Abstract

We examine consumer expectations about how specialty versus conventional food products affect well-being and how small, artisan producers can use that information to design better customer experiences. Drawing on recent work examining the costs and benefits of pleasure- and meaning-based consumption, we investigate whether consumer expectations that specialty products are more meaningful lead to increased desire for additional product information. We selectively sampled from the target market of interest: high-involvement consumers who regularly consume a food (cheese) in both more typical and specialty forms. The authors manipulate product type (typical versus special) within participant and measure differences in expected pleasure and meaning as well as a variety of behaviors related to and preference for additional product information. We find that these high-involvement consumers expect special food products to provide both more meaningful (hypothesized) and more pleasurable consumption experiences (not hypothesized) than typical food products. Consistent with our theory, consumer use of, search for, and preference for additional product information was greater for special products. A causal mediation analysis revealed that expectations of meaning mediate the relationship between product type and utility of product information, an effect which persists controlling for the unexpected difference in expected pleasure.

Highlights

  • IntroductionProviding consumers with information about how food was produced, efforts made to reduce negative environmental impacts, effects of local food purchases on developing rural economies, can each foster a deeper connection with food [4]

  • We examine how consumer expectations of the effect of typical versus special food products on distinct aspects of well-being differ and how the value of information differs for special vs. typical food products

  • We hypothesized and found that special food products are more associated with meaning than typical products and that when consumers encounter special food products they are likely to search for, value, and use information at higher levels than they would for typical products in part to cultivate meaningful consumption experiences

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Summary

Introduction

Providing consumers with information about how food was produced, efforts made to reduce negative environmental impacts, effects of local food purchases on developing rural economies, can each foster a deeper connection with food [4]. Consumers who value this connection often search outside of traditional outlets and product varieties to satisfy their needs [5]. This can mean shifting their purchasing from grocery stores and chain restaurants to farmers’

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