Does a Low Price Mean Good Value or Bad Quality?

Some shoppers may perceive products with a low price as a good deal while others deem a bargain as cheap quality.

According to a study in the Journal of Consumer Research, UC marketing Professor Frank Kardes explains this shopper’s dilemma by exploring what he and his co-authors refer to as “naïve theory,” a belief that consumers make product inferences by filling in knowledge gaps with their own theories to help them decide whether a cut-rate product is cheap or a deal.

Kardes, the Donald E. Weston professor of marketing in the Carl H. Lindner College of Business, along with Helene Deval, PhD ‘10, assistant professor of marketing at Dalhousie University, and Susan Powell Mantel, PhD ‘94, associate professor of marketing at Ball State University, and Steven S. Posavac, professor of marketing at Vanderbilt University, wrote “How Naïve Theories Drive Opposing Inferences from the Same Information.”

Kardes’ research was featured in a November 14, 2012 Time article that describes how consumers arrive at buying decisions. Researchers conducted eight experiments that showed, depending upon a consumer’s frame of mind, how varied information used to fill in knowledge gaps does affect how price is perceived and whether we decide to buy.

The research was also highlighted in an October 24, 2012 article on

Wine-Searcher. Com

that established price matters, as consumers equate higher wine prices with better quality.

Read the

full story

at Time.

Related Stories

1

Cincinnati’s data science community makes interdisciplinary...

May 7, 2024

The University of Cincinnati Center for Business Analytics held its 12th annual Analytics Summit on April 30. More than 200 attendees convened at the Sharonville Convention Center eager to dive into this year’s theme: real-world applications of business analytics.

Debug Query for this