New Research Highlights Possible Downside to Latest Trend of Marketing Shared Food


TORONTO, Dec. 18, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- A new, soon-to-be-published study shows that consumers underestimate the impact to their waistlines – and their health – when eating sharing-size meals and other food products.

The study, to be published in the Journal of Consumer Psychology, explores whether the latest consumer fad for food sharing is negatively impacting health. Over the last decade, consumers have become accustomed to going to restaurants where the menu is designed to be shared by the entire table. More recently, brands such as M&M’s, Snickers, and Skittles have released sharing-size options, and Hershey’s is advertising its products as ‘perfect for sharing.’ As the popularity of this trend increases, so too does the debate over how food sharing is impacting health. Mars-Wrigley, the company behind brands such as M&M’s and Skittles, suggests that food sharing can help with weight maintenance by facilitating portion control. However, critics are claiming that food sharing may be encouraging excessive caloric intake.

Authors Theodore J. Noseworthy, Associate Professor of Marketing and a Canada Research Chair (Tier II) in Entrepreneurial Innovation and the Public Good at York University’s Schulich School of Business, and Nükhet Taylor, an Assistant Professor in Marketing Management at Ryerson University’s Ted Rogers School of Management, discovered that sharing food biases how people think about the consequences of their caloric intake – or put another way, people underestimate the fattening potential of shared food. This has important health consequences because these same people become prone to select more calorie-dense foods in subsequent food choices.

People tend to regulate their caloric intake; we may pass on an ice cream sundae if we’ve already eaten a few French fries. It seems, however, that if we were to take those same fries from a shared plate, we tend to discount the consequences of eating them in our minds. Thus, there’s little to stop us from eating that sundae,” explains Noseworthy, Scientific Director of the NOESIS Innovation, Design, and Consumption Laboratory at Schulich.

The big question for Nükhet Taylor was “why” this is happening. “When people eat from their own plates, they feel that they own the food on that plate. This facilitates the acceptance of the consequences of the calories they ingest, such as the possibility that these calories may lead to weight gain,” notes Taylor. In contrast, shared consumption means eating from a communal resource. This can erode individual ownership, and lead people to underestimate the consequences of caloric intake.

These findings represent a cautionary note for companies that strive to engage in responsible marketing, as well as for public policy makers. “Obesity is an increasingly widespread epidemic in North America, and the most common reason outside of genetic factors is the overconsumption of food,” says Noseworthy. “Companies need to be aware of the potential negative impact they may be having on consumers’ health when they engage in marketing campaigns that emphasize food sharing.”

Professor Theodore Noseworthy is available for interviews about the findings. A copy of the study is available upon request.

For more information, please contact:

Sarah Lynn Hayward at shayward@schulich.yorku.ca