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Instinctive Decisions Turn Out to Be the Best While Buying a Product

by Savitha C Muppala on Jan 28 2009 5:19 PM

A new study has rated the accuracy of instinctive decisions over decisions based on deliberation, while buying a product.

According to the researchers from Northwestern University and Radboud University, The Netherlands, the researchers found that better judgments can often be made without deliberation.

"Whether evaluating abstract objects (Chinese ideograms) or actual consumer items (paintings, apartments, and jellybeans), people who deliberated on their preferences were less consistent than those who made non-deliberative judgments," wrote the authors.

In the first study, participants rated Chinese ideograms for attractiveness.

In a following study, participants were asked to judge paintings that were widely considered high- or low-quality. Subsequent groups of participants rated jellybeans and apartments.

In all the studies, some participants were encouraged to deliberate and others to go with their gut. They found that the more complex the decision, the less useful deliberation became.

For instance, when participants rated apartments on just three primary characteristics (location, price, and size) deliberation proved useful.

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However, when the decision became more complex (with nine characteristics) the participants who deliberated made worse decisions.

The authors believe this study has implications to the marketplace.

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"If deliberative attention naturally gravitates toward highly salient or novel aspects of an object, marketers might use a deliberative mindset to focus consumers' attention toward particular aspects," said the authors.

"For example, if a car boasts one particularly good feature (for example, safety) but has a number of other negative features (for example, expensive, bad gas mileage, poor handling), a car salesman might encourage a potential car buyer to deliberate over the pros and cons of the car, while at the same time emphasizing the importance of safety.

"In this way, the disturbed weighting of attributes created by deliberation might be used to highlight the one sellable feature and draw attention away from the unattractive features," the authors added.

The study appears in Journal of Consumer Research.

Source-ANI
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