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The Fans’ Perception of Competitive Balance and Its Impact on Willingness-to-Pay for a Single Game
56
Citations
16
References
2015
Year
Consumer UncertaintyBehavioral Decision MakingEconomics LiteratureGame TheoryConsumer ResearchBehavioral Game TheoryOutcome HypothesisManagementExperimental EconomicsCompetitiveness InfluenceFans ’ PerceptionFan LoyaltyConsumer Decision MakingMarket BehaviorGamesMarketingBehavioral EconomicsBusinessSport EconomicsSingle GameCompetitive Balance
The economics literature related to the uncertainty of outcome hypothesis reopens the discussion of whether the fans’ perceptions of competitive balance (CB) are in line with Rottenberg’s and Neale’s theory. This article contributes to the literature by analyzing the effect of fans’ perceptions of suspensefulness on their willingness-to-pay for a single-game ticket and evaluating monetarily the (un)importance of CB. Results suggest that fans’ notions of competitiveness influence their spending behavior, rising as perceived balance rises, at least up to high levels of competitiveness.
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