2009
DOI: 10.1509/jmkg.73.1.44
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Pay What You Want: A New Participative Pricing Mechanism

Abstract: Pay what you want (PWYW) is a new participative pricing mechanism in which consumers have maximum control over the price they pay. Previous research has suggested that participative pricing increases consumers' intent to purchase. However, sellers using PWYW face the risk that consumers will exploit their control and pay nothing at all or a price below the seller's costs. In three field studies, the authors find that prices paid are significantly greater than zero. They analyze factors that influence prices pa… Show more

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Cited by 202 publications
(407 citation statements)
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“…Five studies indicate that the association between the two variables is significantly positive (Kim et al, 2009(Kim et al, , 2014Mills, 2013;Regner, 2015;Riener and Traxler, 2012). Three investigations observe an insignificant correlation (Borck et al, 2006;Roy, 2015;Roy et al, 2016a), but the validity of two of the three null-result-publications is low because they examine student samples with restricted income variances.…”
Section: Socio-demographic Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Five studies indicate that the association between the two variables is significantly positive (Kim et al, 2009(Kim et al, , 2014Mills, 2013;Regner, 2015;Riener and Traxler, 2012). Three investigations observe an insignificant correlation (Borck et al, 2006;Roy, 2015;Roy et al, 2016a), but the validity of two of the three null-result-publications is low because they examine student samples with restricted income variances.…”
Section: Socio-demographic Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Otherwise, in contexts where customers pay before consumption satisfaction is likely to exert a clear influence on prices paid only if buyers are already very familiar with the peculiarities of the purchased service or product and have therefore formed a stable evaluation of the offering and/or its supplier. A total of nine studies find that buyer satisfaction is significantly positively correlated with prices paid voluntarily after consumption (see Table 1: Borck et al, 2006;Gautier and Van der Klaauw, 2012;Kim et al, 2009Kim et al, , 2014aLeón et al, 2012;Machado and Sinha, 2012;Racherla et al, 2011;Riener, 2008;Schmidt et al, 2015). Solely, Drevs (2013) and Schons et al (2014) observe no significant association between the two variables.…”
Section: Satisfactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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