MKTG 322 exam 2 - FLASHCARDS - Consumer health and physical well being (1)
Marketers are “responsible for organizing the context in which people make decisions”.
• Therefore, marketers can shape decisions about:
• Food purchase, consumption, and disposal
• Progress of goals (e.g., healthy eating, exercising)
.
What are visual biases?
Consumers make errors when visually estimating portion sizes, calories, and product healthiness
What bias is this: prettier food is perceived as healthier, specifically because classical aesthetic features make it appear more natural?
Healthy bias
What bias is this: The taller of two equivolume objects appears larger?
Elongation bias
What bias is this: Consumers make errors when visually estimating portion sizes.
• Supersized portions appear smaller than they really are (we do not have a reference point).
• Supersized portions are underestimated more strongly when all three dimensions change (Length, Width, Height).
Qualtity estimations
True or false: visual perception is a reliable indicator of food
portion size, healthiness, etc?
FALSE
What do ambiguous size labels do?
Labeling the sizes of food packages or portions as “small,” “medium,” or “large” significantly affects size perceptions
Small and healthy-sounding labels such as Keto and Organic can affect perceived calorie content and portion size
.
Why is supersizing a problem?
Larger serving dishes can increase:
• food consumption (we eat more than we need/want!)
• food waste