Optimising your product without losing flavour

There isn’t a brand in the world that doesn’t want to improve its products. That could mean making them healthier, cheaper, more sustainable, or in some cases, compliant with new regulations. The challenge is, making the necessary changes, without losing the taste consumers love – and that’s where product optimisation comes in. At Wirral Sensory Services (WSS), product optimisation is at the heart of what we do, helping food and drink companies adjust, reformulate, and innovate with confidence. In more detail: what is product optimisation? To keep things simple, product optimisation means refining a recipe, formulation, or process, in order to achieve the best balance between taste, texture, cost, and performance. This is necessary because sometimes brands need to:
  • Reduce sugar, salt, or fat content
  • Replace ingredients due to supply chain changes
  • Meet new sustainability targets
  • Improve nutritional profiles
  • Cut costs without hurting quality
It does come with potential problems though, because even a small tweak can dramatically change how a product feels or tastes. That’s why we use sensory and consumer research to ensure every change still meets customer expectations. Why optimisation matters more than ever Product optimisation is far more important than people realise, because of the following.
  1. Consumer health trends
Today’s shoppers demand healthier options – but they still expect great flavour. Reformulating to lower sugar or salt can make sense nutritionally, but only if the end product still tastes the same standard.
  1. Cost pressures
Rising ingredient and production costs mean brands must be efficient. Product optimisation allows you to identify the most cost-effective formulation that consumers still prefer.
  1. Sustainability goals
Many companies are shifting to more sustainable or locally sourced ingredients. Sensory testing ensures these swaps don’t compromise on quality or taste.
  1. Regulatory requirements
New government policies on sugar, salt, and additives are reshaping the market. Testing helps ensure compliance and continued consumer satisfaction. How WSS helps brands optimise products WSS’s expert team uses a blend of sensory science and real-world consumer testing to guide every stage of product refinement. For example, here’s how a typical optimisation project might unfold:
  1. Define the challenge WSS begins by understanding your goals: Is it about reducing calories, cutting cost, or matching a competitor’s flavour?
  2. Design the experiment We help develop several potential formulations – for example, five versions of a drink with varying sweetness levels.
  3. Conduct sensory evaluation Panels of trained assessors and/or target consumers taste each version under controlled conditions. They rate aspects like sweetness, texture, aroma, aftertaste, and overall liking.
  4. Analyse the data Advanced statistical analysis identifies which attributes drive preference – and which can be safely adjusted without hurting acceptance.
  5. Deliver clear recommendations You’ll receive an easy-to-understand report showing which version consumers prefer and why, along with actionable advice for product launch or reformulation. The result? Data-backed confidence that your optimised product delivers the same (or better) experience as before.
Small changes can often lead to a big impact Optimisation isn’t always about major reformulation. Sometimes it’s as simple as adjusting cooking time or temperature, switching to a different supplier or changing packaging materials that affect shelf-life or freshness. Even minor adjustments can affect aroma, mouthfeel, or perceived sweetness. WSS helps detect and manage those subtle differences before your consumers do. With over 25 years of experience in sensory and consumer science, our team works with major retailers, food manufacturers, and brands across the UK and beyond. Remember! Optimising a recipe doesn’t have to mean compromising flavour. With the right research and sensory insights, your brand can create products that meet modern demands, without losing the magic that makes customers come back. If you have a question about anything we’ve mentioned in this article or require further information, head over to our site here, or give a member of our team a call (0)151 346 2999.

Product Benchmarking for Food Products: Why Comparison Testing Matters More Than You Think

consumer research You’ve spent months perfecting your recipe, tweaking ingredients, and fine-tuning flavour profiles until your internal team agrees the product is ready. The question is whether you’ve created something consumers will actually choose over the dozens of alternatives already sitting on supermarket shelves. Benchmarking food products against your competition answers this question before you’ve invested in full production runs and marketing campaigns. Testing your product alongside market leaders reveals exactly where you stand in the eyes of the people who’ll be making purchasing decisions. This isn’t about whether your team likes what you’ve created, it’s about whether your target consumers prefer it to the products they’re already buying. That difference matters more than most brands realise until they’ve watched a promising launch fail because they skipped this crucial validation step.  Given that’s the case, let’s examine how benchmarking food products works in practice and why it delivers insights that internal testing simply cannot replicate.

What Benchmarking Food Actually Involves

Testing Under Identical Conditions

Benchmarking food brings your product and competitor products together in a controlled environment where consumers from your target demographic can evaluate them side by side.  The testing happens blind, meaning participants don’t know which product is yours and which belongs to established brands, removing the bias that brand recognition introduces. Everyone experiences the products under identical conditions regarding temperature, presentation, lighting, and timing, which means any preference differences reflect genuine product attributes rather than random variables. This controlled comparison generates data about specific sensory attributes including appearance, aroma, flavour intensity, texture, and aftertaste, alongside overall acceptance scores. You’re not just learning whether consumers prefer your product, you’re discovering precisely which attributes drive that preference or rejection.

Using Results That Actually Guide Development

The analysis reveals statistically significant differences between products for each tested attribute, showing you exactly where your formulation excels and where it falls short against competition These insights then inform reformulation decisions based on concrete evidence rather than guesswork about what consumers might prefer. Some brands discover their product already outperforms market leaders, giving them powerful ammunition for retailer negotiations and marketing claims, whilst others identify specific weaknesses that need addressing before launch.

Why Benchmarking Reveals What Internal Testing Cannot

Your development team has tasted your product hundreds of times throughout the formulation process, which fundamentally changes how they perceive it. Flavours that seemed bold initially become normal through repeated exposure, leading teams to push intensity levels that consumers might find overwhelming. Benchmarking food products with fresh palates from your actual target market cuts through this familiarity bias. The comparison aspect matters enormously because consumers don’t evaluate products in isolation when shopping. They’re choosing between your product and established alternatives they already know and trust. Understanding how your formulation performs in this competitive context provides far more actionable intelligence than knowing consumers generally like it when tested alone. We’ve watched brands discover through product benchmarking that products their teams loved performed poorly against competition because flavour profiles skewed too far from category norms, or texture didn’t match consumer expectations shaped by market leaders. These discoveries before launch save the substantial costs of reformulation after you’ve already committed to production.

Connecting Benchmarking to Broader Product Development

Benchmarking food products often works most powerfully when combined with other research methodologies that provide complementary insights:
  • Sensory profiling uses trained panellists to objectively measure specific product attributes, identifying the precise sensory characteristics that differentiate your formulation from competitors
  • Product optimisation correlates sensory profiling data with consumer preference scores to identify the key drivers of acceptance, helping you create formulations that maximise appeal
  • Taste testing validates whether reformulations based on benchmarking insights actually improve consumer acceptance before you finalise recipes
This integrated approach transforms benchmarking from a simple competitive comparison into strategic intelligence that guides your entire product development process. You’re not just learning where you stand, you’re discovering exactly how to improve.

When Benchmarking Delivers Commercial Advantages Beyond Development

The intelligence benchmarking generates serves purposes beyond product refinement. When your food product outperforms established market leaders in blind testing, you’ve gained powerful evidence for retailer presentations arguing why your product deserves shelf space. Buyers want products that’ll perform better than current listings, and benchmarking data provides exactly that proof. Some brands also leverage benchmarking results in consumer marketing, though this requires careful consideration of advertising standards and claim substantiation requirements. The key is that benchmarking delivers commercial value whether your results show you’re already winning or reveal areas needing improvement before launch.

Making Benchmarking Work for Your Food Product Development

Benchmarking transforms product development from guesswork into evidence-based decision making, showing you precisely how your formulations stack up against the products consumers are already buying. Wirral Sensory Services has been running these comparative studies for food and beverage brands since 1997, helping everyone from startups to multinational companies understand their competitive position before launch. Want to find out where your product really stands? Call us on +44 (0)151 346 2999 or drop us an email at info@wssintl.com to arrange a consultation about your benchmarking needs.