Seduced by the label: How the recommended serving size on nutrition labels affects food sales

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Seduced by the label: How the recommended serving size on nutrition labels affects food sales. / Elshiewy, Ossama; Jahn, Steffen; Boztug, Yasemin.
In: Journal of the Association for Consumer Research, Vol. 1, No. 1, 01.01.2016, p. 104-114.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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@article{47b94fcc03a14695a15c6a6ed971e815,
title = "Seduced by the label: How the recommended serving size on nutrition labels affects food sales",
abstract = "As consumers pay greater attention to nutrition content when choosing food, voluntary front-of-pack labels have become popular tools for food marketers. However, voluntary nutrition labels provide certain freedoms regarding the disclosed information, which can be exploited. A common strategy is to disclose nutrition values based on smaller recommended serving sizes, which presents the nutrition amounts favorably on the label. Problematically, consumers can misinterpret such information and draw biased conclusions regarding product healthiness. This study uses purchase data with 61 products from both healthy (yogurt) and unhealthy (cookies) categories to analyze how recommended serving sizes on nutrition labels affect food sales. In line with our predictions, sales increased after a label introduction in the healthy (but not in the unhealthy) category for products with smaller recommended serving sizes. Since the least healthy versions within the category tend to have smaller recommended serving sizes, nutrition labels can stimulate sales of unhealthier food.",
keywords = "Management studies",
author = "Ossama Elshiewy and Steffen Jahn and Yasemin Boztug",
note = "Titel d. Ausgabe: The Behavioral Science of Eating",
year = "2016",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1086/684286",
language = "English",
volume = "1",
pages = "104--114",
journal = "Journal of the Association for Consumer Research",
issn = "2378-1815",
publisher = "Chicago University Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Seduced by the label

T2 - How the recommended serving size on nutrition labels affects food sales

AU - Elshiewy, Ossama

AU - Jahn, Steffen

AU - Boztug, Yasemin

N1 - Titel d. Ausgabe: The Behavioral Science of Eating

PY - 2016/1/1

Y1 - 2016/1/1

N2 - As consumers pay greater attention to nutrition content when choosing food, voluntary front-of-pack labels have become popular tools for food marketers. However, voluntary nutrition labels provide certain freedoms regarding the disclosed information, which can be exploited. A common strategy is to disclose nutrition values based on smaller recommended serving sizes, which presents the nutrition amounts favorably on the label. Problematically, consumers can misinterpret such information and draw biased conclusions regarding product healthiness. This study uses purchase data with 61 products from both healthy (yogurt) and unhealthy (cookies) categories to analyze how recommended serving sizes on nutrition labels affect food sales. In line with our predictions, sales increased after a label introduction in the healthy (but not in the unhealthy) category for products with smaller recommended serving sizes. Since the least healthy versions within the category tend to have smaller recommended serving sizes, nutrition labels can stimulate sales of unhealthier food.

AB - As consumers pay greater attention to nutrition content when choosing food, voluntary front-of-pack labels have become popular tools for food marketers. However, voluntary nutrition labels provide certain freedoms regarding the disclosed information, which can be exploited. A common strategy is to disclose nutrition values based on smaller recommended serving sizes, which presents the nutrition amounts favorably on the label. Problematically, consumers can misinterpret such information and draw biased conclusions regarding product healthiness. This study uses purchase data with 61 products from both healthy (yogurt) and unhealthy (cookies) categories to analyze how recommended serving sizes on nutrition labels affect food sales. In line with our predictions, sales increased after a label introduction in the healthy (but not in the unhealthy) category for products with smaller recommended serving sizes. Since the least healthy versions within the category tend to have smaller recommended serving sizes, nutrition labels can stimulate sales of unhealthier food.

KW - Management studies

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85019199931&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1086/684286

DO - 10.1086/684286

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:85019199931

VL - 1

SP - 104

EP - 114

JO - Journal of the Association for Consumer Research

JF - Journal of the Association for Consumer Research

SN - 2378-1815

IS - 1

ER -

DOI