Turning unplanned overpayment into a status signal: how mentioning the price paid repairs satisfaction |
| |
Authors: | Aaron M. Garvey Simon J. Blanchard Karen Page Winterich |
| |
Affiliation: | 1.Gatton College of Business and Economics,University of Kentucky,Lexington,USA;2.McDonough School of Business,Georgetown University,Washington,USA;3.Smeal College of Business,The Pennsylvania State University,University Park,USA |
| |
Abstract: | We investigate how mentioning the price paid to others (which we refer to as price-dropping) can be used to assuage the negative experience that occurs when consumers realize they unintentionally overpaid for a product. Specifically, we show that by engaging in price-dropping, consumers re-appropriate the overpayment into a conspicuous consumption signal that improves their satisfaction. Two studies demonstrate that the effect of price-dropping is mitigated when consumers who overpaid have low sensitivity to status cues, and also when the audience of the price-drop is unreceptive to status cues. We discuss how price-dropping has implications for retailer pricing policies and customer experience, along with avenues for future research. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|