Christian Fuentes
Professor
Making a market for alternatives: marketing devices and the qualification of a vegan milk substitute
Author
Summary, in English
The aim of this paper is to describe, conceptualise and critically discuss how and with what consequences marketing is used to construct a mass market for vegan substitutes. Drawing on the concepts of the marketing device and qualification, it shows how Oatly – a Swedish company making oat-based products – enrols three sets of marketing devices, i.e. digital media, packaging and stores, to simultaneously ‘alternativise’ and ‘convenienise’ its range of vegan products. The result is the material and discursive construction of a range of vegan products that is qualified as different enough from conventional dairy products to be an attractive alternative, but similar enough to fit into existing practices of shopping for food, cooking and eating. By qualifying products along multiple registers, Oatly constructs ‘plastic’ products, which can be consumed, for various reasons, by various groups of consumers thus enacting a multi-niche market for its products.
Department/s
- Department of Service Studies
Publishing year
2017-05-25
Language
English
Pages
529-555
Publication/Series
Journal of Marketing Management
Volume
33
Issue
7-8
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Westburn Publishers
Topic
- Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified
Keywords
- vegan consumption
- food substitutes
- sustainability
- alternative
- market devices
- qualification
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1472-1376