6 results on '"hedonic purchase"'
Search Results
2. How Do Price and Quantity Promotions Affect Hedonic Purchases? An ERPs Study
- Author
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Kunpeng Jing, Yupeng Mei, Zhijie Song, Hao Wang, and Rui Shi
- Subjects
price promotion ,quantity promotion ,hedonic purchase ,P2 ,N2 ,LPP ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Due to consuming hedonic products unnecessary to basic well-being, consumers need justifications for pleasure. However, different justifications have differential influences in promoting hedonic purchases, such as price and quantity promotions (PP and QP), the difference being that the latter requires purchasing additional units to get the same discount as the former. In the present study, even-related potentials (ERPs) was applied to reveal the timing of brain activities to further understand how promotion information consisting of promotion type (PP and QP) and discount depth, deep and shallow discounts (DD and SD) on hedonic products was processed. Behaviorally, consumers were more willing to purchase items in PP and DD conditions than QP and SD conditions, respectively, and spent more time making final purchase decisions in QP and DD condition or PP and SD condition compared to PP and DD condition. Neurophysiologically, DD automatically recruited more attentional resources than SD and led to a higher P2 amplitude. QP and DD condition or PP and SD condition evoked a larger N2 amplitude and enhanced perceptual conflict compared to PP and DD condition. During late stage, PP and DD elicited a more positive LPP amplitude in contrast to QP and SD, respectively, indicating that people have stronger purchase intention and positive affect in PP and DD contexts. These findings provided evidence for the differential influences between PP and QP and what ultimately made consumers buy hedonic products or not.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. How Do Price and Quantity Promotions Affect Hedonic Purchases? An ERPs Study.
- Author
-
Jing, Kunpeng, Mei, Yupeng, Song, Zhijie, Wang, Hao, and Shi, Rui
- Subjects
EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,CONSUMER behavior ,BRAIN physiology ,CASH discounts ,NEUROPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Due to consuming hedonic products unnecessary to basic well-being, consumers need justifications for pleasure. However, different justifications have differential influences in promoting hedonic purchases, such as price and quantity promotions (PP and QP), the difference being that the latter requires purchasing additional units to get the same discount as the former. In the present study, even-related potentials (ERPs) was applied to reveal the timing of brain activities to further understand how promotion information consisting of promotion type (PP and QP) and discount depth, deep and shallow discounts (DD and SD) on hedonic products was processed. Behaviorally, consumers were more willing to purchase items in PP and DD conditions than QP and SD conditions, respectively, and spent more time making final purchase decisions in QP and DD condition or PP and SD condition compared to PP and DD condition. Neurophysiologically, DD automatically recruited more attentional resources than SD and led to a higher P2 amplitude. QP and DD condition or PP and SD condition evoked a larger N2 amplitude and enhanced perceptual conflict compared to PP and DD condition. During late stage, PP and DD elicited a more positive LPP amplitude in contrast to QP and SD, respectively, indicating that people have stronger purchase intention and positive affect in PP and DD contexts. These findings provided evidence for the differential influences between PP and QP and what ultimately made consumers buy hedonic products or not. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The different impact of fluency and disfluency on online group-buying conforming behavior.
- Author
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Chang, Chia-Jung
- Subjects
- *
ACQUISITION of property , *CONSUMER attitudes , *ONLINE information services , *GROUP process - Abstract
This study conducted two experiments to examine the moderating impact of processing and retrieval fluency on online group-buying conforming behavior, return tendency and, in particular, conformity towards hedonic and utilitarian products. Experiments 1-1, 1–2, and 2 showed that consumers exhibited more online group-buying conforming behavior under processing or retrieval fluency conditions than under disfluency conditions. The results also revealed that the positive impact of disfluency might eliminate the return tendency towards online group-buying conforming behavior. Finally, fluency produced more online group-buying conforming behavior when consumers purchased hedonic products than when they purchased utilitarian goods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. How Do Price and Quantity Promotions Affect Hedonic Purchases? An ERPs Study
- Author
-
Yupeng Mei, Kunpeng Jing, Hao Wang, Rui Shi, and Zhijie Song
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,LPP ,price promotion ,Affect (psychology) ,Pleasure ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Promotion (rank) ,Perception ,0502 economics and business ,Statistics ,Price promotion ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Original Research ,media_common ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Late stage ,Contrast (statistics) ,N2 ,Purchasing ,P2 ,hedonic purchase ,050211 marketing ,quantity promotion ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Due to consuming hedonic products unnecessary to basic well-being, consumers need justifications for pleasure. However, different justifications have differential influences in promoting hedonic purchases, such as price and quantity promotions (PP and QP), the difference being that the latter requires purchasing additional units to get the same discount as the former. In the present study, even-related potentials (ERPs) was applied to reveal the timing of brain activities to further understand how promotion information consisting of promotion type (PP and QP) and discount depth, deep and shallow discounts (DD and SD) on hedonic products was processed. Behaviorally, consumers were more willing to purchase items in PP and DD conditions than QP and SD conditions, respectively, and spent more time making final purchase decisions in QP and DD condition or PP and SD condition compared to PP and DD condition. Neurophysiologically, DD automatically recruited more attentional resources than SD and led to a higher P2 amplitude. QP and DD condition or PP and SD condition evoked a larger N2 amplitude and enhanced perceptual conflict compared to PP and DD condition. During late stage, PP and DD elicited a more positive LPP amplitude in contrast to QP and SD, respectively, indicating that people have stronger purchase intention and positive affect in PP and DD contexts. These findings provided evidence for the differential influences between PP and QP and what ultimately made consumers buy hedonic products or not.
- Published
- 2019
6. How Do Consumers Overcome Ambivalence toward Hedonic Purchases? A Typology of Consumer Strategies
- Author
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Dubois, Bernard, Czellar, Sandor, Laurent, Gilles, Raigner, Michèle, HEC Paris - Recherche - Hors Laboratoire, Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales (HEC Paris), and Haldemann, Antoine
- Subjects
hedonic purchase ,[SHS.GESTION.MARK]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration/domain_shs.gestion.mark ,[SHS.GESTION.MARK] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration/domain_shs.gestion.mark ,consumer behavior ,consumer strategies ,consumer ,jel:D12 - Abstract
Cahier de Recherche du Groupe HEC Paris, n° 819/2005; Purchase decisions for hedonic products and services are often characterized by ambivalence -sensory benefits make them attractive, but consumers may feel guilty about bying them. To overcome this ambivalence, consumers frequently adopt strategies that allow them to enloy hedonic benefits while limiting their negative feelings. Combining an extensive literature review with an interpretive study, the authors identify 23 consumer strategies and propose a typology in four groups on the basis of strategy antecedents: two groups of objective strategies (obtaining consumption benefits without purchasing, objectively contining purchasing costs) and two groups of subjective strategies (manipulating the mental accounting of costs and benefits, relinquishing responsability).
- Published
- 2005
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