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Buffet Menu Nudging

This study tests whether re-ordering menu information can reduce buffet plate-waste risk without forcing choice removal. Two Vietnamese online experiments compare healthier-options-first (HOF) versus unhealthier-options-first (UOF) menu sequencing across buffet formats and tiered-price contexts.

Samples

Study 1: n = 257
Study 2: n = 147

Primary Effect

Study 1: -146 kcal
HOF 1427 vs UOF 1573

Revenue Signal

Higher-tier odds OR = 0.52
Premium 52.4% → 23.8%

All intake outcomes are intention-based selections from simulated menus; they are interpreted as a proxy for plate-waste risk rather than direct weighed plate waste.

Buffet menu simulation collage used in sequence-nudging research
14 simulation boards 2 menu-order conditions (HOF vs UOF) Study 1: 2×3 design Study 2: tiered-price choice

Problem Framing

Background and Gap

Buffet formats are structurally vulnerable to overserving because fixed pricing reduces marginal cost at the point of diner choice.

The global context is severe: UNEP (2024) reports about 1.05 billion tonnes of food waste per year (about 132 kg per person), linked to roughly 8-10% of greenhouse-gas emissions while hunger still affects hundreds of millions of people.

Most restaurant food-waste interventions emphasize back-of-house controls, but plate waste is a customer-side behavior problem. Food-service contributes a meaningful share of consumer-level waste, and buffet formats are especially exposed because fixed pricing, visual abundance, and value-seeking behavior can push guests toward higher-calorie and higher-volume selection.

This research addresses a practical managerial gap: can a low-cost, non-restrictive menu-order intervention reduce plate-waste risk while preserving perceived value and premium-tier demand?

Research Design

Method and Experimental Design

Both studies used online simulated buffet menus to estimate planned consumption and value perceptions before real-world rollout.

Study 1 Setup

2×3 between-subjects design: HOF vs UOF across hotpot, Korean tokpokki, and vegetarian buffet contexts (n = 257).

Study 2 Setup

Hotpot-only tiered pricing experiment (219k, 279k, 329k VND) with random HOF/UOF assignment (n = 147).

Core Measures

Intended calorie intake, perceived value, and tier-choice intention; intended calories were computed from menu selections.

Interpretation Guardrail

Intended intake is intention-based simulation output and treated as a behavioral proxy for likely plate-waste pressure.

Theory Testing

Hypotheses (H1-H4)

The model links menu-order nudging, perceived value, and commercial tier-selection behavior.

  • H1: Buffet type and menu order interact significantly on intended calorie intake.
  • H2: Perceived value is lower under HOF than UOF menus.
  • H3: HOF increases probability of lower-tier buffet package choice.
  • H4: Perceived value mediates the relationship between menu order and tier choice.

Experiment One

Study 1 Results

Healthy-first sequencing reduced intended intake overall, with stronger effects in meat-forward buffet formats.

Sample

n = 257

Vietnamese buffet diners in online simulation.

HOF vs UOF

1427 vs 1573 kcal

Independent-samples t-test comparison.

Overall Delta

-146 kcal

Lower intended calories under HOF.

Interaction Pattern

Hotpot +290
Korean +142
Vegetarian +6 (ns)

UOF minus HOF change by buffet type.

Value Perception

Lower for hotpot and Korean

No significant value drop for vegetarian buffet condition.

The two-way ANOVA supported H1: menu-order effects depended on buffet type. HOF delivered the strongest reduction in hotpot and Korean contexts, while vegetarian menus showed almost no calorie difference between orders.

Key test outputs: t(255) = -3.86, p < .001 for overall HOF vs UOF intake; interaction F(2, 251) = 17.79, p < .001 for buffet-type moderation. H2 was also supported in aggregate (t = -4.12, p < .001), with value penalties concentrated in meat-forward formats and no significant vegetarian difference.

Experiment Two

Study 2 Results

In tiered pricing, HOF continued reducing intended intake but also shifted demand away from premium bundles.

Sample

n = 147

Hotpot tier-choice simulation participants.

HOF vs UOF

1445 vs 1668 kcal

Significant manipulation check difference.

Premium Share

52.4% → 23.8%

Premium-tier selection dropped under HOF.

Higher-tier Odds

OR = 0.52

48% lower odds of choosing higher tier under HOF.

Mediation

Indirect = -0.339

95% CI [-0.56, -0.15] via perceived value.

H3 was supported: participants exposed to HOF were more likely to choose lower-priced packages. Evidence converged across tests (chi-square = 12.79, p = .002; ordinal model likelihood-ratio chi-square = 14.20, p < .001).

H4 was supported with partial mediation: HOF reduced perceived value (path a = -0.87, p < .001), and perceived value increased odds of higher-tier choice (path b = 0.39, p < .001). The indirect effect was significant (-0.339, 95% CI [-0.56, -0.15]) while the direct path remained weakly significant, indicating both direct and value-mediated pathways.

Synthesis

Discussion

The intervention works behaviorally but introduces an economic trade-off when premium cues are weakened.

Menu order functions as a soft default. HOF can reduce high-calorie intended choices in indulgent buffet formats without banning options. This confirms choice-architecture mechanisms such as primacy and salience ordering.

However, the same intervention can lower perceived value in contexts where diners treat visible meat abundance as the signal of worth. In tiered pricing, that perception channel can reduce premium conversion and pressure revenue-per-guest.

Operations

Managerial Implications

Managers can deploy HOF, but should pair it with premium-value signaling to protect upgrade intent.

  • Deploy HOF in digital and print menus to nudge early selection toward lower-cost, lower-calorie items.
  • Protect perceived value by adding premium-quality cues to healthy items (ingredient quality, craftsmanship, sourcing).
  • For tiered pricing, highlight premium inclusions at every decision step (exclusive seafood/cuts/special stations).
  • Train service staff to verbally reinforce premium station benefits so healthy-first ordering does not read as reduced generosity.

Research Boundaries

Limitations and Future Research

The current findings are decision-intention based and should be validated with operational plate-waste and margin tracking.

  • Sample composition is student-heavy and may over-represent price sensitivity and health salience.
  • Menu choices are simulated intentions; future field experiments should measure real plate waste and return behavior.
  • Study 2 focuses on revenue proxy (tier choice), not contribution margin or profit-based metrics.
  • Future work should test broader demographics, richer menu breadth, and cross-cultural buffet norms.

Documentation

Selected References

Key references used in this research framing and interpretation.

  1. Brunstrom, J. M. (2014). Mind over platter: pre-meal planning and the control of meal size in humans.
  2. Dolnicar, S., Juvan, E., and Grun, B. (2020). Reducing the plate waste of families at hotel buffets.
  3. Juvan, E., Grun, B., and Dolnicar, S. (2017). Biting off more than they can chew: food waste at hotel breakfast buffets.
  4. Kuo, C. and Shih, Y. (2016). Reducing buffet plate waste through behavioral interventions.
  5. Thaler, R. H. and Sunstein, C. R. (2021). Nudge: The final edition.
  6. Wansink, B. and Hanks, A. S. (2013). Serving healthy foods first in buffet lines improves overall meal selection.
  7. Wansink, B. and Love, K. (2014). Menu strategies for promoting high-margin, healthy foods.
  8. Ge, L. et al. (2018). Portion-size reduction and restaurant value perception.
  9. Varian, H. R. (1997). Versioning and self-selection in differentiated pricing.
  10. United Nations Environment Programme (2024). Food Waste Index Report 2024.