1994
DOI: 10.1016/s1057-7408(08)80027-7
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Differences in the relative influence of product attributes under alternative processing conditions: Attribute importance versus attribute ease of imagability

Abstract: We present two experiments that test whether ease of imagability can shift the influence of a product attribute without affecting its assessed importance in the decision. Results of the experiments indicate that more easily imagined attributes may have a disproportionate influence when subjects use imagery in the evaluation, but not when they engage in more analytical processing. Experiments 1 and 2 differ in the manner in which method of evaluation (imagery based vs. nonimagery based) was manipulated. In Expe… Show more

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Cited by 110 publications
(90 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
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“…Vivid product attributes have a disproportionate infl uence on product preferences when consumers pro-cess the product information using imagery (Keller & McGill, 1994;McGill & Anand, 1989). Moreover, because consumers are likely to base their purchase intentions on the ease with which they can imagine the product experience, asking consumers to imagine the product experience in the absence of vivid product information may not only be ineffi cient but may actually decrease the likelihood of purchasing the product (Petrova & Cialdini, 2005).…”
Section: Vividness Of the Product Informationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Vivid product attributes have a disproportionate infl uence on product preferences when consumers pro-cess the product information using imagery (Keller & McGill, 1994;McGill & Anand, 1989). Moreover, because consumers are likely to base their purchase intentions on the ease with which they can imagine the product experience, asking consumers to imagine the product experience in the absence of vivid product information may not only be ineffi cient but may actually decrease the likelihood of purchasing the product (Petrova & Cialdini, 2005).…”
Section: Vividness Of the Product Informationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Th e existing fi ndings converge across a variety of products, such as automobiles (Burns, Biswas, & Babin, 1993;McGill & Anand, 1989), beer (Rossiter & Percy, 1978), apartments (Keller & McGill, 1994;McGill & Anand, 1989), restaurants (Petrova & Cialdini, 2005), cameras (Schlosser, 2003), and vacations (Adval & Wyer, 1998;Krisnamurty & Sujan, 1999;Petrova & Cialdini, 2005). However, all of these product categories have an experiential component, and the product use has been associated with positive aff ect.…”
Section: When Does Imagery Infl Uence Consumers' Judgments?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Brand attitudes can be defined as consumers' overall evaluations of a brand (Mitchell & Olson, 1981). Consumers might form an attitude based on their direct experience (Fazio, 1986) or their imagined attempt to experience the attitude object (P. Keller & McGill, 1994). In general, consumers are more likely to select a brand toward which they hold the most favourable attitude when facing a choice of brands in a product category (James, 2005).…”
Section: Dimensions For Evaluating Brand Alliancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The manipulation used by McGill and Anand prompted subjects to elaborate on thoughts and activities related to specific attributes used in the descriptions of specific alternatives (see also Keller & McGill, 1994). Their results show that easily imagined attributes are more influential in choice than less easily imagined attributes, for subjects prompted to imagine the alternatives.…”
Section: Related Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%