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Tob Control 2008;17:416-421 doi:10.1136/tc.2008.026732
  • Research paper

How does increasingly plainer cigarette packaging influence adult smokers’ perceptions about brand image? An experimental study

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  1. M A Wakefield,
  2. D Germain,
  3. S J Durkin
  1. Centre for Behavioural Research in Cancer, The Cancer Council Victoria, Victoria, Australia
  1. Dr M A Wakefield, Centre for Behavioural Research in Cancer, The Cancer Council Victoria, 1 Rathdowne Street, Carlton, Victoria, Australia 3053; melanie.wakefield{at}cancervic.org.au
  • Received 9 July 2008
  • Accepted 28 September 2008
  • Published Online First 30 September 2008

Abstract

Background: Cigarette packaging is a key marketing strategy for promoting brand image. Plain packaging has been proposed to limit brand image, but tobacco companies would resist removal of branding design elements.

Method: A 3 (brand types) × 4 (degree of plain packaging) between-subject experimental design was used, using an internet online method, to expose 813 adult Australian smokers to one randomly selected cigarette pack, after which respondents completed ratings of the pack.

Results: Compared with current cigarette packs with full branding, cigarette packs that displayed progressively fewer branding design elements were perceived increasingly unfavourably in terms of smokers’ appraisals of the packs, the smokers who might smoke such packs, and the inferred experience of smoking a cigarette from these packs. For example, cardboard brown packs with the number of enclosed cigarettes displayed on the front of the pack and featuring only the brand name in small standard font at the bottom of the pack face were rated as significantly less attractive and popular than original branded packs. Smokers of these plain packs were rated as significantly less trendy/stylish, less sociable/outgoing and less mature than smokers of the original pack. Compared with original packs, smokers inferred that cigarettes from these plain packs would be less rich in tobacco, less satisfying and of lower quality tobacco.

Conclusion: Plain packaging policies that remove most brand design elements are likely to be most successful in removing cigarette brand image associations.

Footnotes

  • Competing interests: None.

  • Funding: This study was funded by Quit Victoria and the Cancer Council Victoria. MAW was supported by an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Principal Research Fellowship.

  • Ethics approval: The study was approved by the Human Research Ethics Committee of the Cancer Council Victoria.

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