General Merchandise/HBC

NACS Updates Product Category Definitions

Adds e-cigs to OTP; other changes to wine, liquor, grocery, snacks, automotive categories

ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- NACS said that the NACS Category Definitions & Numbering Guide, Version 7.1, is now available for download. It updates product category definitions.

In developing the updates, the NACS Research Committee worked closely with industry leaders and key stakeholders to make a few important changes to the 7.0 version, which was published in 2010. These changes improve the clarity of the guide and reflect recent updates resulting from product transition and diversification.

"These categories can be used by the industry to establish performance benchmarks and a framework for retailers and manufacturers to have meaningful discussions regarding market performance comparisons," said NACS Research Committee chairman Joe Sheetz. "However, it is important to emphasize that a product's inclusion in one of the categories set forth has no meaning, express or implied, other than uniformity of treatment for benchmarking and comparative performance purposes."

Specific updates include:

  • The Other Tobacco category has been renamed Other Tobacco Products; a subcategory of E-cigarettes was added while the subcategory of Other Tobacco Products was renamed Other Tobacco.
  • The Wine category has the new subcategory Other Wine.
  • The Liquor category has two new subcategories: Cocktail Mixes & Other Liquor.
  • The Edible Grocery category has the new subcategory Water/Beverage Enhancers.
  • In the Alternative Snacks category, the Health/Energy Bars subcategory has been renamed Health/Energy/Protein Bars.
  • The Automotive Products category has the new subcategory Other Automotive, which includes fuses, gas cans, light bulbs, tools and emergency items.

NACS released its first guide, the Category Definitions & Numbering Guide 1.0, in 1998 to provide a framework for data collection and benchmarking the industry's category performance.

The new NACS Category Definitions and Numbering Guide, Version 7.1, is available for download in both PDF and Excel formats.

Founded in 1961 as the National Association of Convenience Stores, NACS is the international association for convenience and fuel retailing. The U.S. convenience store industry, with more than 149,000 stores across the country, posted $681 billion in total sales in 2011, of which $486 billion were motor fuels sales. NACS has 2,200 retail and 1,600 supplier member companies that do business in nearly 50 countries.

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