Habit is the real battleground… and most brands ignore it
Many food and drink innovations fail not because consumers dislike them, but because they ask people to break habits they rely on. That’s a big ask.
- Taste – expectation matters as much as experience. Branding shapes how something is expected to taste before it’s even tried.
- Habit – many food and drink purchases are automatic. Brands win not by shouting loudest, but by embedding themselves into routines.
- Branding – meaning, memory and identity guide decisions, especially in saturated categories.
People don’t just consume food and drink, they use it to structure their days, manage energy, reward themselves and signal identity. Research that doesn’t explore usage, routine and emotional role misses the point entirely.
This is where brand market research, brand health tracking and brand tracking studies become essential. Understanding how a brand is encoded in people’s minds, not just how it performs on shelf, allows food and drink brands to influence behaviour without breaking the habit loop.
Why the giants obsess over research (and always have)
There’s a myth that the biggest food and drink brands rely on instinct and scale. They don’t.
Brands like Coca-Cola use market research precisely because they operate at a cultural scale. When culture shifts, their brand meaning shifts with it, whether they like it or not.
Vision One has previously worked with Coca-Cola, supporting the brand in understanding how people, perceptions and culture evolve over time. For global brands, research isn’t about reassurance. It’s about avoiding cultural missteps that take years to undo.
The giants stay ahead because they:
- Track subtle shifts in attitude, not just awareness
- Understand how cultural meaning drifts over time
- Evolve without abandoning what people trust
That requires corporate brand tracking and cultural insight, which allows major brands to move with society rather than react too late.
Innovation that changes with culture, Not just trends
Food and drink innovation fails when it chases trends without understanding people. The food and drink industry is littered with innovations that looked good on paper, yet failed in reality.
The common mistake? Mistaking trends for motivations.
Smarter consumer research ensures innovation works with cultural behaviour, not against it. It helps brands see:
- What role would this actually play in someone’s life?
- What habit would it replace, or fail to?
- What tension does it genuinely solve?
By combining qualitative research, consumer research surveys and early-stage concept exploration, brands can tell the difference between ideas that sound interesting and ideas that will survive contact with real behaviour.
This is particularly important in categories where trust and familiarity are hard-won and easily lost.
Marketing doesn’t just communicate – It changes experience
In food and drink, marketing doesn’t stop at awareness. It shapes expectation, primes taste and influences memory.
This is why advertising testing and ad testing matter more here than in many other categories. Creative work doesn’t just need to be noticed — it needs to set the right expectation.
Poorly aligned marketing can actively damage experience, even when the product delivers. Smarter research helps brands understand whether communications are reinforcing or undermining what people believe about them.
If market research simply confirms what a brand already believes, it isn’t doing its job. The most valuable research:
- Challenges assumptions
- Reveals uncomfortable truths
- Forces better questions
- Makes decisions harder before they become easier
As a leading market research consultancy in the UK, we help food and drink brands turn insight into action. At Vision One, we believe research should reduce risk not by playing safe, but by deeply understanding people, their habits, motivations and cultural context.
Winning in food and drink means understanding people first
Food and drink is personal. It’s emotional. It’s cultural.
That’s why brands in this sector benefit more from market research than almost any other industry, when that research goes beyond data and into understanding people.
They win by understanding:
- Why people choose without thinking
- What habits they refuse to break
- How culture reshapes meaning over time
For brands looking to win now and stay relevant in the future, smarter, insight-led market research isn’t a nice-to-have.
It’s how taste becomes loyalty, habit becomes growth, and branding becomes cultural meaning.