4.4 Article

How Association with Physical Waste Attenuates Consumer Preferences for Rescue-Based Food

Journal

JOURNAL OF MARKETING RESEARCH
Volume 58, Issue 5, Pages 870-887

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00222437211031243

Keywords

corporate social responsibility; food waste; mental imagery; rescue-based food; sustainability

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The study found that when companies emphasize the association between physical waste and RBF, negative mental imagery may be triggered, reducing consumer attitudes towards RBF; conversely, focusing on societal benefits or limiting the number of cues associated with physical waste can increase consumer demand for these foods.
In an effort to combat food waste, many firms have introduced rescue-based foods (RBFs), which are made from ingredients that are safe to eat but would otherwise be wasted, often due to aesthetic issues or oversupply. Although the benefits of RBF are varied, some firms adopt strategies that highlight RBF's waste-reduction benefits, such as reduced landfill use or lower environmental impact. This research posits that when firms adopt strategies that highlight associations between physical waste and RBF, those associations can generate negative mental imagery, which can trigger disgust and mitigate positive consumer attitudes toward RBF. When such associations are not present, demand is consistent with demand for conventional foods. The authors find support for the role of mental imagery in this demand mitigation process, with some promotional appeals stimulating thoughts of physical waste. Counterintuitively, this research reveals that when marketers adopt the common practice of using environmental benefit appeals that can trigger physical waste associations, such as the color green, consumer demand for RBF diminishes. Conversely, focusing on the societal benefits or limiting the number of cues available to create physical waste associations generates consumer demand for these foods on a level equivalent to that of conventional food.

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