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USDA/ARS Children's Nutrition Research Center at Baylor College of Medicine

Consumer News-- Facts and Answers

   

 



 

   

Savvy snack bar marketing could 'ad' up to better nutrition for kids

Healthy eating poster
 

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CNRC behavior scientists took a page out of the food marketers' handbook to entice middle school students to eat healthier.

In a study involving more than 10,000 sixth, seventh, and eighth graders, marketing research strategies commonly used by food companies to sell snacks like soda and chips were used to make school snack bar offerings healthier and increase students' fruit and vegetables consumption.

"Figuring out how to get kids to buy healthy foods like fruits and vegetables with their lunch money is as much a marketing challenge as it is a health issue," said Dr. Karen Cullen, an assistant professor of pediatrics at Baylor College of Medicine.

According to Cullen, kids' consumption of fruits and vegetables slips significantly between elementary and middle school, a time when they begin having access to snack bars. Snack bars, favored for their convenience, tend to offer foods like pizza, burgers, fries and chips -- but no fruit or low-fat vegetables.

"The experience of foodservice managers is that kids won't buy fruits or low-fat vegetables at the snack bar," she said. "We decided to see whether we could change that."

Cullen's team put on their "marketing caps" to kick off the study. Their goal: learn what middle school students - their "target market" - thought.

"A basic tenet of marketing is the need to understand your customer," she said. "We needed to hear from students what fruits and vegetables they liked and what they thought they would buy -- and why."

Through focus groups and written surveys, the team gained important marketing insights, such as kids who liked apples and oranges wouldn't buy a whole piece of fruit because it was hard to eat or messy. On the other hand, apple slices offered with a small side of caramel dip got enthusiastic approval.

Armed with this knowledge, Cullen's team crafted a two-pronged marketing plan.

First, the team worked with foodservice managers to develop healthy kid-friendly "products," such as salad "shakers," veggie and dip "grab bags", and bananas with a small side of chocolate dip, for the snack bars.

Then they launched an "advertising campaign", consisting of poster "ads" and cafeteria table tents.

"The 'ads' connected eating the new snack bar fruit and vegetable 'products' with the things that kids told us they want most, like friends, being cool, and having fun," Cullen said.

These are the same feelings that snack food companies tap into so effectively with ads for high fat/high sugar foods aimed at kids.

"Marketing is used to sell everything from shoes to sodas to kids. Why shouldn't it be used to sell healthy foods at school snack bars, too?" she said.

Editor's Note:  Full-size (11 X 17), full-color versions of the Healthy Eating posters developed for this study are available for downloading from our Poster Gallery:http://www.bcm.tmc.edu/cnrc/images\posters3\posters\poster_1.html

 

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