Newswise, June 30, 2016— Philadelphia, PA, June 30, 2016 –
Fruit and vegetable availability is often assumed to be a purchase barrier, yet
fruit and vegetable availability does not necessarily result in frequent
purchases.
Rather, in-store
marketing of less-healthy foods may be a major influencing factor in consumer
spending habits regarding fruits and vegetables.
A new study, in which in-store marketing focused attention on
fruits and vegetables, resulted in an increased proportion of produce purchases
keeping overall food spending the same.
To study the effect of in-store marketing, researchers used a
shopper marketing nutrition intervention and placed 10 large (6 by 3 feet)
green arrows on the floor of a grocery.
The arrows were placed in highly visible areas around the
perimeter of the store and pointed to the produce section. On the arrows were
sayings such as, “Follow green arrow for health,” and included a graphical
representation of fruits and vegetables and emoticons to facilitate social
approval.
Two groceries were included in this pilot study, including a
control grocery of the same chain with similar demographics and poverty levels
with no arrows.
Weekly sales reports detailing daily grocery department sales
were generated by the retailer for the 14-day trial.
During this period, the intervention store experienced a
significant increase in the proportion of spending on produce compared with
other food. Despite the increase in spending on fruits and vegetables at the
intervention store, however, the total food spending per customer did not
change significantly between the two stores
“Efforts to move shoppers to purchase healthier foods while
not increasing budgets could trigger a public health shift,” lead author Collin
Payne, PhD, New Mexico State University, said.
“And our intervention showed that the produce spending
proportion increase is possible without increasing overall spending per shopper
transaction.”
The results of the initial trial were duplicated over a longer
period, at two additional stores with different demographics and poverty
levels. This added validity to the initial results by extending the
intervention to new groups of shoppers.
However, Dr. Payne and his coinvestigators recommend that
future studies examine how long this intervention is likely to have an effect.
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