Food Navigator USA: Although consumers take a great deal of responsibility themselves for weight gain, about three quarters believe that advertising encourages them to eat less-healthy food and that food companies should provide healthier fare, according to a new Nielsen Consumer Insight report. But fast-food companies "get off surprisingly easy," the report says, "and are not seen as nearly as important a player in the obesity blame game as food companies."
The Holy Cow revelation of this story is the shift in attitude since the last study in 2006. Way back then, 82% of American adults acknowledged an individual's responsibility in weight gain but only 2% placed the biggest blame on food companies and 6% on fast food restaurants. How we got from 2% to 75% of American placing culpability on food companies is not explained. It's probably a simple process that just seems murky, like how we can suddenly gain 20 pounds overnight.
The upside to all this, Sarah Hills reports, is that there's a "clear opportunity" for marketers to effectively target overweight or obese people with messaging that speaks to their mindset, as well as educating them. Hills also cites a recent Credit Suisse report that estimates that revenue related to obesity products in the consumer staples sector will reach $1.4 trillion globally by 2012, with average annual growth of 9.3% from 2008.
The Holy Cow revelation of this story is the shift in attitude since the last study in 2006. Way back then, 82% of American adults acknowledged an individual's responsibility in weight gain but only 2% placed the biggest blame on food companies and 6% on fast food restaurants. How we got from 2% to 75% of American placing culpability on food companies is not explained. It's probably a simple process that just seems murky, like how we can suddenly gain 20 pounds overnight.
The upside to all this, Sarah Hills reports, is that there's a "clear opportunity" for marketers to effectively target overweight or obese people with messaging that speaks to their mindset, as well as educating them. Hills also cites a recent Credit Suisse report that estimates that revenue related to obesity products in the consumer staples sector will reach $1.4 trillion globally by 2012, with average annual growth of 9.3% from 2008.
OMG, fat people are fat.
I used to think that the indiviudual deserved all the blame, not able to shut their pie hole for even a second, but now not so much.
Food companies exploit poor and lazier individuals. They create low cost product to sell, sell, sell and in the process forget nutrition and plain good values. People need to eat and they often buy the cheapest option which is teeming with chemicals and crap.
It's a shame what's happened. Over time people have learned such bad eating habits and food companies have taught it.
The fact that the individual now thinks 75% of food companies are to blame for the problem as opposed to 2% is a massive jump, and I think it's just the realisation from the individual that if a lot of their supply is crap then they aren't totally to blame.
1 comment:
Hi niice reading your post
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