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A Two-State Model of Purchase Incidence and Brand Choice
302
Citations
12
References
1991
Year
Decision StatesBuying BehaviorBrand ChoicePurchase IncidenceBehavioral Decision MakingConsumer StudyManagementBusinessConsumer ResearchPurchase IntentionConsumer BehaviorMarketingStatisticsConsumer AttitudeConsumer Choice
The authors develop and test a probabilistic model of purchase incidence and brand choice for frequently purchased consumer products. The model incorporates two ways of shopping in a category. Shoppers who have planned their purchasing (made a decision before entering the store) do not process in-store information and show no response to point-of-purchase promotions. Consumers who have not planned their purchasing in a category (deciding at the point of purchase) may process in-store information and may be strongly influenced by promotions. The two modes of information processing are called decision states and are labelled planned and opportunistic, respectively. The two-state model is calibrated on IRI scanner purchase records for saltine crackers. The model yields a significantly better fit than a one-state nested logit model and provides new insights into the relationship between shopping behavior and consumer purchase response.
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