Why fresh produce innovation is one of retails most overlooked growth stories
When analysts talk about innovation in grocery retail, the conversation tends to land on technology: self-checkout, dynamic pricing, and last-mile delivery. These are legitimate stories, but they crowd out a quieter shift that has been reshaping the fresh produce aisle for the better part of a decade – and which tells a more interesting story about how consumer behaviour actually changes.
The produce aisle has quietly become a value-added category
Fresh vegetables were once sold almost exclusively in their whole, unprocessed form. Today, innovation in the category is driven by convenience, with the same ingredients available at various stages of preparation, from whole produce to trimmed, washed, diced, and ready-to-cook options. This evolution is commercially significant because it influences how consumers make purchasing decisions, offering greater flexibility to match different needs, lifestyles, and time constraints. Take pre-chopped onions from Taylor Farms, for example. A consumer choosing to buy these onions is not making a different nutritional decision from one who buys a loose onion – they are making a different time decision. The product is effectively the same ingredient with prep labour priced in. That shift from commodity to convenience format is where margin lives in fresh produce, and it is a structural change rather than a passing trend.
Consumer willingness to pay for convenience is durable
The idea that consumers are willing to pay a premium for convenience is well established. What receives less attention, however, is how resilient that willingness remains during periods of economic uncertainty. Recent trends in UK grocery shopping suggest that while consumers may switch supermarket chains or trade down in certain categories when household budgets are stretched, convenience-focused fresh produce products have remained comparatively resilient.
The reason is simple: time poverty does not disappear when financial pressures increase. The factors that make a pre-chopped onion more appealing than a whole one—saving time, reducing effort, and simplifying meal preparation—remain just as relevant during periods of high inflation. In many cases, households facing both financial and time constraints are even more likely to choose products that help alleviate one of those pressures. As a result, convenience continues to hold significant value for consumers, even when spending habits become more selective.
ONS retail industry data consistently shows food as one of the most stable categories in consumer spending, and within food, fresh and chilled formats have outperformed ambient over the long cycle. Value-added produce sits at the intersection of both.
The margin opportunity for retailers is in the format mix
For grocery retailers, the practical implication is that the fresh produce category cannot be managed purely as a volume-and-waste optimisation problem. The format mix – what proportion of any given vegetable is sold whole versus prepared – is a revenue management question.
A retailer that stocks only whole onions and loose bags is leaving money on the table relative to one that stocks the category across formats and positions them clearly by use case. The consumer who is cooking for speed on a Wednesday evening is not the same shopper as the one doing a Sunday meal prep, and the product selection in the aisle should reflect that distinction. As retail spending data continues to show that convenience drives purchase decisions across demographics, the case for investing in format depth rather than just SKU breadth becomes clearer.
The supply side story is equally underreported
Behind the format shift is a supply chain investment story. Producing pre-cut, pre-washed, ready-to-cook vegetables at scale requires cold chain infrastructure, food safety certification, and processing capacity that whole-produce supply chains do not.
For investors and analysts watching the grocery sector, the fresh produce processing and packaging segment is a more interesting growth story than its modest profile suggests. The economics of format premiums, combined with growing consumer demand for time-efficient meal preparation, point to a category that has further to run.

