4.0 Article

Moving towards healthy: cuing food healthiness and appeal

Journal

JOURNAL OF SOCIAL MARKETING
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages 44-63

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/JSOCM-03-2019-0038

Keywords

Food healthiness; Food marketing; Advertising; Perception; Heuristics; Public health; Health marketing; heuristic; Communication; Food; Healthiness; Motion

Categories

Funding

  1. Research Center of The Faculty of Business Administration at the Ono Academic College

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This study introduces a new method of promoting healthy foods through indirect communication, showing that motion can increase perceptions of food healthiness without reducing food appeal. This research offers a valuable tool for social marketers to encourage healthier eating habits and supports the use of indirect cues to promote societal goals effectively.
Purpose This paper aims to offer social marketers an innovative method to promote healthy foods. This method demonstrates the effectiveness of indirect communication in attracting consumers to healthy foods. Further, it aims to offer a way to promote food as healthier with no detrimental effects on its perceived appeal, which are a likely side effect of advertising food as healthy. Design/methodology/approach Four between-participant lab studies (N = 50, 80, 80, 102) included manipulations of food motion vs stillness and then compared ratings of food freshness, healthiness and appeal using self-report measures. Findings Motion increases healthiness evaluation. This increase in healthiness evaluation occurs without reductions in food appeal. These effects are mediated by evaluations of freshness. This occurred across three different food types and two mediums (still images and digital videos). Research limitations/implications The paper provides an effective tool for social marketers wishing to encourage healthier eating. Specifically, it helps address two problems: low effectiveness of prevalent, information-based appeals to encourage healthy eating; and reduced evaluations of tastiness that normally occur when consumers are convinced food is healthy. Social implications Social marketers can use motion as an effective tool to promote food as healthy. Importantly, this indirect communication avoids the potential pitfall of reduced food appeal. This should help encourage healthier eating. The findings also supports the use of indirect cues as an effective approach to promoting social ends. Originality/value Offering a novel, indirect method of enhancing judgments of food healthiness via a simple visual cue. Demonstrating the effect and its underlying mechanism. Providing a way to counter the prevalent unhealthy = tasty intuition, a major obstacle to promoting healthy eating. Supporting social marketers' use of indirect communication to increase the appeal of desirable societal goals. Finally, showing that sensory visual cues can serve as a source of heuristic thinking.

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