For the past few years, the consumer products agenda has felt relatively predictable: managing costs, taking prices where possible, and keeping operating models optimised. Heading into 2026, that playbook is proving too slow for the pace of change.
Consumer products companies are navigating overlapping demographic, political, environmental, technological and cultural shifts. Together, these forces are reshaping how value is created, priced, delivered and experienced, often simultaneously. Accepted truths around scale, breadth and optimisation are being challenged by the need for focus, speed and agility. It is time to start a new conversation about industry change, client success, and what decision-makers should prioritise for 2026.
The 2026 Global Consumer Products Industry Outlook offers a forward-looking perspective grounded in insights from a global survey of 300 senior executives at leading consumer products companies. The research highlights seven executive discussion starters, referred to as "provocations", designed to help leaders challenge assumptions and set strategy for the year ahead.
Consumers are increasingly moving from convenience and brand-driven choices to value-driven tradeoffs. 47% of consumers globally, including 35% of high-income households, now behave as value seekers, regularly sacrificing convenience to keep costs down, making price value scrutiny a mainstream expectation across income levels. Growth will favour more-value-for-the-price (MVP) brands that consistently feel “worth it” across price tiers, but only one-third of brands currently achieve that.
Deglobalisation and shifting trade policies are creating new pressure points that demand more active management. Companies are reducing exposure to policy risk, adjusting pricing strategies, and rethinking where and how they compete. By 2026, seven in ten executives expect high growth opportunities beyond their traditional markets, supported by expanded distribution, digital capabilities and e-commerce.
Consumer products companies are moving away from aisle-spanning conglomerates towards more focused portfolios. Two-thirds of surveyed organisations plan to grow through partnerships, while about half intend to rationalise SKUs to reduce complexity, improve efficiency, and stay closer to evolving consumer needs.
74% of surveyed companies are simplifying organisational structures to reduce interdependencies and enable faster, more accountable decision-making. Flatter structures and end-to-end processes, often supported by artificial intelligence (AI), are becoming prerequisites for scaling productivity and unlocking value. Many organisations also expect to pair simplification with outsourcing and centres of excellence to free capacity for growth and accelerate AI-enabled operations.
Investor expectations are shifting away from headcount growth towards productivity gains driven by digital transformation and AI. Growth is increasingly expected to come from doing more with the same workforce through automation, process redesign and better use of data, not simply by adding talent.
Traditional CPG-retailer roles are being reshaped. 79% of executives expect power to shift further towards retailers over the next two to three years, driven by private label growth, retailer scale and advantages in consumer data. The opportunity lies in deeper collaboration, with more joint operating models focused on shared planning, pricing, early innovation and cost reduction.
AI is transforming the supply side of the market, but consumers are becoming AI-powered too. As generative AI increasingly influences discovery and purchase decisions, the next battleground will include generative engine optimisation (GEO), AI-enabled checkout pathways, and agentic commerce. Yet only 31% of executives say they are actively addressing how to influence AI-assisted shoppers, suggesting a growing strategic gap.
Quickly shifting industry rules are creating a period of discomfort for consumer products companies, but this disruption also brings opportunity. Organisations that use this moment to drive hard conversations and make decisive trade‑offs are likely to be better positioned for the year ahead. Over the next five years, the consumer market will be reshaped by heightened expectations of value, evolving shopping behaviours, and the rapid adoption of artificial intelligence.
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