How are Purchasing Decisions Impacted by the Compromise Effect?
The compromise effect can be observed in the consumer’s tendency to avoid extreme ends of the available range when making purchasing decisions. In this video, MARKO SARSTEDT investigates the origins of the compromise effect. Describing an experiment that interrogates the effects of a lowering of cognitive capability on purchasing decisions, Sarstedt argues that rather than involving fast or intuitive decision making, the compromise effect is grounded in deliberate and demanding thought processes. The research provides a platform for further work examining the links between other effects (e.g. the attraction effect, the phantom decoy effect) and cognitive depletion.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21036/LTPUB10639Ludwig Maximilian University Munich (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München)
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Original Publication
The Influence of Serotonin Deficiency on Choice Deferral and the Compromise Effect
Marcel Lichters
,Claudia Brunnlieb
,Gideon Nave
,Marko Sarstedt
,Bodo Vogt
Published in 2015