» Articles » PMID: 29954860

Marketing with Tobacco Pack Onserts: a Qualitative Analysis of Tobacco Industry Documents

Overview
Journal Tob Control
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2018 Jun 30
PMID 29954860
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Cigarette packs are a form of advertising that distributes brand information wherever smokers go. In the 21st century, tobacco companies began using onserts on cigarette packs to communicate new advertising messages to smokers.

Methods: We reviewed tobacco industry documents dated 1926 to 2017 to identify how the tobacco industry developed and used onserts in marketing and to serve the industry's political and legal objectives.

Results: Onserts added to cigarette packs became a more cost-effective way for brands to market in the year 2000. Manufacturers then began studying them, finding that new messages were appealing, while repeated messages were ignored. By 2005, tobacco companies were using onserts to effectively communicate about new tobacco products and packaging changes. They also used repeated 'corporate responsibility' messages that were, according to the industry's own research, likely to be ignored.

Conclusions: Tobacco companies have expanded on cigarette pack-based advertising. Twenty-first century onserts simultaneously seek to increase sales using materials that are novel, attractive and provide independent value, while undercutting public health messages about the risks of tobacco use using materials that repeat over time and are comparatively unattractive. Health authorities can use this industry research to mandate onserts to communicate effective health messages.

Citing Articles

Sugar and Dyslipidemia: A Double-Hit, Perfect Storm.

Gugliucci A J Clin Med. 2023; 12(17).

PMID: 37685728 PMC: 10488931. DOI: 10.3390/jcm12175660.


A mixed-method study of perceptions of cigarette pack inserts among adult smokers from New York and South Carolina exposed as part of a randomized controlled trial.

Hackworth E, Budiongan J, Lambert V, Kim M, Ferguson S, Niederdeppe J Health Educ Res. 2023; 38(6):548-562.

PMID: 37450334 PMC: 10714041. DOI: 10.1093/her/cyad030.


Broadcast reach and self-reported exposure to court-ordered corrective statements on cigarette harms.

Timberlake D, Pechmann C Prev Med Rep. 2020; 19:101127.

PMID: 32489773 PMC: 7260579. DOI: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2020.101127.

References
1.
Wakefield M, Morley C, Horan J, Cummings K . The cigarette pack as image: new evidence from tobacco industry documents. Tob Control. 2002; 11 Suppl 1:I73-80. PMC: 1766062. DOI: 10.1136/tc.11.suppl_1.i73. View

2.
Romito L, Saxton M, Coan L, Christen A . Retail promotions and perceptions of R.J. Reynolds' novel dissolvable tobacco in a US test market. Harm Reduct J. 2011; 8:10. PMC: 3123190. DOI: 10.1186/1477-7517-8-10. View

3.
Wander N, Malone R . Making big tobacco give in: you lose, they win. Am J Public Health. 2006; 96(11):2048-54. PMC: 1751801. DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2005.075119. View

4.
Germain D, Wakefield M, Durkin S . Adolescents' perceptions of cigarette brand image: does plain packaging make a difference?. J Adolesc Health. 2010; 46(4):385-92. DOI: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2009.08.009. View

5.
Lindblom E, Berman M, Thrasher J . FDA-Required Tobacco Product Inserts & Onserts–and the First Amendment. Food Drug Law J. 2017; 72(1):1-25. PMC: 6125716. View