The Trouble With Food Marketing To Children

By Cliff Walsh


The amount of money that the food industry spends on advertising geared toward children is astonishing. Some estimate the number runs close to $15 billion a year. It's hard not to turn on the TV or go to the grocery store without seeing animated characters, toys, or partnerships with the hottest kids' movie. This is obviously done to draw their attention and create an emotional connection to the product and brand, preferably for life.

Children are important to advertisers because they influence their parents' buying decisions (with incessant whining and tantrums) today while they will be decision makers in the future. Start early and you can turn create a customer for life. These advertisers wouldn't spend billions of dollars if this wasn't effective. According the The Henry J. Kaiser Foundation (KFF.org), children up to 17 years of age, see 12-21 TV commercials for food products a day. That's between roughly 4,500 and 7,500 per year. How can parents compete with that?

While food shopping recently, I decided to take a moment and look at some of the marketing geared toward children. It's not hard to miss that almost every packaged item, geared to any age, are plastered with marketing claims and labels. These are always on the front of the package while the nutrition facts and ingredients are hidden somewhere more discreet, like the back or bottom and needing a magnifying glass to read.

Furthermore, with respect to marketing to children, the size of the cartoon character or "brand ambassador") often takes up the entire front portion of the package, dwarfing any pictures of the actual food product. Let's also not forget all of the tomfoolery that goes into creating the food pictures. Did you ever notice that your bowl of cereal never looks as good as the one on the box? It's because they don't use milk, but glue.

While the average person is easily influenced by advertising, at least subconsciously, children are even more susceptible. These marketing ploys and tricks make my life harder as a parent, as I'm sure they do to others as well. And with the rise in childhood obesity, the marketing of fast food and other processed foods is problematic. Ultimately, the health of a child's nutrition is the responsibility of the parent or guardian, but is it too much to ask for the truth? When it comes to the food industry, the answer is probably. These are the same people putting poisonous chemicals in our food, but I digress.

What steps can you take? First, shopping at stores with healthier products like Wild By Nature, Trader Joe's, or Whole Foods can often eliminate the worst of the food choices, so your child doesn't even have the option of poor nutrition. It is also important to understand what they're watching on TV. You can choose advertisement-free programs or stations or focus only on stations that have rules about advertising to children. Finally, it makes sense to talk to your child about proper nutrition and the importance of avoiding processed foods and dangerous chemicals in the food supply. With up to 20 advertisements a day reaching your child, you can never talk to them too much about healthy food.




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