Laddering techniques (means-end-chains) have become popular as a means of understanding consumers' motivations for (food) product choice. Comparisons of the output of interview (soft) laddering (SL, n=49) were made with two forms of questionnaire-based (hard) laddering, pencil-and-paper (PL, n=46) and computerised presentations (CL, n=45). Within the context of mothers choosing breakfast for their children, the aim was to assess whether the form of administration would have a differential effect upon results. The laddering methods produced different results. Hard laddering produced more ladders (CL > PL > SL; p<0.01) when values were excluded whereas SL produced more linkages between levels of abstraction (SL > CL > PL; p<...