Doctors
Skeptical of Food Industry Ad Pledge
Companies Pledged to Eliminate Ads for Unhealthy Food
Targeting Children, but Should You Believe Them?
By
Sibile Morency
ABC News.com
Aug. 24, 2007
In July, the Council of Better Business Bureaus
announced that 11 food industry companies, including
McDonald's, Coca-Cola and Mars, had voluntarily set
new rules to eliminate junk food advertising to kids
younger than 12.
But critics familiar with these companies'
marketing campaigns question the sincerity of that
pledge.
"It appears that the food and beverage industry is
making minimal changes with one hand, but greatly
expanding its marketing to children with the other.
It's not fair to families when food companies use
technology to market to children out of earshot of
parents," said Lori Dorfman, director of the Berkeley
Media Studies Group.
According to a May report from the Berkeley Media
Studies Group and the Center for Digital Democracy,
many companies have found creative ways to use
technology to appeal to younger customers. One example
cited was Coca-Cola's My Coke Rewards program, which
invites customers to use special codes found on Coke
products to access a Web site and enter personal
information to collect rewards like downloadable ring
tones.
According to Kathryn Montgomery, a professor of
communications at American University and a consultant
on the report, the Coca-Cola program enables marketers
to create a profile of each customer, including
information about purchasing behavior and responses to
advertising messages.
50 Percent Rule
Companies who have made the pledge are aware that
kids younger than 12 are reached by some of their junk
food advertising campaigns aimed at older audiences.
For example, General Mills, Mars and Kelloggs
advertise on Neopets, a social networking site where
26 percent of users are younger than 12, according to
Nielsen/NetRatings.
In response to such concerns, Coca-Cola and Mars
Inc. explain that their pledge is a commitment to
eliminate junk food advertising to kids only if the TV
program or Web site is specifically designed for kids
younger than 12 or has an audience where 50 percent or
more of the users belong to that demographic.
"Coca-Cola respects the sanctity of
childhood and the role parents play in raising their
children and determining what they eat and watch.
Media buys are made on the basis of brand strategy &
that has 50 percent or more adults [as an audience],"
said Diane Garza, a spokeswoman for Coca-Cola. "For
every child that gets exposed, there is an adult
present. If they as a family are involved in a certain
media and they expose children, that's a decision they
are making for their family. It's about intent, not
exposure."
Ryan Bowling, spokesperson for Mars U.S., agreed,
saying, "We told the public [that we're] not marketing
to audiences under 12. Those sites are geared towards
older audiences, so we're comfortable with them. It's
up to the parents to supervise kids accordingly."
Thomas Robinson, of the Center for Healthy Weight
at the Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, takes issue
with the 50 percent rule.
"If it's 50 percent of the audience, clearly [that
is] not as sincere than if they were to reduce their
standards," Robinson said. "If their promise to reduce
advertising to kids under 12 is not extended to other
marketing, then it puts doubt on whether or not
they're doing this to promote health or just
protecting themselves from lawsuits."
Healthy Alternative?
As part of the pledge, companies stated that
products advertised on any program directed primarily
at kids under the age of 12 would only be sound food
choices.
But some pediatricians question the nutritional
value of the so-called "healthier options" promoted by
companies like McDonald's.
"They'll say they're all white meat chicken, but
it's still fried and high in fat. So not sure how
healthy that is. White meat smushed together? No idea
what their food technology is like," said Robinson.
"The healthy alternatives are strawberries and
blueberries. Things that have natural nutrients in
them. Foods I prefer not to get are ones with high
fructose corn syrup. Any food that has HFS is highly
processed. You're better off with natural foods,
naturally enriched ones," said George Bray, chief of
the division of clinical obesity and metabolism at the
Pennington Biomedical Research Center.
Branded From Birth
Robinson, the lead author of a recent Stanford
study titled "Effects of Fast Food Branding on Young
Children's Taste Preferences," explains that children
as young as 3 years old are able to differentiate
between brands.
"Our study found that when a child had two foods,
the one they thought was from McDonald's was the one
they thought tasted better," Robinson said. "Even for
carrots, kids thought [they] were better if [they]
came from McDonald's then regular carrots."
The purpose of the study was to measure the effect
of children's exposure to brands from birth, including
their experience at a restaurant with food, peer
behavior and restaurant-sponsored toys.
"The effects were already present with kids 3- to
5-year-olds," Robinson said. "Seventy-five percent of
children had toys from McDonald's in their home
three-quarters of the children! When you talk about
market penetration, that's pretty amazing to me."
Robinson is convinced that companies can
successfully promote healthier options while still
turning a profit.
"They're very effective at what they do. I have
every confidence they can do it with healthy food
items, as they did with junk food. When Atkins became
popular, overnight they turned on a dime. You saw low-carb
products everywhere. When they see a market
opportunity, they have no problem changing the
marketing. I think if they wanted to do it, they could
do it, and still make a profit."
First Step, Long Way
to Go
The Federal Trade Commission is currently
conducting a study on food marketing to children and
adolescents and has already sent orders to the
companies that advertise most frequently to that
demographic requesting that they reveal the types of
marketing techniques they use.
In the meantime, doctors support the idea behind
the pledge to halt that marketing.
"The pledge is a step in the right direction. It's
a baby step, but a big one for the big companies,"
said Keith-Thomas Ayoob, associate clinical professor
of pediatrics at Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
Montgomery applauds the food industry's initiative
to eliminate the marketing that reaches children, but
she remains skeptical of their motives.
"I think it's a move in the right
direction. It shows that the food industry is a
serious problem, have to do something about it, have
to take it seriously. Obviously they do that to
prevent government regulation. They know the FTC is
doing an investigation of food advertising practices,"
she said.
"However I think it's very complicated. & As a
consumer, as a parent, this company doing this, this
company doing that, how do I hold them accountable? If
they have clear rules, then you have a level playing
field."
Despite the pediatricians' consensus on the
negative effects of junk food advertising, they
readily hold parents accountable for their children's
health and diet decisions.
"Advertising does not guarantee sales. Parents have
a lot more clout then they think," said Ayoob."They
should not be influenced by children or advertising.
An ad can be what it is, but no one is giving food for
free. Parents are buying the food."
For parents, the challenge is to cut through the
marketing messages to determine whether the food being
offered is indeed healthy for their children.
"They can talk a good talk, but can they walk the
walk? I doubt it, if it's gonna cut their profits. I
think it's gonna come down to the government to set
regulations," said Sherri Carlson, a mother of three
who lives in Massachusetts