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Philip Graves
Philip Graves
Heuristics

Feeding the Kids Horsemeat

Five reasons UK consumers continue to buy food products that can't be trusted.

The headlines were unequivocal. “Frozen Burger Sales Plunge”. But the data tells a far more equivocal and, to my mind, infinitely more revealing story about the nature of consumers’ minds.

The first beef product to be found to contain horsemeat – frozen ‘beef’ burgers – have indeed dropped, but 57% of people continue to buy them. Sales of frozen ready meals are down by just 13%. Many of these meals contain beef and, already, a beef lasagne has been found that contained absolutely nothing that could have mooed: it was found to contain 100% of the galloping, neighing, three-day-eventing variety.

With supermarkets rushing to investigate the supply chains that they appear to, until now, have understood about as well as a two year old understands Santa’s festive logistics, it would be optimistic to suppose that all these other ready meals will turn out to be fine.

As a consumer psychologist, I’m not at all surprised that people are continuing to buy products that they know might be contaminated with meat of dubious origins. Indeed, I expect that, in a relatively short period of time, even burger sales will rebound.

There are five psychological factors that lead me to this assessment.

1. Attention

At the moment there is a lot of media attention focusing on the issue. However, the nature of 24-hour news is that topicality trumps gravity.

Already the UK press is more interested in salacious accusations against priests and politicians. Whilst not wishing to belittle the significance of these allegations for the dozens of people directly involved, there is no rational sense of proportionality driving the selection of headlines. By the time we get to BBQ weather – normally two days in June here in the UK – the media focus will lie elsewhere.

2. Priming

Most of those people who have changed their behaviour have succumbed to priming – our propensity to give much greater weight to what we encounter first. The first products that were found to contain traces of horsemeat were frozen burgers, so people have focused on this piece of information.

The vast majority of their emotive response to the news that their daughter isn’t just reading about My Little Pony has been associated with burgers. Consequently, it’s the sight of a burger that triggers the adverse reaction and causes behaviour to change, at least for now.

3. Cognitive Dissonance

Our minds aren’t good at retaining conflicting information. Faced with the suggestion that we’ve been buying products that contained horsemeat and feeding it to our kids, it’s easier to tell ourselves that what we purchased was probably OK. So it’s probably OK to keep buying it too. So we do.

4. Heuristics

When we go into a supermarket we rely on heuristics (rules of thumb) that generally work for us. These save us from having to think things through consciously, which is slow and energy sapping.

We believe that buying in bulk is probably cheaper; that food with a discount sticker is saving us money; and, based on its name and the shape of the pack, that the brand we bought before will be exactly the same again. Without these heuristics, a supermarket shop would take up half a day.

But this means that we aren’t stopping and evaluating broader issues. Supermarket shoppers won’t suddenly become considered, analytical, ingredient-minded consumers.

Give it a few weeks, put the products on promotion, and the general rules that help us feel good about making quick decisions will replace any deeper reservations about the nature of food supply chains.

5. Habits

When it comes down to it we’re creatures of habit. We assimilate routine tasks into unconscious responses to save us having to devote too much energy to everyday events.

So when the sun shines, burgers will be bought (probably on both days). When someone buys the food for the next month it will still include meals that someone has prepared in a factory with whatever creature arrived on the pallet from CheapMeat Inc..

The alternative would involve finding a recipe, hunting down ten ingredients and standing in a kitchen actually preparing food: for many cooking is a skill that seems as anachronistic as being a cooper, fletcher or fuller.

All of which means that we’re dependent on journalists to keep the debate alive for long enough for the supermarkets to feel they need to act. Or for supermarkets to want to change things for the better. However, if they fall foul of our love of discount price heuristics, we may not thank them for it.

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About the Author
Philip Graves

Philip Graves is the author of Consumer.ology and a consumer behavior consultant to numerous international businesses.

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