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Consumer responses to offline and online low price signals: The role of cognitive elaboration
Authors:Sujay Dutta  Sandeep Bhowmick
Institution:a Business Department, School of Business Administration, Wayne State University, 5201 Cass Avenue, Detroit, MI 48202, United States
b Department of Marketing, E.J. Ourso College of Business, Louisiana State University, 3124 A, P.F. Taylor Building, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, United States
Abstract:Low price signals (LPS), pricing tools where retailers promise to match or beat competitors' prices, have been increasingly popular in offline and online markets. We compare consumer evaluation of offline and online LPS as a function of how deeply they process the signals. Results of an experiment indicate that regardless of retail media consumers accept an LPS as an indicator of low price when they do not elaborate sufficiently on the signal. However, at high levels of elaboration, consumers challenge the assumptions underlying their acceptance of the signal at lower levels of elaboration whereby they become more skeptical of an online signal than an offline signal resulting in lower efficacy of the former. Implications of these findings for consumer vulnerability to false low price signaling are discussed along with other theoretical and managerial implications. Additionally, directions for future research are provided.
Keywords:Low price signal  Low Price Guarantee  Price-matching guarantee  Signaling  Cognitive elaboration
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