My feed is what I eat? A qualitative study on adolescents' awareness and appreciation of food marketing on social media

Author:

van der Bend Daphne L.M.12ORCID,Beunke Tjamke A.2,Shrewsbury Vanessa A.1,Bucher Tamara3,van Kleef Ellen2

Affiliation:

1. School of Health Sciences, College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing The University of Newcastle Newcastle NSW Australia

2. Department of Social Sciences, Marketing and Consumer Behaviour Group Wageningen University & Research Wageningen The Netherlands

3. School of Environmental and Life Sciences, College of Engineering, Science and Environment The University of Newcastle Ourimbah NSW Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAdolescents spend much of their time online and hence are exposed to a lot of non‐core (energy‐dense, nutrient‐poor) social media food marketing (SMFM). This may influence their dietary choices and health. This present study aimed to investigate adolescents’ perceptions towards SMFM; that is, their recognition and appreciation of SMFM.MethodsSemi‐structured one‐on‐one interviews were conducted with Dutch adolescents aged 13–16 years (n = 16), on Skype. Examples of food promotions on Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube were discussed with adolescents.ResultsAdolescents’ reasons for recognising and appreciating or liking SMFM were often related to the level of product integration. Factors that determined participants’ recognition of SMFM included product focus (e.g., brand or product prominence), sponsorship disclosure, type of content (paid, influencer and peer‐generated content) and promotional strategy (e.g., discounts, promotional texts, layout). Participants’ appreciation of SMFM was determined by the format of a post (image, video, text, pop‐up), trustworthiness of the source (brand, celebrity, friend/peer), type of product promoted (core, non‐core) and appearance or layout of a post (e.g., professionalism, appeal).ConclusionsThe present study contributes to the ongoing debate on how to increase adolescents’ resilience to commercial messages that promote non‐core foods. Adolescents mostly enjoy watching non‐core video content from peers or influencers and do not perceive this as food marketing. It is recommended that future studies investigate the effects of earned social media marketing formats (i.e., unpaid peer and influencer endorsements) promoting non‐core foods on adolescents’ dietary intake, and how they can be made more critical towards such types of SMFM.

Publisher

Wiley

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