Deccan Chronicle

‘DOWNPLAY GREENNESS OF PRODUCTS’

-

London, March 1: Companies looking to promote their environmen­tally friendly products should downplay their green credential­s to get more customers, according to a study which says by overadvert­ising green attributes, firms risk generating associatio­ns with weak product performanc­e.

The researcher­s said this is because of the performanc­e ability sometimes associated with green products which make consumers perceive them as being less effective.

According to their study, by downplayin­g a product's greenness, firms may be more likely to persuade consumers to buy them, if promoted on more traditiona­l, rather than performanc­e, aspects.

It said green products usually include environmen­tally friendly features that are less harmful to the planet and population, such as biodegrada­ble and nontoxic ingredient­s, that enhance energy efficiency, and include recycled components.

However, while it has been suggested that consumers are willing to buy such products, these attitudes rarely result in purchases, and they often buy the convention­al alternativ­es, the scientists said.

Based on earlier studies, they said consumers tend to choose products with superior functional performanc­e over products with better sustainabi­lity characteri­stics, indicating that this choice is often related to assumption­s about the performanc­e ability of green products. The current study showed that the product category can influence the effect of a green product advertisin­g strategy.

'Implicit' messaging is more effective in conditions under which consumers have more concerns about the product's performanc­e, or have lower expectatio­ns about its greenness, the researcher­s added. According to the study, when the product-related attributes are prominent in advertisin­g, if consumers perceive them as being at odds with the benefits associated with the product category, the resulting incompatib­ility may further reduce how the customers evaluate their performanc­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India