Targeted retail coupons influence category-level food purchases over 2-years

Abstract Background Targeted coupons strongly influence purchasing behavior and may represent an innovative approach for improving dietary behaviors. Methods The retail analytics firm, Dunnhumby, provided secondary retail data containing grocery transactions, targeted coupon exposures, and coupon us...

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Main Authors: Xintong Guan, Stephen A. Atlas, Maya Vadiveloo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-11-01
Series:International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12966-018-0744-7
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spelling doaj-5d335488510a48dba3d71964cbe0ee802020-11-25T00:52:55ZengBMCInternational Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity1479-58682018-11-0115111010.1186/s12966-018-0744-7Targeted retail coupons influence category-level food purchases over 2-yearsXintong Guan0Stephen A. Atlas1Maya Vadiveloo2Department of Marketing, University of Rhode IslandDepartment of Marketing, University of Rhode IslandDepartment of Nutrition and Food Sciences, University of Rhode IslandAbstract Background Targeted coupons strongly influence purchasing behavior and may represent an innovative approach for improving dietary behaviors. Methods The retail analytics firm, Dunnhumby, provided secondary retail data containing grocery transactions, targeted coupon exposures, and coupon use for 2500 households over 2-years. The USDA Quarterly At-Home Food Purchasing Database was used to categorize individual foods into 52 categories and combined into 12 food groups. Mixed effects linear models estimated the difference-in-difference effects of coupon exposure on category-level purchase rate/wk. pre- and post-campaign; models also tested effect modification by food category. Results Category-level food purchases significantly increased post-campaign. Mean (SD) food purchases/wk. Among exposed households (17.34 (13.08) units/wk) vs. unexposed households (3.75 (4.59) units/wk) were higher (p < 0.001). Difference-in-difference effects of coupon exposure showed a higher increase in purchase rate among exposed vs. unexposed households (5.73 vs. 0.67, p < 0.001). Food category significantly modified the association between coupon exposure and coupon campaign. Category-level purchase rate among exposed vs. unexposed households was relatively higher in less healthful (e.g. convenience foods) vs. more healthful categories (e.g. nuts) with a 1.17 unit/wk. increase in convenience foods purchase (p < 0.001) vs. a 0.03 unit/wk. increase in nuts (p < 0.001). Exploratory analyses suggested that price elasticity of food categories for targeted coupons (1.02–2.81) was higher than previous estimates for untargeted coupons. Conclusion Across food categories, coupon exposure increased category-level purchase rate, with a relatively larger effect size for less healthful than more healthful categories. Promising results from this preliminary study suggest that experimental research is warranted to determine whether targeting with the explicit purpose of improving dietary quality can more effectively influence diet, and whether it can do so more cost effectively.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12966-018-0744-7Retail purchase qualityGrocery purchasesLongitudinalIncentivesDietary patternIntervention
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xintong Guan
Stephen A. Atlas
Maya Vadiveloo
spellingShingle Xintong Guan
Stephen A. Atlas
Maya Vadiveloo
Targeted retail coupons influence category-level food purchases over 2-years
International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
Retail purchase quality
Grocery purchases
Longitudinal
Incentives
Dietary pattern
Intervention
author_facet Xintong Guan
Stephen A. Atlas
Maya Vadiveloo
author_sort Xintong Guan
title Targeted retail coupons influence category-level food purchases over 2-years
title_short Targeted retail coupons influence category-level food purchases over 2-years
title_full Targeted retail coupons influence category-level food purchases over 2-years
title_fullStr Targeted retail coupons influence category-level food purchases over 2-years
title_full_unstemmed Targeted retail coupons influence category-level food purchases over 2-years
title_sort targeted retail coupons influence category-level food purchases over 2-years
publisher BMC
series International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
issn 1479-5868
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Abstract Background Targeted coupons strongly influence purchasing behavior and may represent an innovative approach for improving dietary behaviors. Methods The retail analytics firm, Dunnhumby, provided secondary retail data containing grocery transactions, targeted coupon exposures, and coupon use for 2500 households over 2-years. The USDA Quarterly At-Home Food Purchasing Database was used to categorize individual foods into 52 categories and combined into 12 food groups. Mixed effects linear models estimated the difference-in-difference effects of coupon exposure on category-level purchase rate/wk. pre- and post-campaign; models also tested effect modification by food category. Results Category-level food purchases significantly increased post-campaign. Mean (SD) food purchases/wk. Among exposed households (17.34 (13.08) units/wk) vs. unexposed households (3.75 (4.59) units/wk) were higher (p < 0.001). Difference-in-difference effects of coupon exposure showed a higher increase in purchase rate among exposed vs. unexposed households (5.73 vs. 0.67, p < 0.001). Food category significantly modified the association between coupon exposure and coupon campaign. Category-level purchase rate among exposed vs. unexposed households was relatively higher in less healthful (e.g. convenience foods) vs. more healthful categories (e.g. nuts) with a 1.17 unit/wk. increase in convenience foods purchase (p < 0.001) vs. a 0.03 unit/wk. increase in nuts (p < 0.001). Exploratory analyses suggested that price elasticity of food categories for targeted coupons (1.02–2.81) was higher than previous estimates for untargeted coupons. Conclusion Across food categories, coupon exposure increased category-level purchase rate, with a relatively larger effect size for less healthful than more healthful categories. Promising results from this preliminary study suggest that experimental research is warranted to determine whether targeting with the explicit purpose of improving dietary quality can more effectively influence diet, and whether it can do so more cost effectively.
topic Retail purchase quality
Grocery purchases
Longitudinal
Incentives
Dietary pattern
Intervention
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12966-018-0744-7
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AT stephenaatlas targetedretailcouponsinfluencecategorylevelfoodpurchasesover2years
AT mayavadiveloo targetedretailcouponsinfluencecategorylevelfoodpurchasesover2years
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