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The Consumption Experience. MAR 3503 March 15, 2012. The paradox of choice. Our options are ever increasing In products: 19 different kinds of Hershey ’ s Kisses have been on the market; 24 kinds of Oreos
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The Consumption Experience MAR 3503 March 15, 2012
The paradox of choice • Our options are ever increasing • In products: 19 different kinds of Hershey’s Kisses have been on the market; 24 kinds of Oreos • In careers: College education allows people to consider careers inaccessible 30 years ago • In love: Relationships that aren’t given a second thought today would have been unthinkable to our grandparents
Is choice a good thing? • When asked, people believe that more options is better • Free society implies the freedom to choose • Everything in life is a choice • Some choices are ingrained and so no longer seem to be a choice • Some seem to be unimportant or irrelevant • These choices are implicit and psychologically unreal
Is choice a good thing? • Implicit choices make our lives easier—can you imagine explicitly making every choice we encounter during the day? • The increase in number of choices is turning some formerly implicit choices into explicit and burdensome ones • Each individual choice is not bad—it is the cumulative effect that leads to problems • Some argue we are trapped in “the tyranny of small decisions”
Is choice a good thing? • Even big choices are often threatening or burdensome • 65% of people say they would like to choose the course of cancer treatment before they are diagnosed, but only 12% wish to choose after diagnosis • As the number of mutual funds in a 401(k) plan goes up, the rate of participation goes down, even when employers match funds • 10 more mutual funds = 2% less participation
Number of options • Alternatives • While it seems like choosing from a larger array of choices should lead to better decisions, it appears that choosing from smaller arrays actually leaves people happier with their choice • For example, a study done at Stanford showed that people who taste 6 different jams are happier with their favorite flavor of jam and are more likely to buy that type of jam or any jam than those who taste 24 different jams • People are happier and actually write better papers when they are given a small number of topics to choose from than a large number • People are happier with a chocolate when they choose it from an array of 6 chocolates than when they choose from an array of 30
Number of options • It appears that a larger number of alternatives leads to more regret with the final choice • The quality of the top two or three options can be much closer than in a smaller array • “Out of 24 jams, there must have been one at least equally as good as the one I chose.” • The options you did not choose are much more salient yet less distinguishable when the array is larger • The pressure to make a good choice is also greater with a large choice set
Adaptation • As have seen, people inevitably adapt to their experiences over time • Sensory experiences • Personal experiences • States of being • But you can reduce how much adaptation occurs or has an impact on your experience
Stupid commercials! • People believe that commercials make you enjoy a TV show less • Half predicted how they would enjoy a TV show with or without them, half actually experienced it and reported how they feel • Half watched a TV show with commercials, half watched the same show without them • Measured actual enjoyment or predicted enjoyment
Commercials help! Nelson, Meyvis, & Galak, 2009
Remembering variety Participants enjoy the jelly beans more when they remembered a variety of other jelly beans. Remembering variety seems to reduce even physiological satiation. Galak, Redden, & Kruger, 2009
Imagined satiety Morewedge, Huh, & Vosgerau, 2010
Beer preferences Lee, Frederick, & Ariely, 2006
Names matter • Asiago Roast Beef Panini • Early Spring Market Vegetables • New York Style Cheesecake • Refreshing White Grape Spritzer • Roast Beef Sandwich • Vegetable Medley • Cheesecake • White Grape Juice
More expensive pain meds work better • Placebo effects are well-known • Money can be a placebo, too • People feel more relief from seasonal colds when they use name-brand medicines than when they use discounted ones • Almost all participants feel pain relief from a “pain-relief medicine” that costs $2.50 a dose, but only half do from a pill that costs $.10 a dose • Participants who drink a full-price SoBe drink are able to solve more anagrams than participants who drink a discounted SoBe • This is especially true when the drink’s “brain-boosting” properties were emphasized
Were you right? Normal pace Slow pace Morewedge et al., 2010
Summary • Experience is not absolute • The same product can lead to different psychological and physiological reactions • We enjoy things for reasons we may not anticipate • Many seeming or normatively irrelevant factors influence our enjoyment of the things we consume • Other options • A product’s name • A product’s price • How sated we are
Next time… • What happens after we make a choice?