A Conceptual replication of the differential price framing effect in the field

Across a series of 10 laboratory and online studies, Allard, Hardisty, and Griffin (2019) demonstrated an increased preference for premium, higher-priced products over standard products when consumers were presented with the additional cost of the higher-priced option (i.e., differential price frami...

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Veröffentlicht in:Marketing letters 2024-03, Vol.35 (1), p.159-170
Hauptverfasser: Köcher, Sören, Husemann-Kopetzky, Markus, Schirmbeck, Marie, Hess, Melina, Gmeindl, Fabian, Hess, Samuel
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Across a series of 10 laboratory and online studies, Allard, Hardisty, and Griffin (2019) demonstrated an increased preference for premium, higher-priced products over standard products when consumers were presented with the additional cost of the higher-priced option (i.e., differential price framing; e.g., “for $20 more”) rather than with its total price (i.e., inclusive price framing; e.g., “for $60 total”); a phenomenon referred to as the differential price framing effect. In this paper, we conceptually replicate this effect in a field experiment that focuses on the application of a differential price framing strategy to a specific product format; namely, multipacks of identical products. Consistent with the differential price framing effect, the present study shows—based on 45,626 add-to-cart events and 30,426 completed product purchases on an online retailer’s website—that the choice shares of higher-priced options increase when a differential price framing strategy is used. However, compared to non-consequential add-to-cart activities, this bias is considerably less pronounced in actual purchase patterns.
ISSN:0923-0645
1573-059X
DOI:10.1007/s11002-023-09690-7