Title: The IKEA effect: Why labor leads to love
1(No Transcript)
2Discount Clubs and Membership Fees, or Why We
Buy 100 Pounds of Spaghetti
- Michael Norton
- Harvard Business School
- Leonard Lee
- Columbia Business School
3A trip to Costco
Eggs Paper Towels Bread Toilet
Paper Toothpaste Aspirin
Portable Air Conditioner 8 Bottles of Wine New
Sheets 10 pounds of venison New Bath Towels 100
pounds of pasta
What You Actually Buy
What You Intend to Buy
- Eggs
- Paper Towels
- Bread
- Toilet Paper
- Toothpaste
- Aspirin
Or in my fathers case
4Discount Clubs
- Large and growing presence
- One recent survey reported that Costco sells to 1
in every 11 people in the United States and
Canada (Spector, 2005) - Estimated to be a 110 billion industry
5Why do they work?
- Rational
- Volume discounts
- Irrational
- 100 pounds of pasta
- Purchasing behavior over and above any real
savings - Fees?
6Why do they work?
- Why might fees decrease profits?
- Deterrent from entering the store
- Why might fees increase profits?
- Price Perceptions
- Implicit contracts between store and consumer
- Price increases acceptable when firm incurs more
costs (Bolton Alba, 2006) - Membership fees signal deeper discounts?
7Overview
- Impact of fees on
- Consumer Behavior
- Willingness to Pay Fees
- Subsequent Spending
- Price Perception
- Company profits
- Four Studies
- Study 1 Predictions about Fees
- Study 2 Fees and Real Spending
- Studies 3A, 3B, 4 Fees and Price Perception
- Study 5 Fees and Choice of Retailers
8Our Store
6 of each item
9Manipulation (between-subjects)
- No Fee
- As experimenters, we frequently buy a variety of
products and items that we use as experimental
stimuli or prizes, and we would like to make some
of these items available to our participants for
purchase. - Fee
- To make this program available to our
participants on a continual basis, we would like
to request that you pay a fee of 0.50 to enter
the store.
10Study 1 Predictions
Would you buy something? If yes, how much
would you spend?
N 76
11The Store
6 of each item
12Study 2 Behavior
N 80
13Studies 1 and 2
- People predict twice as much value for no fee
- In reality, three times as much value for fees
14Studies 3A and 3B Price Perceptions
- Study 3A
- Which has lower prices?
- Study 3B
- What price?
p
ps
15Study 4 The Whole Picture
- Replication of Study 2 real buying
- Assessed price perceptions (5-point scale)
N 78
16Study 5 Retailer Choice
- In Study 1, consumers predicted fees would
dissuade them from entering stores - Can the presence of fees lead consumers to choose
one retailer over another? - Even given the same amount of savings?
17Newspaper Circulars
Manipulate which store charges fee
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20Study 5 Retailer Choice
- Will consumers realize their mistake?
- Cant compare different sizes
- Wont compare stuck with membership fee
- Sunk costs (Arkes Blumer, 1985 Staw, 1981
Thaler, 1980)
21Summary
- Despite predictions to the contrary, fees (at
least small fees) can lead to greater spending - Related to perceptions of lower prices
- For the same products
- Can lead to choice of merchant, based on illusion
of better deals
22Fees and Visibility
- Companies that charge fees for services
- Motivated to have consumers pay fee and never
show up - Increased usage when aware of fees (Gourville,
Soman) - Implication Hide fees
23Fees and Visibility
- Companies that charge fees for products (Costco)
- Motivated to have consumers pay fee and
frequently show up - Our results Fees spur spending
- Implication Constant reminders of fees?
24What is the right fee to charge?
- May be a curvilinear relationship between fee and
price perceptions - When fees are low ? too good to be true
- 10 CDs for .01
- When fees occupy a middle ground ? low price
perceptions - Our studies, Costco, Sams Club
- When fees are high ? quality/exclusivity
perception - Country clubs
25Next
- Manipulate visibility and fee level
- In the field
- Local video rental retailer
- vs. Netflix and Blockbuster
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28Can Fees Bias Memory?
- Fees lead to greater usage of services (Soman,
Gourville) - Might they lead to the belief that one has used
services more in the past? - Back to service providers
- Gym
- Reminder/no reminder
29Memory - Gym
F(1, 192) 4.93, p
30Memory - Gym
Interaction F(1, 192) 4.16, p