(no title)
giu | 4 years ago
From the study's abstract:
> A preregistered field experiment indicated that diners were 21.1% more likely to buy a bowl of chicken noodle soup when a sign revealing its ingredients also included the cafeteria’s costs to make it.
From the linked article's sub-title:
> Sales of a chicken noodle soup increased 21.1% when people were shown the costs of making it.
The study's abstract mentions that they were more likely to buy a bowl of chicken; it's not mentioned that they actually bought it.
tuukkah|4 years ago
tuukkah|4 years ago
"Sales increased 21.1%" is equivalent as long as the unit price remained the same.
vntok|4 years ago
> People said they were 14.2% more likely to buy this chocolate bar when they were shown the version with a cost breakdown
Surely that cannot be correct. Possibly 14.2% of the people who were asked said that they would be "somewhat" more likely to buy X with more data stuck to its label (does any data improve sales? Did they A/B the label by adding random info?). This is very different from them acting upon it though.