Diaper rush: conquering a $9 billion market no one wants
to talk about
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[October 22, 2019] By
Richa Naidu and Ritsuko Ando
CHICAGO/TOKYO, (Reuters) - The time may not
be far off when more adults need diapers than babies as the population
grows older, potentially a huge opportunity for manufacturers of
incontinence products - if they can lift the stigma that has long
constrained sales.
The market for adult diapers, disposable underwear and absorbent pads is
growing fast, up 9% last year to $9 billion, having doubled in the last
decade, according to Euromonitor.
But manufacturers like market leaders Essity <ESSITYa.ST> and
Kimberly-Clark Corp <KMB.N> reckon only half of the more than 400
million adults likely to be affected by weak bladders, are buying the
right products, because they are too embarrassed.
Companies are trying various methods to change attitudes, including
making products more discreet, avoiding terms like diapers or nappies,
and placing items in the personal care aisle, next to deodorants and
menstrual pads, rather than in the baby products section.
They are also trying to normalize discussions around the subject through
advertising.
In Japan, where adult incontinence products have outsold baby diaper
sales since around 2013 due to a rapidly ageing population, market
leader Unicharm Corp <8113.T> has adopted the phrase "choi more" in its
advertising, which translates as "lil' dribble", to make light of the
problem.
"What we are doing is trying to let people know that incontinence, even
among young people, is normal," said Unicharm spokesman Hitoshi
Watanabe.
The company is focusing particularly on people with mild bladder issues
where it sees the biggest growth as people lead more active lives.
Unicharm's sales of absorbent pads and liners that target this market
were up 8% last year.
In the U.S., market leader Kimberly-Clark has this year given its
35-year-old Depend brand a makeover, introducing thinner, softer and
more fitted products that can be worn discreetly, in an effort to make
them more acceptable.
The changes are just the latest in a decade-long attempt to win over
consumers, which started with manufacturers dropping the 'diaper' label,
to loosen the association older customers might have with a loss of
control in their life.
Yet it is still difficult for companies to persuade people they should
buy specially made incontinence products.
"People keep the fact that they have incontinence secret from their
loved ones, from their husbands, brothers and sisters – this is a deep
secret for many consumers and yet it's just a fact of life, it's a
physiological reality," said Fiona Tomlin, who leads Kimberly-Clark's
adult and feminine care division.
Manufacturers have been particularly keen to win over women, who are
more than twice as likely as men to experience bladder weakness, due to
childbirth.
Kimberly-Clark has reached out to them directly over the years in
light-hearted ad campaigns featuring actresses Whoopi Goldberg and
Kirstie Alley.
[to top of second column] |
Adult diapers marketed as feminine and sexy are displayed in a
grocery store in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. October 11, 2019. Picture
taken October 11, 2019. REUTERS/Richa Naidu
Graphic: Incontinence affects three times more women than men,
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/12/7315/7246/Global%20Incontinence%20Forum.jpg
SECRET'S OUT
Kimberly-Clark's Poise brand is aimed at younger women like Ellie Foster, a
31-year-old from Maine, who has struggled with leaks since having her first
child a year-and-a-half ago but is too embarrassed to buy products that might
help her.
"At first I did, but it was definitely weird picking out adult diapers to wear,"
said Foster. "You feel like you're in the old lady section."
Sweden's Essity, the global industry leader, is also trying to reach a younger
audience with its TENA brand and a new line of black, low-rise disposable
underwear called Silhouette Noir.
The advert's tagline reads: 'secret's out: 1 in 3 women have incontinence'.
Around 12% of all women and 5% of men experience some form of urinary
incontinence, although conditions vary from mild and temporary to serious and
chronic, according to the Global Forum on Incontinence, which is backed by
Essity.
Essity said it tries to package and market its products in a way that avoids
associations with ageing.
"Designing products and packaging it as feminine and discreet as possible for
females and as masculine and discreet as possible for men helps," said Ulrika
Kolsrud, president of Essity's health and medical solutions.
Getting the message across to potential customers can sometimes be a tricky path
to tread. A few years ago, SCA <SCAb.ST> - from which Essity was spun off in
2017 - mailed samples of its products to Swedish men above 55, only to receive a
barrage of complaints.
But efforts are starting to pay off. Five years ago, adult incontinence products
were used by around 13% of the target adult female audience in France and the UK
and that is now closer to 20%, according to research firm Kantar.
That does, of course, leave huge potential for further sales growth. As Kolsrud
puts it: "If incontinence was a country, it would be the third largest country
in the world."
For the interactive graphic, click here:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/DIAPERS-ADULTS/0H001QXCV8WL/index.html
(Additional reporting by Siddharth Cavale in London; Editing by Vanessa
O'Connell and Elaine Hardcastle)
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