| Literature DB >> 15171786 |
Abstract
In recent years, the food and beverage industry in the US has viewed children and adolescents as a major market force. As a result, children and adolescents are now the target of intense and specialized food marketing and advertising efforts. Food marketers are interested in youth as consumers because of their spending power, their purchasing influence, and as future adult consumers. Multiple techniques and channels are used to reach youth, beginning when they are toddlers, to foster brand-building and influence food product purchase behavior. These food marketing channels include television advertising, in-school marketing, product placements, kids clubs, the Internet, toys and products with brand logos, and youth-targeted promotions, such as cross-selling and tie-ins. Foods marketed to children are predominantly high in sugar and fat, and as such are inconsistent with national dietary recommendations. The purpose of this article is to examine the food advertising and marketing channels used to target children and adolescents in the US, the impact of food advertising on eating behavior, and current regulation and policies.Entities:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15171786 PMCID: PMC416565 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5868-1-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Annual Advertising Budget for Products/Brands of Food and Beverages in the US, 2001
| Coke, Diet Coke | $224.0 |
| Pepsi, Mountain Dew | $226.0 |
| Kool-Aid | $15.9 |
| Dasani Bottled Water | $26.4 |
| Aquafina Bottled Water | $13.2 |
| Nestle candy | $65.0 |
| Hershey's candy | $55.0 |
| M&M's candy | $46.8 |
| Snickers candy bars | $46.4 |
| Reese's candy | $22.7 |
| Frito-Lay & Frito's chips/snacks | $24.8 |
| Dorito's tortilla chips | $20.9 |
| Ruffles potato chips | $19.3 |
| Bugles corn snacks | $13.4 |
| McDonald's | $635.0 |
| Burger King | $298.0 |
| KFC | $206.5 |
| Taco Bell | $179.4 |
| Pizza Hut | $148.0 |
Source: Advertising Age. June 24, 2002.
Marketing Practices Used in US Schools
| Food/beverage sales benefiting a district, school, or student activity | • Exclusionary contracts or other arrangements between school districts, or schools and bottlers to sell soft drinks in schools or on school grounds |
| Branded fast food | • Contracts or other arrangements between districts or schools and fast food companies to sell food in schools or on school grounds |
| Cash or credit rebate programs | • Programs that award cash or equipment to schools in proportion to the value of store receipts or coupons collected by the schools (e.g., cereal box tops, food product labels) |
| Fundraising activities | • Short-term sales of candy, pizza, cookie dough, etc. by parents, students, or both to benefit a specific student population or club |
| Advertising in schools, in school facilities, an on school buses | • Billboards and signs in school corridors, sports facilities, or buses |
| Advertisements in school publications | • Ads in sports programs, yearbooks, school newspapers, and school calendars |
| Media-based advertising | • Televised ads aired by Channel One or commercial stations |
| Samples | • Free snack food or beverages |
| Corporate-sponsored educational materials | • Teaching materials and nutrition education kits from food corporations that incorporate the sponsor's products or promote the sponsor's brand |
| Corporate-sponsored contests and incentives | • Pizza Hut's Book-It program, McDonald's McSpellIt Club |
| Corporate grants or gifts | • Corporate gifts to schools that generate commercial benefits to the donor |
| Surveys or polls | • Student questionnaires or taste tests |
| Internet panels | • Use of the Internet to poll students' responses to computer-delivered questions |
| Internet tracking | • Tracking students' Internet behavior and responses to questions at one or more websites |
Adapted from: US General Accounting Office. Commercial Activities in Schools, 2000.
Examples of Food Corporation Websites in the US Geared to Children and Adolescents
| Food Company | |
| BURGER KING | Games, toys, tunes, and other downloads are promoted along side their food items. There is a special |
|
CAP'N CRUNCH | Downloadable Cap'n Crunch commercials, screen savers, desktop wallpaper, and cursor icons. An ad for free Air Head candy in specially marked boxes of Cap'n Crunch appears on the corner of most pages of the site. |
|
DUBBLE BUBBLE GUM |
Animated site includes games |
| Homepage displays logos of all of this corporation's food products. Each logo links to individual product's homepage (i.e., Doritos, Cheetos, Cracker Jack, Fritos, etc.) These websites contain flashing icons and banners, music, games, e-cards, and special offers featuring the products and/or its characters, (i.e., Chester Cheeto, the hip animated character that advertises Cheetos). | |
| GENERAL MILLS | |
| HERSHEY'S | Kids' link from Hershey's homepage that welcomes viewers to the "sweetest place on the web." There are animated games all promoting the company's brands, i.e., |
| KEEBLER | Many games and activities all featuring elves and the company's food products. Kids can meet the individual elves and also send an electronic "elfin greeting card" to friends. Throughout the website, there is e-billboard with ads for Keebler cookies and snacks. |
| KELLOGGS | Homepage includes a link to |
|
KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN (KFC) | Kids' link features photos of the KFC latest "laptop" meal available at KFC and a link where kids can send an e-card with a photo of a KFC entrée. |
|
KOOLAID, KRAFT, OSCAR MAYER, POST | Site co-sponsored by KoolAid, Kraft Macaroni and Cheese, Oscar Mayer Lunchables, and Post cereals. Children can look at child-geared food logos in a number of fun activities. Many games, the pieces of which involve one of the sponsored products. For example, there is |
| LIFESAVERS | Links at the top of the website provide a variety of games: 15 arcade games, 20 sports games, 8 action "extreme" sports games, 11 card games/puzzles, 3 trivia games, 6 multiplayer sports games, and a list of 5 prizes you could win if you play certain games that advertise Lifesavers, including the game pieces. |
|
M&M's
| All games actively involve the M&M's characters and promote its candy. Downloads include M&M desktop wallpaper, icons, sounds, stationery, and autographed pictures. E-cards of characters can be sent from this site. In the Colorworks section, you can play a melody on a keyboard of colorful M&M's and order special M&M's color combinations of your school's colors. |
| McDONALD'S | Main page links to Ronald.com with the slogan "You found the Internet's land for fun. Ronald.com!" There are many games, puzzles, quizzes, and coloring pages all with Ronald McDonald and other McDonald's characters, as well as the food entrées available at the restaurant. |
|
MOUNTAIN DEW
| Games and downloads of desktop wallpaper, screensavers, as well as current ads and promotions. You can register to receive a regular newsletter and e-mails of the latest offers or rewards promoted by the company. |
| NABISCO | Animated links to 17 arcade games, 16 sports games, 6 card games, and 13 puzzles. Nabisco snacks (i.e., Chips Ahoy and Oreo cookies, Ritz crackers, Cheese Nips, etc.) are prominently displayed and are animated in every game and puzzle. |
| OSCAR MAYER | Homepage features links to several interactive sites including |
| POST | Postopia Party is an animated site including many different games, all featuring or promoting Post's sweetened cereals, Honeycomb, Pebbles, Alphabits, Golden Crisp, Oreo O's, Honey Comb. |
| SNICKERS |
"Don't let hunger happen to you" is the slogan of this web site. Games (i.e., |
|
SUNNY DELIGHT | Loud, animated site where viewers can visit Sunny Spots to download commercials or go to |
| TWINKIES | "Destination Planet Twinkie." The main page has links to Hall of Fame (gives biographies of hostess characters, including Twinkie the Kid, Happy Ho Ho and King Ding Dong), |
* The content on the websites changes frequently
Examples of toys with food brand logos in the US
| • Play-Doh Little Debbie snack Cake Kitchen |
| • Play-Doh Chuck E. Cheese Pizza Playset |
| • Play-Doh Lunchables Playset |
| • Play-Doh McDonaldland Happy Meal Playshop |
| • Jello Barbie |
| • McDonald's Barbie |
| • Little Debbi Barbie |
| • Coca-Cola Majorette Barbie |
| • McDonald's Food Cart with Play Food |
| • McDonald's Deluxe Mealtime Set |
| • McDonald's Fast Food Center |
| • Easy-Bake Chips Ahoy Cake Bake Set |
| • Easy-Bake Oreo cakes Bake Set |
| • Easy-Bake Pop Tarts Snack |
| • Easy-Bake Pizza Hut Menu |
| • Easy-Bake M&M's Cookies Bake Set |
| • Easy-Bake Kellogg's Tony the Tiger Cakes Mini Bake Set |
| A matching game for young children to learn shapes with plastic real looking oreo cookies that pull apart to reveal shapes. |
Examples of Food Branded Reading and Counting Books for Preschoolers and Young Children in the US
| The Cheerios Counting Book: 1, 2, 3; The Cheerios Play Book; |
| Necco® |
| Others |
| Oreos Cookies Counting Book; Skittles Riddles Math; Sun Maid Raisins Play Book |
Source: Amazon.com <<>>
Chronology of Key Events in US Regulations on Advertising to Children
| National Association of Broadcasters' first adopted self-regulatory toy TV advertising guidelines. | |
| Action for Children's Television (ACT), a children's advocacy group calls on FCC and FTC to prohibit or limit TV advertising directed at children. | |
| FCC adopts first federal policies restricting TV advertising. These include: | |
| ACT ad the Center for Science in the public interest (CSPI) file petitions to FTC to ban TV advertising of highly sugared products. | |
| FTC formally proposes a rule that would ban or severely restrict all TV advertising to children. FTC presents a review of the scientific evidence and argues that all advertising directed to young children is inherently unfair and deceptive. The proposal provokes intense opposition from the broadcasting, advertising and food and toy industries and an aggressive campaign to oppose the ban based on First Amendment Protection. | |
| In response to corporate pressure, Congress refuses to approve FTC's operating budget and passed legislation "FTC Improvements Act of 1980" which removes the agency's authority to restrict advertising. The Act prohibits any further action to adopt proposed children's advertising rules. | |
| Deregulation of Television occurs during the Reagan administration. FCC deregulates all limits on the amount of advertising times, and the restriction on program-length commercials. | |
| Children's advocacy and consumer groups pushed Congress t pass the Children's Television Act which directed the FCC to require educational programming for children and to limit the amount of commercial time during children's programming to 10.5 min/hr on weekends and 12 min/hr on weekdays. FCC reinstates the policy on program length commercials but redefines them. | |
| In response to advocacy groups and an FTC report, Congress passes the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) that directs the FTC to develop rules restricting certain data collection practices and requiring parental permission for collection of personal information for children under 13 years of age. | |
Potential strategies and policy recommendations on food advertising and marketing aimed at children
| • Develop federal, state, or local policies to designate schools as food advertising-free zones, where children and adolescents can pursue learning free of commercial influences and pressures. Children's health should never be an acceptable "trade-off," no matter how severe the budgetary constraints in schools or communities. [ |
| • Develop federal or state school policies that promote a healthful eating environment in schools. The sale of soft drinks and other high calorie, low nutrition foods should be prohibited during the school day in public schools. |
| • Congressional action to eliminate food advertising aimed at young children on children's television programs, such as morning, after-school, and weekend children's programs. Since the climate has not been favorable for regulation, interim means could be explored such as having stricter limitations on the amount of advertising permitted on children's television (e.g., no more than 5-6 commercial minutes per hour on programming which would reduce the current limits by about 50%), or by placing a monetary surcharge on advertising for high-calorie, low-nutrition foods targeted at youth. These funds could be used to develop nutrition and physical activity media campaigns and promotion programs to be overseen by a non-profit or governmental organization. As an interim step, guidelines for responsible food advertising and marketing aimed at children could be developed. |
| • Establish federal regulations to protect children from manipulative, invasive, and deceptive food advertising on the Internet. The FTC would be the most appropriate federal agency to develop such rules. |
| • Convene a White House or Surgeon General's Conference on food marketing and advertising aimed at children and adolescents and its effects on their health, and develop recommendations on this issue. |
| • Develop and disseminate school-based curricula that teach children and adolescents media literacy and give them life skills to be informed consumers of media. |
| • Build public support by increasing awareness among parents, educators, and consumers on the nature and extent of food advertising and marketing to children, especially young children. |