‘Planet placement’. How stories influence consumer behaviour
‘Planet placement’. How stories influence consumer behaviour
Studies on sustainable consumption consistently report an attitude-behaviour gap, with social norms and self-efficacy/agency having greater influence on behaviour. In this paper, I propose that cultural norms emerge via fictional characters and stories as much as by formal communications. A study I undertook with Bafta, called #ClimateCharacters, compared fictional characters’ carbon footprints in a humorous way. For example, James Bond, with his single use sports car and walk-in wardrobe of luxury suits, contrasts with Jack Reacher, who travels by bus and only buys second-hand clothes. Five similar examples were shared via social media with accompanying images and linked to a survey on whether respondents believed fictional characters affected consumption habits. Results (n=100) found that half believed they affected them or believed they would affect others. I also present results from a survey of 50 readers one month after reading Habitat Man. This is an eco-themed rom-com about a green garden consultant who helps clients to make their gardens wildlife-friendly. In the process, he falls in love and digs up a body. Similar to product placement, the novel ‘planet places’ sustainable practices throughout. For example, the body in the garden leads to a natural burial scene. The character car shares and cycles, and a secondary character invents a ‘random recipe generator’ using seasonal food and a joker ingredient such as nettles or insects. 98% of readers reported a change in attitudes and 60% adopted at least one green alternative as a result of reading the book. Common examples were nature-friendly gardening, home-composting etc. but several also said they’d changed their will to specify a natural burial.
Results are explained by reference to role modelling and narrative transportation whereby readers internalise the values of characters they identify with, and implications for sustainable marketing discussed.
Cultivation theory, role models,, pro-environmental behavior, fictional characters, social learning, storytelling
Baden, Denise
daad83b9-c537-4d3c-bab6-548b841f23b5
12 September 2025
Baden, Denise
daad83b9-c537-4d3c-bab6-548b841f23b5
Baden, Denise
(2025)
‘Planet placement’. How stories influence consumer behaviour.
International Conference on Social Responsibility, Ethics and Sustainable Business, , Alicante, Spain.
11 - 12 Sep 2025.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
Studies on sustainable consumption consistently report an attitude-behaviour gap, with social norms and self-efficacy/agency having greater influence on behaviour. In this paper, I propose that cultural norms emerge via fictional characters and stories as much as by formal communications. A study I undertook with Bafta, called #ClimateCharacters, compared fictional characters’ carbon footprints in a humorous way. For example, James Bond, with his single use sports car and walk-in wardrobe of luxury suits, contrasts with Jack Reacher, who travels by bus and only buys second-hand clothes. Five similar examples were shared via social media with accompanying images and linked to a survey on whether respondents believed fictional characters affected consumption habits. Results (n=100) found that half believed they affected them or believed they would affect others. I also present results from a survey of 50 readers one month after reading Habitat Man. This is an eco-themed rom-com about a green garden consultant who helps clients to make their gardens wildlife-friendly. In the process, he falls in love and digs up a body. Similar to product placement, the novel ‘planet places’ sustainable practices throughout. For example, the body in the garden leads to a natural burial scene. The character car shares and cycles, and a secondary character invents a ‘random recipe generator’ using seasonal food and a joker ingredient such as nettles or insects. 98% of readers reported a change in attitudes and 60% adopted at least one green alternative as a result of reading the book. Common examples were nature-friendly gardening, home-composting etc. but several also said they’d changed their will to specify a natural burial.
Results are explained by reference to role modelling and narrative transportation whereby readers internalise the values of characters they identify with, and implications for sustainable marketing discussed.
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Published date: 12 September 2025
Venue - Dates:
International Conference on Social Responsibility, Ethics and Sustainable Business, , Alicante, Spain, 2025-09-11 - 2025-09-12
Keywords:
Cultivation theory, role models,, pro-environmental behavior, fictional characters, social learning, storytelling
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Local EPrints ID: 506965
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506965
PURE UUID: 87a247ee-7243-406d-b06d-d71eb076d629
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Date deposited: 24 Nov 2025 17:43
Last modified: 25 Nov 2025 02:36
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