2019
DOI: 10.1111/ijpo.12540
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The effect of influencer marketing of food and a “protective” advertising disclosure on children's food intake

Abstract: Summary Background Children are active on social media and consequently are exposed to new and subtle forms of food marketing. Objectives To examine whether exposure to a YouTube video featuring influencer marketing of an unhealthy snack affects children's ad libitum snack intake and whether inclusion of an advertising disclosure moderates this effect. Methods In a randomized between‐subjects design, 151 children (aged 9‐11 y; mean, 10.32 y ± 0.6) were exposed to influencer marketing of a non‐food product (n =… Show more

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Cited by 106 publications
(142 citation statements)
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“…The male YouTuber had a subscriber count of approximately 11 million across his three YouTube channels, and the female YouTuber a total of 16 million subscribers across her two YouTube channels. The YouTubers' viewer demographics are not publicly available but they are known to be popular with children (5-15 years) in the UK [73] and are consistent with those used in previous experimental studies investigating the extent, nature and impact of influencer food marketing [14,22,23]. Notably, the influencer marketing campaign shown was featured in content likely to be viewed by children, and not in content specifically targeted at them (e.g., YouTube Kids app), where self-regulation should prohibit exposure [74].…”
Section: Youtube Video Featuring Influencer Marketingmentioning
confidence: 76%
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“…The male YouTuber had a subscriber count of approximately 11 million across his three YouTube channels, and the female YouTuber a total of 16 million subscribers across her two YouTube channels. The YouTubers' viewer demographics are not publicly available but they are known to be popular with children (5-15 years) in the UK [73] and are consistent with those used in previous experimental studies investigating the extent, nature and impact of influencer food marketing [14,22,23]. Notably, the influencer marketing campaign shown was featured in content likely to be viewed by children, and not in content specifically targeted at them (e.g., YouTube Kids app), where self-regulation should prohibit exposure [74].…”
Section: Youtube Video Featuring Influencer Marketingmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…Notably, an account is not required for users to view videos on YouTube. In addition, children use parents' accounts, and fake appetitive response can be influenced by HFSS product marketing [22,[56][57][58][59]. In order for children to defend against the effects of food and beverage advertising, the food marketing defence model [52] asserts that four conditions must be satisfied: awareness of advertising, understanding of its persuasive intent, and the ability and the motivation to resist.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Similarly, brands are able to leverage the power of social media influencers to propagate their messages, and it appears to work. In a recent study, when children (9-11 years) were exposed to influencer marketing of unhealthy foods via YouTube, they consumed significantly more of the marketed snack relative to the alternative brand [32], demonstrating a brand-specific effect that was not tempered by the presence of a disclosure informing children that they were viewing marketing content. When the exposure was to influencer marketing via Instagram, a non-specific effect on intake was found whereby children consumed almost 100 kcal more than the control group at a subsequent snack opportunity where the marketed foods were not available [33].…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%