Ayuda
Ir al contenido

Dialnet


Sustainable, hedonic and efficient: : interaction effects between product properties and consumer reviews on post-experience responses

  • Autores: Marie-Cécile. Cervellon, Lindsey I Carey
  • Localización: European Journal of Marketing, ISSN-e 1758-7123, Vol. 48, Nº. 7-8, 2014, págs. 11-12
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Purpose - This paper investigates the influence of consumer reviews on the evaluation, post-experience, of products with a combination of sustainable, hedonic and utilitarian properties.

      Design/methodology/approach - In the first instance, consumer reviews for organic and non organic cosmetics posted on the French website beauté-test.com were analyzed. Secondly, a full factorial 2 product types (organic, non organic) X 3 reviews (positive, negative, no reviews) experiment was conducted. Sixty French women tested a beauty product and evaluated it on hedonic and utilitarian (ambiguous and non ambiguous) properties. In a second experiment, 132 English-speaking students evaluated an herbal tea at home, along a full factorial 2 product types (fair-trade, non fair-trade) X 3 product properties (hedonic, utilitarian ambiguous, utilitarian non ambiguous) X 2 reviews (negative review, no review) between-subject design.

      Findings - First, consumers are significantly less influenced by reviews for hedonic products compared to utilitarian products. In particular, they rely on reviews when evaluating utilitarian ambiguous properties (eg. anti-aging properties) which they find difficult to judge on their own. Second, consumers are more resistant to the persuasive effect of reviews when the product focus is on sustainable (organic or fair-trade) credentials, in particular when judging ambiguous properties.

      Originality/value - This paper explores a topic neglected in the literature so far: the moderating role of product properties, sustainability in particular, on consumers� responses to persuasion, consumer reviews in the context of this paper. Its originality lies in the demonstration that consumers learn through product testing for hedonic and utilitarian unambiguous product properties and through consumer reviews for utilitarian ambiguous product properties. Additionally, it highlights the resistance of sustainable products (organic and fair-trade in this research) to negative product reviews.


Fundación Dialnet

Dialnet Plus

  • Más información sobre Dialnet Plus

Opciones de compartir

Opciones de entorno