Perceived product creativity and mental contrasting: Desired future on consumers’ product replacement decisions
Published online on September 27, 2018
Abstract
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- "\nAbstract\nConsumers often imagine what it would be like to own a new product.
Does engaging in such thoughts on desired future impact consumers’ purchase intentions,
and if so, what is the underlying process? This study sets out to investigate the
posed questions by assessing self‐regulatory strategies consumers employ upon pondering
on a desired future. Based on Oettingen’s fantasy realization model, the authors
take a comparative approach of two modes on desired future—mental contrasting and
\nindulging—en route to purchase intentions. In mental contrasting, an individual
juxtaposes a desired future with his/her present reality, whereas, indulging is
simply envisioning a desired future. Contingent upon the perceived likelihood of
fantasy realization, consumers in the mental‐contrasting condition adjust their
level—that is, high (low) for high (low) feasibility case—in goal commitment as
well as in energization to achieve the desired future. In contrast, consumers in
the indulging condition engage in moderate level of goal commitment—irrespective
of the likelihood of fantasy realization. In a series of experiments, this study
scrutinizes the fantasy realization model in context of attribute alignability/nonalignability,
uncertainty in attribute meaningfulness and novelty, technological and psychological
obsolescence en route to affecting the consumers’ product purchase/upgrade intentions.
Conceptually, this study is the first to adapt the fantasy realization model to
the marketing context, and the authors provide managerial implications of their
key findings.\n"
- Psychology & Marketing, EarlyView.