It is consumers’ perceived power (i.e. sense of power), and not their objective power, that directly triggers psychological and behavioral consequences. Across three experiments, by employing different types of experimental designs and instantiating sense of power in participants through conceptual/mindset priming techniques, I examine how power affects consumers in attitude updating, in evaluating information prior to a decision, and in their consumption tendencies. Specifically, high-power subjects are shown to revise more their attitude after a counterattitudinal task, to have lower levels of predecisional distortion of information concerning two travel destinations, and to be more prone to choose a product to self-assemble. The empirical insights gained through this investigation urge marketers and practitioners to target powerful consumers and market influentials or to directly empowers consumers, in order to facilitate word-of-mouth and referrals, to assess unbiased consumers’ preferences, to push self-production practices, customerization, and, ultimately, to effectively pursue value-based differentiation. [edited by Author]
How sense of power shapes consumers’ evaluative judgements and decisions / Domenico Sardanelli , 2019 Jun 06., Anno Accademico 2017 - 2018. [10.14273/unisa-2450].
How sense of power shapes consumers’ evaluative judgements and decisions
Sardanelli, Domenico
2019
Abstract
It is consumers’ perceived power (i.e. sense of power), and not their objective power, that directly triggers psychological and behavioral consequences. Across three experiments, by employing different types of experimental designs and instantiating sense of power in participants through conceptual/mindset priming techniques, I examine how power affects consumers in attitude updating, in evaluating information prior to a decision, and in their consumption tendencies. Specifically, high-power subjects are shown to revise more their attitude after a counterattitudinal task, to have lower levels of predecisional distortion of information concerning two travel destinations, and to be more prone to choose a product to self-assemble. The empirical insights gained through this investigation urge marketers and practitioners to target powerful consumers and market influentials or to directly empowers consumers, in order to facilitate word-of-mouth and referrals, to assess unbiased consumers’ preferences, to push self-production practices, customerization, and, ultimately, to effectively pursue value-based differentiation. [edited by Author]I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


