I guess that is fair: How the efforts of other customers influence buyer price fairness perceptions

Past research has demonstrated that consumers' price fairness judgments are influenced by comparisons between the offer price they receive and the prices paid by other consumers for the same product offering. In today's digital age, reference points for purchases are more prevalent than ev...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychology & marketing 2019-07, Vol.36 (7), p.700-715
Hauptverfasser: Lastner, Matthew M., Fennell, Patrick, Folse, Judith A. G., Rice, Dan H., Porter, McDowell
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container_end_page 715
container_issue 7
container_start_page 700
container_title Psychology & marketing
container_volume 36
creator Lastner, Matthew M.
Fennell, Patrick
Folse, Judith A. G.
Rice, Dan H.
Porter, McDowell
description Past research has demonstrated that consumers' price fairness judgments are influenced by comparisons between the offer price they receive and the prices paid by other consumers for the same product offering. In today's digital age, reference points for purchases are more prevalent than ever. However, investigations on how certain inputs of the transaction affect these judgments is lacking. Specifically, extant research has failed to account for how the purchase efforts of other consumers can influence one's own price fairness evaluations. Moreover, relatively little empirical research has endeavored to understand the simultaneous cognitive and affective processes that explain how consumers arrive at price fairness judgments. To address these gaps in the literature, we introduce two studies aimed at understanding the process through which the salient efforts of referent consumers serve to mitigate perceptions of price unfairness when two customers pay different prices for the same product. The findings support a dual‐process model whereby the efforts of other (referent) customers serve to simultaneously reduce buyer anger and increase buyer understanding of the price disparity, ultimately mitigating perceptions of price unfairness.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/mar.21206
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Business Source Complete
subjects anger
Consumer behavior
deservingness
effort
equity theory
Perceptions
price fairness
Price levels
Psychological aspects
social comparison theory
title I guess that is fair: How the efforts of other customers influence buyer price fairness perceptions
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