retail.
Our take: Offering more packaging options is a smart way for CPG brands to stay competitive in a value-focused environment.
- Offering more pack sizes is a smart move given consumers’ razor-sharp focus on value. But execution matters. If consumers perceive downsized offerings as shrinkflation rather than value, the strategy could backfire.
- Brands that use size variety to attract new shoppers, price with precision, and win at the shelf will be best positioned to turn flexibility into both loyalty and margin.