No identity, no thanks Ryan Pierse/Getty
The proof is in the packaging. Making all cigarette packets look the same reduces the positive feelings smokers associate with specific brands and encourages quitting, Australian research shows.
The findings come ahead of the UK and Ireland introducing plain tobacco packaging in May.
Australia was the first nation to introduce such聽legislation in December 2012. Since then, all cigarettes have been sold in plain olive packets with standard fonts and聽graphic health warnings.
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The primary goal was to make cigarettes聽less appealing聽so that people would not take up smoking in the first place. But an added bonus has been the number of existing smokers who have ditched the habit.
Between 2010 and 2013, the proportion of daily smokers in Australia dropped from 15.1 to 12.8 per cent 鈥 a聽. The number of calls to quit helplines also increased by 78 per cent after the policy change.
Brand betrayal
This drop in smoking popularity can be partly explained by a loss of brand affinity, says聽聽at the Australian National University in Canberra.
People derive a sense of belonging and identity from brands, he says. For example, you may see yourself as a 鈥淢ac person鈥 or a 鈥淧C person鈥 and feel connected to other people who choose that brand. 鈥淢arketers are extremely savvy about cultivating these brand identities.鈥
After tobacco advertising was banned in Australia in 1992, the only way to foster brand stereotypes was by using fonts and imagery on cigarette packs that appeal to specific groups. But Webb鈥檚 research suggests that since plain packaging was introduced, brand identity and positive brand stereotypes have significantly declined.
Webb and his colleagues surveyed 178 smokers immediately before and seven months after the policy change and found that they were significantly less likely to adhere to any particular brand after the change. They were also less likely to rate typical smokers of that brand as having positive traits like trendiness or sophistication.
Win-win
This loss of brand identity also聽correlated with smoking reductions and increased intentions to quit.
鈥淲e typically think that the primary drivers for why people smoke are individual personality traits or biological factors,鈥 Webb says. 鈥淏ut this understates the symbolic power of brand identities and brand stereotypes in maintaining smoking behaviour.鈥
Plain packaging has been highly successful so far, says聽聽at the University of Sydney. 鈥淚t strips the ability of tobacco companies to propose to people that buying brand X will confer all sorts of interesting qualities to them.鈥
Moreover, warnings that plain packaging would increase counterfeit cigarettes and fuel smuggling rings have proven unfounded, 聽shows. 鈥淪o far, there haven鈥檛 been any drawbacks,鈥 Webb says.
Journal reference:聽Addictive Behaviors Reports, DOI:聽
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