The effect of gender, age and product type on the origin induced food product experience among young consumers in Finland
Vainio A; Hopia A.; Kumpulainen T; Sandell M
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042718145
Tiivistelmä
Locally produced and sourced food products are gaining popularity among
consumers. The effect of the expectations induced by the origin of the
food was studied with 1491 consumers in two separate studies among
different age groups. In order to test the consumer response to the
product origin neutral, domestic, and local conditions were used.
Consumers evaluated the product's pleasantness, their probability to
choose it, the overall quality, and their willingness to pay. To gather
information on whether the phenomenon was consistent, independent from
the product category, three different types of products were tested
(meat, bread, and vegetables). Our results show that a closer origin
does not necessarily produce a positive response, but that there are
several moderating factors such as gender, age, and product type. Female
university students responded equally to domestic and local origins in
the case of bread, but for meat products, only those of local origin
induced a positive reaction. In this study population, the male
respondents only reacted to a local origin in the case of bread, while
domestic meat products provided similar results to local origins. Among
young men consumers in the 7th-9th grades responded to the local origin
of vegetables positively, while others among the youngest consumers, the
origin did not induce a significant effect. The results indicate that
even when the product is not appealing itself, locality can still
increase the perceived quality.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]