Location, location and presentation help promote healthier snacks, expert finds

While key words for real estate are location, location, location, for healthy foods, they just may be presentation and location.

Case in point: When apples were moved in a school lunchroom from a metal bin to an attractive basket lit by an ordinary desk lamp closer to the cash register and away from more tempting, less-healthy chips and other packaged snacks, their sales jumped 58 percent.

"The best solution is often the simplest one," said Brian Wansink, Cornell's John S. Dyson Professor of Marketing and director of Cornell's Food and Brand Lab and of Cornell's Smarter Lunchroom initiative. "Rather than penalizing a less healthy food choice, we just made the healthier item much more likely to be noticed and chosen."

Wansink presented his findings at the Food for Your Whole Life Health Symposium June 6-7 at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in New York City.

The study was part of the Smarter Lunchrooms program -- an effort to design sustainable research-based lunchrooms that subtly guide smarter choices. For example, "making environmental changes that can lead a student to unknowingly make healthier lunch choices without knowing they were 'nudged' in that direction by the way the lunchroom was designed," explains Wansink.

He lists tips and research findings about easy strategies for schools to implement at SmarterLunchrooms.org and offers a free Consumer Camp June 10-11 in Warren Hall. The workshops June 10, including Lunchroom Makeovers at 3:30 p.m., are intended for school lunch professionals; Friday's workshops, in B-45 Warren Hall, include Small Changes 101 and New News You Can Use and are open to the public (for times of specific workshops, see http://www.alumni.cornell.edu/reunion/activities.cfm and seach for "Food and Brand Lab").

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John Carberry