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Purpose

This study aims to examine factors that influence consumption of vegetables in the USA.

Design/methodology/approach

Discrete choice methodology is used to measure the relative importance of health benefits and other attributes when choosing food to be eaten at home, cluster analysis to identify segments, and analysis of variance to analyze differences between clusters.

Findings

The results show that, for food in general, nutrition and impact on weight are more important than value for money, ease of preparation and taste. However, for vegetables, while the nutrition and weight benefits are very positive factors, taste, cost and ease of preparation inhibit consumption. Results of the cluster analysis suggest that marketing strategies should be adapted for different consumer segments.

Research limitations/implications

The sample size is fairly small – 250.

Practical implications

The results can be used to help food marketers increase consumption of vegetables.

Social implications

More effective marketing of vegetables should increase consumption, enhancing consumer welfare and reducing health care costs.

Originality/value

Discrete choice analysis has not previously been used in studies of this topic.

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