Shopper’s ‘Back to School’ Study

Tristan Cotterill

Australians will focus on value for money when it comes to back-to-school shopping in 2023, in a bid to navigate skyrocketing cost-of-living pressures on household budgets, according to Shopper’s latest study.

Shopper’s ‘Back to School’ study offers insights into what’s motivating purchase decisions, the pain points for parents and caregivers and where Australians are seeking inspiration for essential school buys. More than 2,677 shoppers with school-aged children were surveyed in shopping centres nationally.

Karissa Fletcher, Chief Marketing Officer at Shopper, told us “Back to school is an expensive time for Australian households following Christmas, with increased entertainment and travel outside of regular spending patterns. Couple this with rising cost of living (impacting fuel, electricity and more) and Australians looking to focus on where they can save more, heading into the new year.”

A recent survey by Canstar* revealed that over 38 per cent of Australians are dipping into their savings to manage the rising cost of living, so price sensitivity will impact shopping behaviours this year.

The Shopper ‘Back to School’ study findings found that almost three in five shoppers (56 per cent) are expecting to spend more on back-to-school items than in previous years, and 26 per cent admitting that price and value will be their core considerations when purchasing back-to-school items.

With value and low price points a priority, Almost a third (32%) of parents are more likely to visit discount stores such as Kmart, Target or Big W to pick up back to school items, followed closely by supermarkets (30%), and office supply specialty retailers such as Officeworks (26%)*. The key items on the back-to-school list are lunchbox ingredients such as food, drinks and snacks; clothing and footwear; school bags; stationery items; and technology items.

“School lunches remain a challenge for families, with an overwhelming 79 per cent of parents always looking for inspiration for new lunchbox ideas. While a third (33 per cent) of parents look to fresh produce options when buying food for lunchboxes, almost a third (31 per cent) admit they buy lunchbox snacks on special or promotion. Despite what many would assume, 35 per cent of parents admit Health Star ratings, the Australian Made logo and sustainably sourced labels don’t influence their purchase, and only 25 per cent admit it influences them slightly. Cost is the overarching consideration.”

Despite expected concerns around back-to-school spending, Australians don’t put it on their radar until January, with more than a third (35 per cent) saying the new year is the signal to start thinking about the return to school needs. Almost two in five (38 per cent) parents only begin back-to-school shopping two weeks before school starts.

Shopping centres are critical to providing inspiration when it comes to back-to-school shopping:

  • More than three in four (76 per cent) parents use in-store advertising as inspiration.
  • Almost two in three (64 per cent) say they will research back-to-school items after seeing them advertised in a shopping centre; and
  • More than two in three (68 per cent) will visit a store to buy a back-to-school item after seeing it advertised in centres.

“Local shopping centres will play a helpful role for parents’ back-to-school preparation, as they seek inspiration from in-centre messaging and can pick up a variety of essential products in the one place. Brands can take advantage of Shopper’s path to purchase advertising to target value-conscious parents this January. Shopper’s dynamic and targeted digital out-of-home advertising allows brands to reach consumers while they’re in a shopping mindset.”

Sources
Canstar’s 2022 Consumer Pulse Report
Back to School Survey one: Retail Visitations N=890, Australian parents aged 18+ with school aged children,
Back to School Survey two: Lunchboxes N=899, Australian parents aged 18+ with school aged children
Back to School Survey three: Actions N=888, Australian parents aged 18+ with school aged children


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