Despite growing public awareness of animal welfare, environmental sustainability, and health-related concerns associated with conventional consumption systems, the adoption of vegan products remains inconsistent and often short-lived. While ethical agreement has entered mainstream discourse, it has not reliably translated into sustained everyday consumption behavior. This white paper argues that the primary barrier to vegan adoption is not the absence of ethical concern, but the failure to translate ethics into feasible, repeatable daily practices. The paper introduces a readiness-based market segmentation that moves beyond the vegan versus non-vegan binary, distinguishing between veganism as an ethical orientation, plant-based living as its practical expression, and “veganish” behavior as a legitimate transitional state. It further develops the Ethics-to-Everyday (E2E) Adoption Framework, integrating consumer readiness, product category dynamics, social media pathways, and ethical framing intensity. Drawing on consumer behavior theory, ethical philosophy, and platform dynamics, the framework explains how ethical meaning moves from awareness to habit formation. The paper concludes with practical implications for industry, policy, and society, emphasizing ethics as direction rather than demand. By aligning ethical intent with everyday constraints, the paper positions vegan adoption as a scalable, socially embedded process rather than a purity-based outcome.
Mohite et al. (Tue,) studied this question.