Nudging green food: The effects of a hedonic cue, menu position, a warm-glow cue, and a descriptive norm
Journal article, 2023

Meat consumption is associated with both public health risks and substantial CO2 emissions. In a large-scale field-experiment, we applied four nudges to the digital menus in 136 hamburger restaurants. The nudges promoted vegetarian food purchases by either (1) changing the menu position of vegetarian food, or aligning vegetarian food with (2) a hedonic, taste-focused nudge, (3) the warm-glow effect, or (4) a descriptive social norm. These nudges were thus aimed to shift salience toward a certain goal or the salience of a specific alternative. Vegetarian food purchases were measured in two datasets analyzing if nudges affected customers' “route” to ordering vegetarian food (29,640 observations), and the total number of vegetarian food sold during the intervention (346,081 observations). Results showed that the position nudge affected customers route to buying vegetarian food. More specifically, making the “green category” more accessible made more customers order through that category. Interestingly, this did not affect the total number of vegetarian sales. However, results indicate that nudges that utilize the salience of goals, in particular hedonic goals, may have an overall positive effect on total vegetarian sales.

Author

Tommy Reinholdsson

University of Gothenburg

Martin Hedesström

University of Gothenburg

Emma Ejelöv

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

André Hansla

University of Gothenburg

Magnus Bergquist

University of Gothenburg

Åsa Svenfelt

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Andreas Nilsson

University of Gothenburg

Journal of Consumer Behaviour

1472-0817 (ISSN) 14791838 (eISSN)

Vol. 22 3 557-568

Climate policies for food consumption: where’s the beef?: Analyzing the policy options and political feasibility for a climate neutral welfare society

Formas (2019-02005), 2019-12-01 -- 2022-12-31.

Subject Categories

Psychology (excluding Applied Psychology)

Social Sciences Interdisciplinary

Food Science

Economics

Social Work

DOI

10.1002/cb.2129

More information

Latest update

7/5/2023 9