Litcius/Paper detail

A reversal of defaults: Implementing a menu-based default nudge to promote out-of-home consumer adoption of plant-based meat alternatives

Danny Taufik, Emily P. Bouwman, Machiel J. Reinders, Hans Dagevos

2022Appetite67 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Restaurants are characterized by high levels of meat being consumed in this out-of-home setting, while plant-based meat alternatives remain a niche product, thus preserving a high environmental impact of food consumption. We tested whether subtly re-designing the restaurant menu, so that plant-based meat alternatives were perceived as the default to a greater extent, increased consumer selection of plant-based meat alternatives. Consumers' freedom of choice was preserved by leaving all choice options on the menu. An online experiment in The Netherlands showed that consumers choose plant-based meat alternatives more often relative to meat when the plant-based option is framed as the default. In a field experiment in a Dutch restaurant, we found that the amount of ordered plant-based meat alternative dishes substantially increased relative to an equivalent meat dish when implementing a default nudge (bean alternative: from 8.6% to 80.0%; seaweed alternative: from 16.1% to 58.3%). Thus, re-designing the menu in a way that suggests that plant-based meat alternatives are the default, while preserving autonomous decision-making, is a promising route to promote out-of-home adoption of plant-based meat alternatives in restaurants.

Topics & Concepts

BusinessProduct (mathematics)DefaultConsumption (sociology)Selection (genetic algorithm)MarketingComputer scienceMathematicsArtificial intelligenceSocial scienceGeometryFinanceSociologyAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental ImpactEnvironmental Education and SustainabilityEnvironmental Sustainability in Business
A reversal of defaults: Implementing a menu-based default nudge to promote out-of-home consumer adoption of plant-based meat alternatives | Litcius