We meat again: a field study on the moderating role of location-specific consumer preferences in nudging vegetarian options

Publication date

2024

Authors

Venema, Tina A.G.ORCID 0000-0002-3939-2828ISNI 0000000493311157
Jensen, Niels Holm

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

This field study set out to test whether consumers’ history of making decisions in a particular choice context moderated the effectiveness of a nudge intervention to reduce meat consumption. In a Danish hospital canteen that served both staff members and visitors, a combination of nudges (Chef’s recommendation sticker + prominent positioning) was implemented to promote vegetarian sandwiches. The sales of these sandwiches increased from 16.45% during the baseline period to 25.16% during the nudge intervention period. Most notably, this increase was caused by the visitors, who had weak location-bound preferences. Hospital staff members (who had strong location-bound preferences) were unaffected by the nudge in their choice. This is an important finding because the two consumer groups did not differ on their person-bound preferences for meat. It seems that behaviour change is best predicted by location-bound preferences, whereas the behaviour itself is best predicted by person-bound preferences. These findings can help organizations in estimating whether a nudge intervention has enough potential for behaviour change, or whether more directive policies are required.

Keywords

Nudge, field study, habits, meat consumption, preferences

Citation

Venema, T A G & Jensen, N H 2024, 'We meat again: a field study on the moderating role of location-specific consumer preferences in nudging vegetarian options', Psychology & health, vol. 39, no. 10, pp. 1337-1351. https://doi.org/10.1080/08870446.2023.2182896