People’s perceptions of technology and food are always changing, and recent data from Pairwise research shows a major shift in American shoppers’ attitudes about the use of technology to develop new produce varieties.
In a quantitative study with 511 U.S. shoppers fielded this March, Pairwise saw a dramatic increase in just over three years in the number of American consumers who either agree or strongly agree that “using technology to create new fruits and vegetables is a great sign of progress.”
Source: Pairwise Quantitative Surveys, N=315 (2019); N=511 (2023)
At Pairwise, we monitor consumer attitudes about the technology used to grow, process, and deliver the foods that they choose to eat. Consumer perceptions can vary based on demographics, such as age or level of educational attainment, or on psychographics, such as openness to new foods or the desire to influence others in one’s network or community.
What drove this shift? Two key factors have emerged:
These evolving perceptions signal a paradigm shift for technology-enabled foods, and the companies that deliver innovative products that meet consumer needs, like flavor and convenience, stand to win with consumers.