Context and wine quality effects on consumers' mood, emotions, liking and willingness to pay for Australian Shiraz wines.

Food Res Int

School of Agriculture, Food and Wine, Waite Research Institute, The University of Adelaide (UA), PMB 1, Glen Osmond, South Australia 5064, Australia. Electronic address:

Published: November 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examined how different drinking environments impact consumers' moods, emotions related to wine, their preferences, and their willingness to pay.
  • The research involved three trials where participants tasted various quality Shiraz wines in different settings, revealing that higher-quality wines generated more positive emotions and preferences, particularly in restaurant settings.
  • Mood before tasting significantly influenced emotional responses, with more intense positive feelings linked to a higher willingness to pay, highlighting the importance of context and emotion in wine marketing.

Article Abstract

This study investigated the effect of different contexts on consumers' mood, product-evoked emotions, liking and willingness to pay for wine. Three consumer trials (n=114, 115, and 120) examined 3 different sample sets of 4 Australian commercial Shiraz wines. Each sample set was comprised of a high, medium-high, medium-low and low quality wine as designated by an expert panel. Wine consumers evaluated the same set of wines in the three different contexts, ranging from a highly-controlled laboratory setting to more realistic restaurant and at-home settings. Results showed that high quality wines were liked more and elicited more intense emotions of positive valence compared to wines of lower quality. Context effects were observed on emotions, but not on liking, indicating that although emotions and liking are correlated, the measurement of emotions can deliver additional information over liking. Tasting wine in the restaurant context evoked more intense positive emotions compared to the home and laboratory contexts. Participants' mood before tasting the wines had a strong influence on consecutive product-evoked emotion ratings, but only weak influence on liking ratings. Furthermore, a strong relationship between wine-evoked emotions and willingness to pay was observed, showing that if a wine-evoked more intense emotion of positive valence e.g., contented, enthusiastic, happy, optimistic and passionate participants were willing to pay significantly more for a bottle. Additionally, the absence of negative emotions, even if typically evoked to a very weak extent, is a requirement for an increased willingness to pay. This study indicates it is worthwhile to consider context and emotions in wine testing and marketing.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2016.08.006DOI Listing

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