In today’s market, brands are listening more than ever. Tracking sentiment. Running surveys. Monitoring social conversations and yet — many are still getting it wrong.Because what consumers say and what they do are no longer the same thing. Welcome to the growing tension between consumer sentiment and consumer reality — and why understanding this gap is becoming one of the most important strategic advantages for brands in South Africa.
The Sentiment Story: “Things Are Tough”
If you listen to consumers right now, the narrative is clear:
- “The cost of living is too high”
- “I’m cutting back”
- “I can’t afford unnecessary spend”
Sentiment is cautious. At times, even pessimistic. And it makes sense. Consumers are navigating rising living costs, economic uncertainty, and ongoing financial pressure. On the surface, this should signal a pullback in spending. But that’s only half the story.
The Reality: Spending Hasn’t Disappeared — It’s Shifted
When you look at actual behaviour, a more nuanced picture emerges. Consumers are still spending — but differently:
- They are trading down in some categories while trading up in others
- They are cutting bulk purchases but allowing for small, meaningful treats
- They are switching brands faster, often driven by promotions or perceived value
- They are becoming highly selective, not inactive
This isn’t contradiction. It’s adaptation. Consumers are not irrational — they are re-prioritising in real time.
The Gap: Where Insight Lives
The mistake many brands make is choosing one side:
- Either they follow sentiment and assume consumers have stopped spending
- Or they follow sales data and assume everything is fine
The truth sits in between. Because the real insight doesn’t live in what consumers say, or in what they do — it lives in the tension between the two.
This gap reveals:
- What consumers value vs what they sacrifice
- Where emotion overrides logic
- Where identity still drives spend, even under pressure
Why This Gap Is Growing
In a market like South Africa, this disconnect is becoming more pronounced due to:
1. Emotional Pressure vs Functional Reality
Consumers feel financially strained — even when they are still participating in the market.
Perception is shaped by daily lived experiences like fuel, electricity, and food costs.
2. The Rise of the “Calculated Consumer”
Consumers are no longer passive. They are:
- Comparing prices
- Waiting for deals
- Switching brands
- Justifying purchases
They are spending — but with intent.
3. The Need for Small Escapes
Even in constrained environments, consumers seek moments of relief:
- A takeaway meal
- Better personal care
- Affordable luxuries
These purchases may seem contradictory to their stated sentiment — but they are psychologically essential.
What Brands Get Wrong
Many brands over-index on what consumers say.
They hear:
“I’m cutting back”
And respond with:
- Blanket discounting
- Overemphasis on price
- Short-term promotional strategies
But this can erode brand value and train consumers to only engage on deal.
Others ignore sentiment entirely — and risk appearing out of touch.
What Brands Should Do Instead
1. Design for Duality
Accept that consumers are both:
- Cost-conscious and willing to spend
- Rational and emotional
Your strategy needs to speak to both.
2. Focus on Value, Not Just Price
Value is no longer just affordability — it’s:
- Justification
- Quality perception
- Emotional reward
3. Identify “Protected Categories”
Even under pressure, there are categories consumers refuse to compromise on.
Find where your brand sits:
- Is it essential?
- Is it a treat?
- Is it replaceable?
4. Read Behaviour, Not Just Words
The brands that win will be those that:
- Go beyond surveys
- Analyse trade-offs
- Understand decision-making in context
The TrendER Perspective
At Trender, we believe that consumer truth is layered.
It’s not found in a single data point, dashboard, or research output.
It’s found in understanding:
- The contradictions
- The trade-offs
- The context behind behaviour
Because consumers are not inconsistent. They are responding — intelligently — to the world around them.
Closing Thought
In a market defined by pressure and adaptation, the brands that succeed won’t be the ones that simply listen. They will be the ones that interpret. Because the future of insight isn’t about choosing between sentiment and reality —It’s about understanding the space in between.
