FohBoh

Restaurant Social Media

Michael L. Atkinson

New Stanford Study Shows Posting Calories on Restaurant Menu Boards Lowers Customers’ Calorie Counts per Visit

I grabbed this off the SBS research site and found it both interesting and amazing how they conducted their research. FInd the site here.

Starbucks’ customers purchased 6% fewer calories per visit at chain outlets that posted calorie counts without substantially affecting revenue say Stanford Graduate School of Business researchers Bryan Bollinger, Phillip Leslie, and Alan Sorensen.

January 6, 2010

STANFORD GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS — A new study released Jan. 6 examined consumer behavior before and after calorie counts were posted, and determined that when restaurants post calories on menu boards, there is a reduction in calories per transaction. Based on transaction data provided by Starbucks, researchers from the Stanford Graduate School of Business found that calorie-posting in New York City in 2008 led to a 6% reduction in calories per transaction. According to the study, beverage choices at Starbucks are unaffected by calorie posting. However, calorie posting leads consumers to buy fewer food items, and to switch to lower calorie food items.
To facilitate the analysis, Starbucks gave the researchers access to transaction data from Starbucks locations in three major cities—New York, Boston, and Philadelphia—from January 2008 to February 2009. Starbucks began posting calorie information in its New York City stores in April 2008, so the study looks at changes in consumer behavior before and after calorie-posting. To control for seasonal changes in purchasing behavior, the authors compare the New York changes to observed behavior in Boston and Philadelphia (where there was no calorie posting) over the same time period.

The results of the study are described in the working paper “Calorie Posting in Chain Restaurants,” which can be downloaded at www.gsb.stanford.edu/news/StarbucksCaloriePostingStudy.pdf. The study’s main findings can be summarized as follows:

Calorie posting at Starbucks led to a 6% reduction in calories per transaction, from 247 to 232 average calories per transaction.
Almost all of the effect is related to food purchases. Average beverage calories per transaction did not change substantially, while average calories from food per transaction fell by 14%, of which 10% is due to people buying fewer items and 4% is due to people buying lower-calorie food items.

For those consumers who averaged more than 250 calories per transaction, calories per transaction fell by 26%.
The calorie reduction persisted for at least 10 months after calorie counts were first posted.

Overall, Starbucks revenues were not affected by the calorie-posting requirement. However, for Starbucks stores located within 50 meters of a competitor, calorie-postings led to an increase in Starbucks revenue.

Opponents of calorie-posting laws have argued that nutritional information is already available (for example, on restaurants’ websites, or on placemats or brochures in the store) and that most consumers don’t make decisions based on calorie counts. However, the researchers: Bryan Bollinger, a PhD candidate, and Phillip Leslie and Alan Sorensen, both associate professors of economics and strategic management at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, find that posting calorie counts on menu boards does affect consumer behavior.
The research team does acknowledge that a 6% reduction in calories is too small to have a major effect on the nation’s waistline. However, even a small benefit from calorie posting would exceed the low cost of posting, making it a worthwhile policy. The long-run effects may also be more dramatic, especially if it encourages restaurants to offer more low-calorie items. The study also presents preliminary evidence that this is indeed happening in New York City.

Obesity rates in the United States are the highest in the world, and have been steadily increasing over the past 15 years. One approach to dealing with the problem has been to enact laws requiring restaurants to post calorie content of their offerings, such as the 2008 New York City law requiring all restaurants with 15 or more outlets to post calorie information as prominently as prices on their menus and menu boards. The requirement is also included as part of the health care legislation currently being debated in Congress.

Get the study abstract here.
StarbucksCaloriePostingStudy.pdf

Views: 24

Tags: , :Stanford Business School, Posting, Restaurant nutrition, boards, calories, menu, on

Comment

You need to be a member of FohBoh to add comments!

Join FohBoh

Lucy Needham Comment by Lucy Needham on January 13, 2010 at 3:18pm
Terrific post Michael. I know for a fact that our users of MenuCalc have seen dramatic increases in their traffic since they proactively posted nutrition data. Not to mention the impact it has made on their brand in the consumer facing social media world and dieting blogs; people actually praise the client and say they'll always go back there!

We still have to wait on the results and more people are aware that this data exists and what the numbers actually mean. But if it's good for business (in some cases of course), and it can begin to educate the diner - then it's a much better scenario that everyone thought/made out.
Doug Golden Comment by Doug Golden on January 11, 2010 at 9:25am
This is good info. However, posting calorie counts will have as much effect on obesity as the surgeon general's warning on packs of cigarettes has on smoking.
Jeff Schacher Comment by Jeff Schacher on January 11, 2010 at 6:49am
I have a client who is required to list the calorie counts and has found the opposite effect in some stores. The guests in middle & lower income neighborhoods seem to equate calories to value and will choose the higher calorie selection when deciding among similarly priced menu items.

So based on that anecdote, I'll be interested to see some research results from other restaurant concepts. But if it proves effective, we can expect a lot more of it. Especially with the increased health care burden many states will be carrying in the future.

Advertisement

Food + Tech

Innovator Video: The Future of Grocery – An Interactive Cheese, Meat & Fish Counter

In this senior thesis project, German interaction design students Benedikt Burgmaier and Fabian Kreuzer re-imagine the meat, cheese and fish counter to provide customers with detailed product, origin and recipe information about food items

[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]

Food Rules for Startups: 8 Ways to Build Better Company Culture

Often startups try to attract talented teammates by offering benefits like ping-pong tables, video games, or gym memberships. While those things are valuable, a culture of good food is an order of magnitude more important. Sharing meals around quality food builds an environment that encourages collaboration and celebrates excellence.

[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]

Infographics of the Week: Water Footprint of Humanity

A new report on the "water footprint of humanity" from scientists at the University of Twente analyzes and maps global water use from 1996 to 2005. According to the study, agriculture accounts for a staggering 92% of annual global freshwater consumption. Production of cereal grains accounts for 27 percent, meat for 22 percent, and dairy for 7 percent of this consumption

[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]

BAMCO’s Role in Making New Farm & Food Data Available

Bon Appétit Management Company, which operates cafés for companies including Twitter, Yahoo! and eBay, announced Tuesday the rollout of a comprehensive farm animal welfare policy that has the potential to make significantly more information about growing practices available. As an industry leader with significant purchasing power, these commitments set an important precedent for increased...

[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]

James Beard’s Mitchell Davis on What a Better Food System Tastes Like [Video]

In this video from TEDxManhattan, James Beard Foundation Executive Vice President Mitchell Davis talks about taste as a powerful tool for social change.

[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]

© 2012   Created by FohBoh.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service