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Regret and nonredemption of daily deals: Individual differences and contextual influences
Authors:Angeline C Scheinbaum  Pratik Shah  Monika Kukar-Kinney  Jacob Copple
Institution:1. Department of Marketing, College of Business, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina;2. Stan Richards School of Advertising & Public Relations, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas;3. Department of Marketing, Robins School of Business, University of Richmond, Richmond, Virginia
Abstract:The growth of online daily deal price promotions and the resulting consumer nonredemption of daily deal coupons is worthy of understanding from a psychological lens of nonconsumption. Whereas there is an emerging literature on daily deals and established literature on barriers to redemption, there exists a gap in where this scholarship intersects. This study provides a conceptual model explaining why consumers purchase daily deal coupons and do not redeem them. We explain consumers’ reasons for buying a daily deal upfront along with their reasons for not using it from theoretical lenses of reasons theory and social motivations theory. On testing the model empirically with qualitative and deepening insight via quantitative methods, the findings reveal that reasons for purchasing daily deals are rooted in individual consumer-level factors (i.e., price-consciousness, buying impulsiveness, and susceptibility to interpersonal normative influence). Further, reasons for nonredemption are explained by contextual elements of the daily deal (i.e., offer distinctiveness, the total number of daily deals sold, restrictions on using the deal, and low discount size). Our findings suggest that post-purchase regret ultimately explains a key reason deals go unused. Marketing implications are offered in the areas of characteristics of daily deal offers.
Keywords:multimethod  nonconsumption  online consumer behavior  regret
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