PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Buyer backlash: Why do slogans about saving money increase spending?

2010-09-21
(Press-News.org) A new study in the Journal of Consumer Research reveals a strange facet of consumer behavior: people behave differently when they encounter companies' brands than they do when they encounter their slogans.

"Exposure to the retailer brand name Walmart, typically associated with saving money, reduces subsequent spending, whereas exposure to the Walmart slogan, (Save money. Live better.) increases spending," write authors Juliano Laran (University of Miami), Amy N. Dalton (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), and Eduardo B. Andrade (University of California, Berkeley).

It's not just Walmart that produces this curious reverse effect. In one study, researchers told participants they would be participating in a recall task. Half of the participants were exposed to several names of retailers associated with saving money: Walmart, Sears, Home Depot, Ross, and Dollar General. The other participants were exposed to the corresponding slogans of the same retailers—for example, "The Good Life at a Great Price. Guaranteed" (Sears). The task was aimed at priming the brand names or slogans without participants' awareness.

In a second task, participants were asked to imagine they were shopping in a mall and to indicate how much they were willing to spend during their shopping trip. "While participants that had been exposed to the 'saving' brands were willing to spend $94 on average, participants that had been exposed to the 'saving' slogans were willing to spend $184 on average," the authors write. "Therefore, the brands associated with saving money led participants to save money, whereas the slogans associated with saving money led to a behavioral backlash and more spending."

In another study, consumers who were subliminally exposed to the word "slogan" wanted to spend more when exposed to a savings message and less when exposed to a sentence that encouraged luxury spending.

"Companies may be trying to attract customers with slogans associated with saving money, but in fact, this strategy may make consumers spend more money than they would if they had not been exposed to the slogans," the authors conclude.

### Juliano Laran, Amy N. Dalton, and Eduardo B. Andrade. "The Curious Case of Behavior Backlash: Why Brands Produce Priming Effects and Slogans Produce Reverse Priming Effects." Journal of Consumer Research: April 2011 (officially published online September 10, 2010).


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Money, drugs and chicken feet? What consumers will do for social acceptance

2010-09-21
People who feel excluded will go to any length to try to become part of a group, even if it involves spending large sums of cash, eating something dicey, or doing illicit drugs, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. "Social exclusion prompts people to use money and consumption in the service of affiliation," write authors Nicole L. Mead (Tilburg University), Roy F. Baumeister (Florida State University), Tyler F. Stillman (Southern Utah University), Catherine D. Rawn (University of British Columbia), and Kathleen D. Vohs (University of Minnesota). "An ...

Hard-wired for chocolate and hybrid cars? How genetics affect consumer choice

2010-09-21
Clues to consumer behavior may be lurking our genes, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. "We examine a wide range of consumer judgment and decision-making phenomenon and discover that many—though not all of them—are in fact heritable or influenced by genetic factors," write authors Itamar Simonson (Stanford University) and Aner Sela (University of Florida, Gainesville). The authors studied twins' consumer preferences to determine whether or not certain behaviors or traits have a genetic basis. "A greater similarity in behavior or trait between ...

Consumers willing to pay more for locally grown apples

2010-09-21
BURLINGTON, VT—A 2008 study found that organic apples represented 4.6% of total apple sales in the United States, up from 3.5% in 2007. In Vermont, apples have been the most important fruit crop for many years, playing an important role in the state's economy—so important, in fact, that apples were named the state's official fruit in 1999. Vermont apple growers, facing a host of challenges such as increasing production costs and intensifying competition from imported apples, are looking for ways to succeed in the emerging organic food market. Qingbin Wang and Robert Parsons ...

New study indicates higher than predicted human exposure to the toxic chemical bisphenol A or BPA

2010-09-21
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Researchers have discovered that women, female monkeys and female mice have major similarities when it comes to how bisphenol A (BPA) is metabolized, and they have renewed their call for governmental regulation when it comes to the estrogen-like chemical found in many everyday products. A study published online in the Sept. 20 NIH journal Environmental Health Perspectives ties rodent data on the health effects of BPA to predictions of human health effects from BPA with the use of everyday household products. The study was authored by researchers at the ...

Investigational eye treatment: Corneal collagen crosslinking research study

2010-09-21
Teaneck, NJ – The Cornea and Laser Eye Institute, with Principal Investigator, Peter S. Hersh M.D., is conducting a research study to study the safety and effectiveness of corneal collagen crosslinking (CXL) using Riboflavin/Dextran and Hypotonic Riboflavin in patients with progressive keratoconus and corneal ectasia. Keratoconus is a disease of the cornea, the clear front lens of the eye (like the crystal on a watch), that occurs in the overall population at a rate of about one in 2000. It usually begins in the teens and 20's and can worsen over time. It is often ...

New app for genes on Earth is tool for scientists and entertaining for all

New app for genes on Earth is tool for scientists and entertaining for all
2010-09-21
The scientists who put an innovative tree of life online last year now have made that same resource available -- free -- for smartphones. The new "TimeTree" application lets anyone with an Apple iPhone harness a vast Internet storehouse of data about the diversity of life, from bacteria to humans. The intuitive interface is designed to answer a simple question, quickly and authoritatively: how long ago did species A and species B share a common ancestor? "Our new iPhone app can be fun for people who want to learn how long ago their cat and dog began evolving down different ...

New Oak Ridge homes are laboratories for energy efficiency

2010-09-21
Four East Tennessee homes completed this month showcase how scientific research can make dramatic changes in the cost of heating and cooling our homes. A ribbon-cutting ceremony held today celebrated the opening of all four homes as laboratories, a major milestone of the first ZEBRAlliance project. ZEBRAlliance, a public-private partnership founded by the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Schaad Companies, is both a research project and a multi-faceted energy-efficiency education campaign. The four houses, located in the Wolf Creek subdivision ...

Landmark report reveals massive global cost of Alzheimer's: 1 percent of global GDP -- and growing

2010-09-21
A landmark report on the Global Economic Impact of Dementia finds that Alzheimer's disease and other dementias are exacting a massive toll on the global economy, with the problem set to accelerate in coming years. The World Alzheimer Report 2010 – issued on World Alzheimer's Day by Alzheimer's Disease International (ADI) – provides the most current and comprehensive global picture of the economic and social costs of the illness. The Report was jointly authored by Professor Anders Wimo of the Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden; and Professor Martin Prince, Institute ...

Drink milk and lose more weight, according to Ben-Gurion University of the Negev research

2010-09-21
BEER-SHEVA, ISRAEL, September 21, 2010 -- A new weight loss study conducted by Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) researchers reveals that dieters who consumed milk or milk products lost more weight on average than those who consumed little to no milk products. Regardless of diet, researchers also found participants with the highest dairy calcium intake, equal to 12 oz. of milk or other dairy products (580 mg of dairy calcium), lost about 12 pounds (6 kg.) at the end of the two years. In comparison, those with the lowest dairy calcium intake averaging about ...

Prostate cancer community calls for better early detection and treatment

2010-09-20
Washington, DC – In a presentation today at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's Annual Legislative Conference Health Braintrust meeting, Faina Shtern, M.D., president and CEO of AdMeTech Foundation, unveiled overwhelming support from Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) members and patient advocacy organizations for the Prostate Research, Imaging, and Men's Education Act of 2010 (PRIME Act). This support builds on the rapidly growing number of Congressional co-sponsors for the legislation, including 25 CBC members who are particularly concerned about the disproportionate ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

October research news from the Ecological Society of America

Kinase atlas uncovers hidden layers of cell signaling regulation

Texas Tech scientists develop novel acceleration technique for crop creation

Worcester Polytechnic Institute to lead $5.2 million state-funded effort to build Central Massachusetts BioHub

China commands 47% of remote sensing research, while U.S. produces just 9%, NYU Tandon study reveals

Grocery store records reveal London food deserts

Hotter than your average spa bath: Extreme warming of Amazon lakes in 2023

Genetic variants fine-tune grain dormancy and crop resilience in barley

Cosmic dust record reveals Arctic ice varied with atmospheric warming, not ocean heat

Mechanical shear forces can trigger gas bubble formation in magmas

Space dust reveals Arctic ice conditions before satellite imaging

MIT physicists observe key evidence of unconventional superconductivity in magic-angle graphene

In the US, Western rivers may be allies in the fight against climate change

The enzyme that doesn’t act like one

Shopping data reveals ‘food desert’ hotspots in London, suggesting where nutritional needs are not be being met

West Coast mammal-eating killer whales are two distinct communities that rarely mix

Highly efficient and compact

A 3D atlas of brain connections

Evolving antibiotic resistance under pressure

Inflammation may be responsible for driving earliest stages of lung cancer

Why your daily walk might not work as well if you’re on metformin

ERC Synergy Grant advances understanding of the blood–nerve interface to improve pain management

New climate dataset warns both rich and poorest nations will see sharp drop in crop yields

Breakthrough could connect quantum computers at 200X the distance

Young adults with elevated cholesterol often go untreated, study finds

More women sought permanent contraception after Supreme Court Dobbs decision

Researchers unite to frame deportations as a national health crisis

Concussions linked to increased risk of a serious traffic crash

$4 million gift to advance women’s health

Growing transgenic plants in weeks instead of months by hijacking a plant’s natural regeneration abilities

[Press-News.org] Buyer backlash: Why do slogans about saving money increase spending?