An Assessment towards Advertisement with Warning Label:
Attached on the Product Packaging: Kids vs Tweens
Rizal Edy Halim and Faisal Muttaqin
Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia
Keywords: Social Marketing, Warning Label, Social Consequence Label, Kid and Tween, Unhealthy Food and
Beverage.
Abstract: Social marketing becomes an academic urgency in the field of marketing science as a result of the many
negative effects arising from business marketing activities. The main targets of such unhealthy product
marketing are children and adolescents. Correspondingly, this study targets the age groups of kids and
tweens. The method used in this research is experiment lab, which involved 180 participants from two age
groups namely kids and tweens. As a result, the study found that the influence of warning label on the age
of tweens is greater than in the age of the children. Meanwhile, the use of visual and textual warning label
using social consequences as content proved to be effective at the age of tweens. The results of this study
are useful for the science development of social marketing, especially within the study of warning labels,
specifically to give recommendation for some alternative warning labels with the additional use of social
consequences content.
1 INTRODUCTION
Empirical testing for warning label towards
unhealthy food and beverage products is still
inadequate. Meanwhile there is urgency for
academics to slow the rate of deceived consumers.
One study from (Effertz et al., 2014) found that
warning label on beverage packaging affects teen
buying intention. Also, (VanEpps et al., 2016) found
that warning label in food product containing caloric
value have been shown to affect consumer
purchasing intent towards unhealthy food products.
However, the fact that there is inadequate research
on warning label for food and beverage packaging
presents the urgency for academics to examine the
effects of warning labels.
Understanding the health risks upon consuming
the products can influence consumers in choosing
the product to purchase. (Berry et al., 2017) found
that consumer understanding on health risks
possessed by a particular product is one factor that
affects consumers’ intent to purchase such particular
products. These findings are very important for
demarketing strategy. Therefore, in this study,
researchers will test their influence on unhealthy
food and beverage products. The research aims to
fill the research void within social marketing
domains associated with warning labels and the anti-
food and unhealthy beverage campaigns.
The scope of the research is limited in target to
elementary school children within three Indonesia
major cities. The marketing of unhealthy food and
beverage products was chosen as the subject because
elementary school students are at risk of being
targeted by this.
2 LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Use of Warning Label in the
Product Pack
Packaging can be an important promotional tool for
marketers in helping to create a profitable brand
image and to link strategic marketing elements
(Halim et al., 2014). To increase brand value,
marketers strive to develop attractive packaging that
creates desired brand positioning and to reinforce
promotional messages delivered through integrated
marketing communications. A packaging can
provide a more positive promotional effect than
advertising (Halim et al., 2014), thus marketers
Halim, R. and Muttaqin, F.
An Assessment towards Advertisement with Warning Label: Attached on the Product Packaging: Kids vs Tweens.
DOI: 10.5220/0008492803370342
In Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Entrepreneurship and Business Management (ICEBM Untar 2018), pages 337-342
ISBN: 978-989-758-363-6
Copyright
c
2019 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
337
strive to create a packaging that is viewed as positive
which eventually can improve purchasing intent. For
products that are potentially harmful to consumers,
putting warning and disclosure on the packaging is
an important potential communication tool for
public health policy and government agencies
(Goodall and Appiah, 2008). The warning label on
the product is a form of consumer protection (Halim
and Muttaqin, 2014; Halim et al., 2014). Warnings
and disclosures may inform consumers about the
potential risks and hazards associated with the use of
the product and, in turn, offset the positive
consequences derived from effective design
packages and other promotions.
2.2 Textual Warning Label
Textual warning label have been used on both food
and pharmaceutical products in order to protect
consumers (Halim et al., 2014). Textual warning
label on alcoholic beverage, junk food and
pharmaceutical products have been around for a long
time. Some researchers have suggested that textual
warning label may affect individual behavior, such
as (Andrews et al., 1993; L. M. and E, 2017). Based
on the principles of persuasive communication
theory, the uses of warning labels have different
effects on individual beliefs and attitudes. The
findings reveal that health-warning label can be
trusted. This finding is reinforced and expanded by
(Bollard et al., 2016; Borland et al., 2009; Bushman,
1998; Hennigs et al., 2017; Kersbergen and Field,
2017; L. M. and E, 2017; McCloud et al., 2017;
Mead, Cohen, Kennedy, Gallo, & Latkin, 2015),
who found that warning labels are believed to be an
effective way to change people's behavior.
As described in the previous section, research on
warning label within social marketing have proved
that warning label can influence the intention to
purchase a product, as observed in (Effertz et al.,
2014; Halim et al., 2014; Hennigs et al., 2017; Kees
et al., 2006; Murdock and Rajagopal, 2017;
Shiyanbola et al., 2017). In line with the progress
made from the research on warning label, the
analysis within this topic is becoming incisive
(Bader et al., 2017; Bollard et al., 2016; Kees et al.,
2006; Mead et al., 2016; Murdock and Rajagopal,
2017). Although many previous studies have shown
the effectiveness of warning labels in affecting
consumer consumption patterns, social marketing
academics are still worried about the increasingly
vigorous promotion of health-damaging products
such as beverages and junk food which eventually
will take on a larger role in creating undesirable
consumption behaviors.
2.3 Message Content on Warning
Label
Furthermore, the use of visual and textual warning
label has been widely applied to developed and
developing countries. Especially in Indonesia, the
warning label on unhealthy food and beverage
products still seems to get less attention from
consumers. The warning label seems to be used only
as a complement to the packaging as a product
prerequisites’ when entering the market. For
example, the warning labels used on snack products
are textual label that use normative writing and do
not draw attention, both in term of design and
content. The design factor on warning label has been
one of important factors in attracting the consumer's
attention, to communicate the purpose of warning
label to the fullest (Bader et al., 2017; Halim et al.,
2014; Kees et al., 2006; Levy et al., 2017; McCloud
et al., 2017; Mead et al., 2015, 2016; Mutti et al.,
2016; Romer et al., 2017; Tannenbaum et al., 2015).
In term of content, elements on warning label
generally describe health risks information
concerning the consumption of food and beverage
products. These labels are proven to be effective in
reducing consumption behavior.
2.4 Kids and Tweens Group
Being the main victim of junk food products around
the world, for example in the United States,
Australia, America, Singapore etc., children and
adolescents are generally the focus of anti-junk food
campaigns globally. The fact that most teenagers
and children are exposed to various types of anti-
junk food messages (e.g. from the media,
community, school and family), and are continuing
to adopt the products is rather troublesome. This
since becomes the main objective among health care
practitioners and designers to prevent them from
developing a junk food addiction.
As children enter adolescence, they often seek to
develop their identity. Physical, cognitive and social
changes that occur today can cause variation in
one’s self-image (Halim and Muttaqin, 2014; Halim
et al., 2014). As a result, young people may question
the personality or the kind of individual they want to
follow. In their search for identity, advertisers want
the purchase of their junk food products to dictate
teens. This characteristic serves easy preferences for
marketers in expanding their products. For example,
ICEBM Untar 2018 - International Conference on Entrepreneurship and Business Management (ICEBM) Untar
338
cigarette campaigns that target teenagers through
music festivals, challenging games, and sports.
Another example is food companies that use visually
appealing animations or cartoon characters to attract
the attention of consumers within this age group.
3 CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
& HYPHOTHESES
After analysing the previous research about warning
label on unhealthy products, the researchers present
the following picture as the research model, which
means to convey the mindset or thought-framework
within this study.
Figure 1: Conceptual Framework.
The conceptual framework that we use within
this research is a refinement and an extension of the
previous research as found in (Halim et al., 2014;
Kees et al., 2006; Murdock and Rajagopal, 2017).
As the extension to the concept of warning label, the
research adds one more type of content used in
warning label that is social consequences’ content.
In addition to using visual and textual warning label
containing health-risk content, social consequence
content is expected to be used in warning label due
to its capability of adversely affecting the
consumers. The effect of warning label is believed to
be further influenced by the consumer age factor
(Effertz et al., 2014). Within this study, we
compared the two age groups that are tweens and
kids. This is in line with previous excerpts that
support the notion that these two age groups are
seemingly the most susceptible target of unhealthy
food and beverage products.
H1: The effectiveness of visual label containing
social consequences content is greater on
tweens group’s purchasing intent than kids
group. And;
H2: The effectiveness of the visual-textual warning
label contain health-risk content is greater on
tweens group’s purchasing intent than the kids
group.
4 METHOD
4.1 Procedures and Sample
To answer the research problem, the research uses
experimental lab method. It is in the form of a causal
study used to describe evidence of a causal
relationship (Malhotra, 2007). The experimental
design of this research consisted of 3 (textual
warning label, visual warning label, textual-visual
warning label) x 2 (health-risk content, social-
consequences content) inter-subjects. Participants
were randomly placed within the 6 cells from the
experimental design formation. Each cell was given
a different stimulus. There were a total of 180
participants, in which tweens and kids group
consisted of 90 participants respectively. The
independent variable was a warning label consisting
of 6 types of labels, namely, textual social
consequences content, visual social consequences
content, textual health content, visual-risk health
content, textual-visual social consequences content,
and textual-visual heath-risk content. The dependent
variable was purchase intention. The question items
used in this research are in accordance with those
defined by Baker and Churchill (1977). The research
used a 7-scale question indicating the purchase
intention, with 1 being “highly wanting to” and 7
being “highly not wanting to”.
5 ANALYSIS AND RESULTS
The result shows that visual warning label
containing social content lead to diminish purchase-
intention at the mean value of M = 5.24 against
Tween group, and M = 4.67 against kids groups.
This implies that the influence of visual label
containing social content is greater at the age of
tween than the kid. Then, to see the synergy of the
effect, t-test was applied. The value shows sig.000 (p
<0,5) and t-value = 40,62 > t-table df (29) = 1.69,
placing H0 in reject area. This implies that there is a
significant influence between the two mean
variables being compared. H1 is therefore accepted:
The effectiveness of visual label containing social
consequences content is greater on tweens group
purchasing intent than kids group.
The result also shows that visual-textual warning
label containing health-risk content lead to diminish
purchase-intention at the mean value of M = 5.40
against tweens group, and M = 5.07 against kids
group. This implies that the influence of visual-
An Assessment towards Advertisement with Warning Label: Attached on the Product Packaging: Kids vs Tweens
339
textual warning label containing health-risk content
is greater at the age of tween than the kid. Then, to
see the significance of the effect, t-test was applied.
The value shows sig.000 (p <0,5) and t-value =
44.10 > t-table df (29) = 1.69, placing H0 in reject
area. This implies that there is a significant influence
between the two mean variables being compared. H2
is therefore accepted: The effectiveness of the visual-
textual warning label contain health-risk content is
greater on tweens group purchasing intent than the
kids group.
6 DISCUSSION
The effective content is characterized by its ability
to warn about danger, to explain the consequences,
and to give instructions to avoid such danger. The
results coming from this study register a new
findings within the domain of product warning label
effectiveness. Through the manipulation of certain
design characteristics, the result shows that the
method indeed improving and sharping the warning
label effectiveness. The there characteristics found
on warning label are text or label writings, display
format, and the location of warnings on product.
First, the content of warning label refers to the
choice of easily digestible vocabulary such as the
health-risk that might arise when consuming the
products. The notion is in line with the explanation
from previous chapter that the text writing for
warning label needs to consider all text format
characteristics such as font colour, font size, text
direction, spacing ratio, instructions, bolded text,
and so on, and this is considered with the focus to
make the text messages to be more readable or
recognisable. It is reinforced with the findings from
Adams and Edworthy (1995) research; Barlow and
Wogalter (1993); Hammond et al., (2011) Malouff et
al., (1993).
Furthermore, the result coming from this study
also underline the assertion that the important
parameter for effective labelling includes label
configuration, label form, border, package design,
colour labelling, and so on, as suggested by Adams
and Edworthy (1995); Barlow and Wogalter (1993);
and Bhalla and Lastovicka (1984). It also underlined
the importance of considering the selection of
appropriate images illustrating both health-risk and
social consequences that might arise when
consuming the products.
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