Shopping for a sustainable future: Two case studies on consumer perception of organic cotton and wine

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Shopping for a sustainable future : Two case studies on consumer perception of organic cotton and wine. / Wang, Qian Janice; Dalsgard, Julie; Giacalone, Davide.

In: Food Quality and Preference, Vol. 96, 104405, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wang, QJ, Dalsgard, J & Giacalone, D 2022, 'Shopping for a sustainable future: Two case studies on consumer perception of organic cotton and wine', Food Quality and Preference, vol. 96, 104405. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2021.104405

APA

Wang, Q. J., Dalsgard, J., & Giacalone, D. (2022). Shopping for a sustainable future: Two case studies on consumer perception of organic cotton and wine. Food Quality and Preference, 96, [104405]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2021.104405

Vancouver

Wang QJ, Dalsgard J, Giacalone D. Shopping for a sustainable future: Two case studies on consumer perception of organic cotton and wine. Food Quality and Preference. 2022;96. 104405. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2021.104405

Author

Wang, Qian Janice ; Dalsgard, Julie ; Giacalone, Davide. / Shopping for a sustainable future : Two case studies on consumer perception of organic cotton and wine. In: Food Quality and Preference. 2022 ; Vol. 96.

Bibtex

@article{ac6b4aba1c5845158ceb50d942578d29,
title = "Shopping for a sustainable future: Two case studies on consumer perception of organic cotton and wine",
abstract = "Grape and cotton are agricultural products with high pesticide usage. With an eye towards sustainability, regions are looking towards organic farming to protect soil health. However, given the higher prices associated with organic products, it is crucial to understand consumer attitudes and perception towards such products in order to shift consumer behaviour. To this end, we conducted two sets of studies focusing on organic cotton (in the form of stuffed toys) and wine (Chianti DOCG). For both products, two studies were carried out using (unbeknownst to the participants) identical samples. In Study 1, participants were told which of the two products was “organic” and which was “conventional”. Liking, willingness to pay (WTP), and evaluation of product properties (textural or flavour pleasantness for cotton and wine, respectively) were then collected. In Study 2, participants were only told which product was organic only after they had made their initial preference decision. They then evaluated product properties and WTP. For stuffed toys, all consumers (N = 59) were willing to pay more for the organic toy, even though only consumers with high tendency to buy organic products found it more pleasant to touch. Furthermore, consumers (N = 33) were willing to pay more for the organic toy regardless of their original preference. For wine, consumers (N = 128) were also willing to pay more for the “organic” wine, but only if they had high tendency to buy organic products. Moreover, consumers (N = 57) were only willing to pay more for organic wine if they had preferred it initially. Overall, this work highlights that consumers are willing to pay more for organic products; however, this stems from concern for environmental sustainability in the case of cotton, but from taste preference in the case of wine. Moreover, organic labelling led to a more positive perceptual evaluation of cotton toys, while this halo effect did not carry over to wine.",
keywords = "Consumer perception, Cotton, Halo effect, Organic, Willingness to pay, Wine",
author = "Wang, {Qian Janice} and Julie Dalsgard and Davide Giacalone",
note = "Funding Information: The authors would like to thank Aarhus Food Festival and volunteers from the Department of Food Science for helping with data collection for Study 1B and 2B. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 The Author(s)",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1016/j.foodqual.2021.104405",
language = "English",
volume = "96",
journal = "Food Quality and Preference",
issn = "0950-3293",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Shopping for a sustainable future

T2 - Two case studies on consumer perception of organic cotton and wine

AU - Wang, Qian Janice

AU - Dalsgard, Julie

AU - Giacalone, Davide

N1 - Funding Information: The authors would like to thank Aarhus Food Festival and volunteers from the Department of Food Science for helping with data collection for Study 1B and 2B. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Author(s)

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Grape and cotton are agricultural products with high pesticide usage. With an eye towards sustainability, regions are looking towards organic farming to protect soil health. However, given the higher prices associated with organic products, it is crucial to understand consumer attitudes and perception towards such products in order to shift consumer behaviour. To this end, we conducted two sets of studies focusing on organic cotton (in the form of stuffed toys) and wine (Chianti DOCG). For both products, two studies were carried out using (unbeknownst to the participants) identical samples. In Study 1, participants were told which of the two products was “organic” and which was “conventional”. Liking, willingness to pay (WTP), and evaluation of product properties (textural or flavour pleasantness for cotton and wine, respectively) were then collected. In Study 2, participants were only told which product was organic only after they had made their initial preference decision. They then evaluated product properties and WTP. For stuffed toys, all consumers (N = 59) were willing to pay more for the organic toy, even though only consumers with high tendency to buy organic products found it more pleasant to touch. Furthermore, consumers (N = 33) were willing to pay more for the organic toy regardless of their original preference. For wine, consumers (N = 128) were also willing to pay more for the “organic” wine, but only if they had high tendency to buy organic products. Moreover, consumers (N = 57) were only willing to pay more for organic wine if they had preferred it initially. Overall, this work highlights that consumers are willing to pay more for organic products; however, this stems from concern for environmental sustainability in the case of cotton, but from taste preference in the case of wine. Moreover, organic labelling led to a more positive perceptual evaluation of cotton toys, while this halo effect did not carry over to wine.

AB - Grape and cotton are agricultural products with high pesticide usage. With an eye towards sustainability, regions are looking towards organic farming to protect soil health. However, given the higher prices associated with organic products, it is crucial to understand consumer attitudes and perception towards such products in order to shift consumer behaviour. To this end, we conducted two sets of studies focusing on organic cotton (in the form of stuffed toys) and wine (Chianti DOCG). For both products, two studies were carried out using (unbeknownst to the participants) identical samples. In Study 1, participants were told which of the two products was “organic” and which was “conventional”. Liking, willingness to pay (WTP), and evaluation of product properties (textural or flavour pleasantness for cotton and wine, respectively) were then collected. In Study 2, participants were only told which product was organic only after they had made their initial preference decision. They then evaluated product properties and WTP. For stuffed toys, all consumers (N = 59) were willing to pay more for the organic toy, even though only consumers with high tendency to buy organic products found it more pleasant to touch. Furthermore, consumers (N = 33) were willing to pay more for the organic toy regardless of their original preference. For wine, consumers (N = 128) were also willing to pay more for the “organic” wine, but only if they had high tendency to buy organic products. Moreover, consumers (N = 57) were only willing to pay more for organic wine if they had preferred it initially. Overall, this work highlights that consumers are willing to pay more for organic products; however, this stems from concern for environmental sustainability in the case of cotton, but from taste preference in the case of wine. Moreover, organic labelling led to a more positive perceptual evaluation of cotton toys, while this halo effect did not carry over to wine.

KW - Consumer perception

KW - Cotton

KW - Halo effect

KW - Organic

KW - Willingness to pay

KW - Wine

U2 - 10.1016/j.foodqual.2021.104405

DO - 10.1016/j.foodqual.2021.104405

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85116004702

VL - 96

JO - Food Quality and Preference

JF - Food Quality and Preference

SN - 0950-3293

M1 - 104405

ER -

ID: 375015249