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Purchasing products that consumers have not used before (e.g., baby stroller for first time parents or a new product like an iPad) can be a challenge for consumers. In this article, the authors examine how mentally simulating two specific aspects of a product - the product usage process vs. the...
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In this research, the authors examine the impact of imagination-focused visualization on the evaluation of really new products (RNPs) - that is, products that provide novel benefits but involve high learning costs. They compare imagination-focused visualization with memory-focused visualization...
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This research examines the role of imagination difficulty on the evaluation of really new products (RNPs) in comparison to incrementally new products (INPs). We extend past research on accessibility utilizing an anticipatory approach where consumers look forward and generate mental images for...
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In this research we examine the role of process vs. outcome-focused mental simulation in new product evaluation. We first show that consumers naturally focus on product benefits when they evaluate incrementally new products (INPs), but have a more balanced focus on both the benefits and process...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014042941
Research on choice over time has found that people tend to focus on concrete aspects of near-future events and abstract aspects of distantfuture events. Furthermore, a focus on concrete aspects heightens the feasibility-related components, whereas a focus on abstract aspects heightens the...
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