The effectiveness of life-cycle pricing for consumer durables
This quasi-experimental study examines consumer
reactions to including projected energy and carbon costs in print ads for a TV,
using an online survey of 2566 Australian consumers. This study determines
whether consumers' temporal orientation (past vs. future) moderates these
reactions. Participants rate ads that include both energy and carbon costs as
the most useful for buying a TV and as having higher perceived value. However,
this fact does not affect likelihood of purchase. Participants with a high
temporal orientation to the past react less favorably to ads that include
carbon costs. This study shows that informing consumers about life-cycle costs
does not substantially affect purchase decisions for durable goods but affects
perceptions of value and usefulness of pricing information in ads.
No comments:
Post a Comment