Trouble viewing this email? Read it on the Web here.
Get To The Point from MarketingProfs

Who Can Resist a Bargain?

Many marketers believe customers are attracted to discounted prices. Yet this assumption may be wrong. While a lowered price might make people more inclined to buy your product, they may also be less satisfied with their purchase.

Researchers at Stanford, INSEAD and MIT found that consumers who were given an energy drink felt the product was less effective if it was purchased at a discount. Consumers who drank the discounted product felt they that had a less intense workout than those who purchased the drink at its regular price.

When advised that the drink helped improve mental acuity, consumers who were told that the drink was purchased at a discount were able to solve fewer word puzzles than those consumers who used the same product purportedly purchased at the regular price.

Also, consumers exposed to strong advertising claims about the energy drink's effectiveness were able to solve more word puzzles than consumers who received weaker advertising about the product. Your marketing messages, therefore, may impact your product's potency. Advertising claims, even if not based in fact, may become reality to customers.

The Po!nt: Customers may, in fact, get what they pay for. Price drops, and advertising overall, may shape consumers' expectations, making them believe a product is not as effective, and hence lower in quality. 

Source: "Placebo Effects of Marketing Actions: Consumers May Get What They Pay For" by Baba Shiv, Ziv Carmo and Dan Ariely. Journal of Marketing Research, 2005. Click here for a PDF of the report.

Previous Articles

Impose Influence via Sticky Notes
Do Touch the Merchandise
More articles

 

Add a Comment
Share This: http://www.marketingprofs.com/short-articles/227/who-can-resist-a-bargain

Vol. 1, No. 7    February 20, 2008

MarketingProfs, LLC | 5315 B FM 1960 W #191 | Houston TX 77069

This email was sent to (%%email%%). To ensure that you continue receiving our emails,
please add us to your address book or safe list.

manage your preferences | opt out by going here.
Got this as a forward? Sign up to receive our future emails.
Copyright © 2000-2009 MarketingProfs, LLC All Rights Reserved.