Interest in Gluten-free Dieting Broadens

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Source: Food Business News

Gluten-free dieting appears well on the way to becoming a sustainable trend while other popular diets seem to be losing ground, said Rochelle Bailis, director of content and insights, Hitwise, Los Angeles. After surging early in 2016, interest in low-carb and paleo dieting may be fading.

Analyzing food industry trends based on internet search numbers, Ms. Bailis said a key to distinguishing legitimate food trends from fads is sustained growth year after year.

The holy grail of legitimate food trends is the ‘steady riser,’ a movement that has grown gradually in awareness and market share over many years,” she said.

For example, interest in organic food dates back to the 1940s, Ms. Bailis said. Despite this track record, organics remain strong into the 21stcentury. Hitwise analysis found a 224% jump in searches for organic food terms between 2014 and 2016, she said.

Hitwise bases its analysis on data gathered from a panel of 8.5 million people, tracking their on-line behavior across 20 million web sites and 500 million search terms. Hitwise is part of Connexity, an e-commerce and consumer analytics company.

Hitwise analysis found a 224% jump in searches for organic food terms between 2014 and 2016.

Gluten-free dieting demonstrates “all the hallmarks of a ‘steady riser’ diet,” Ms. Bailis said.

While experiencing a scattering of “blips” she said searches for “gluten-free” climbed steadily during the analysis period, rising 141% between 2014 and 2016.

More cyclical has been interest in the term “detox.” Ms. Bailis attributed a July 2014 spike in searches to sudden interest in the wake of research studies about the detoxification properties of niacin published in theNew England Journal of Medicine.

Ms. Bailis characterized several diets as “so last year,” mostly based on ebbing interest in late 2016.

Interest in low sugar diets has flat-lined.

Low sugar diet searches showed growth during the 2014-16 period, but the gains were concentrated during a period in early 2016.

“Since then interest has essentially flat-lined,” she said.

Even more dramatic was growth in interest in “low-carb” dieting in early 2016, Ms. Bailis said. That surge was followed by a slow, steady decline over the balance of the year.

That being said, since 2014 low-carb searches have still increased by a sizeable 223%,” she said.

After a “meteoric” jump in 2016, interest in the paleo diet has dissipated.

Similar to the arc of “low-carb” dieting has been the pattern for “paleo” searches. After a “meteoric” jump in 2016, interest has dissipated, Ms. Bailis said.

“That doesn’t necessarily mean that the paleo diet trend is dead but serves as a reminder that fast-rising food fads carry the risk of falling out of favor quickly,” she said.

Ms. Bailis’ analysis included two “rising stars,” diet searches that show a sudden upswing of promise.

“Vegan searches have been climbing steadily since 2014, and at the end of October jumped suddenly into the league of ‘rising stars’ by doubling in volume,” Ms. Bailis said.“This abrupt interest in veganism is quite startling, considering veganism has existed for decades.”

“Vegan” searches have been steadily climbing since 2014.

Searches for “vegetarian” experienced similar growth and “entrance into the league of rising stars” late in 2016, Ms. Bailis said. Growth has been steady for some time but more than doubled in recent months, she said.

This sudden renewed interest in vegetarianism and veganism, along with the persistent demand for organic foods, suggests consumers are more invested in sustainable food movements that improve their own health while protecting the planet and other organisms.

The interest in different diets has been accompanied by skepticism, Ms. Bailis said. As a result, she said new product development aimed at tapping into trends should proceed with caution.

“Also, as our national desire to eat better continues to expand, it is imperative that food brands and consumer packaged food companies are able to distinguish between authentic food trends and ‘here today, gone tomorrow’ diet fads,” she said.

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