09 Dec 2013 Two magic words make regular coffee taste better, study finds
Researchers from the Sweden and the US conducted three experiments to test both whether participants prefer the taste of so-called “eco-friendly” coffee and if they were willing to pay more for it.
Participants were told to sample two cups of coffee. In two of the experiments, they were told that one was eco-friendly and the other one was not, though in reality, both coffees were exactly the same. In another experiment, the participants were told after sampling which coffee was supposedly eco-friendly.
The researchers found that “eco labels not only promote a willingness to pay more for the product but they also appear to enhance the perceptual experience of the product’s taste.”
So not only will people pay more for a product based on one adjective, but people will also think that it tastes better, even if it doesn’t.
Even when the participants were were told which cup was “eco-friendly” after drinking, there was still some willingness to pay more for it, even if it was the non-preferred selection based on taste.
Is this proof that “greenwashing” works? If people are willing to perceive an eco-friendly product as both tasting superior and worth a more premium price, perhaps the conversation now needs to steer toward how to exactly define the term.
Source: Huffington Post