articleJournal of Marketing ResearchJan 10, 2005Closed access

Justification Effects on Consumer Choice of Hedonic and Utilitarian Goods

University of Washington

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Abstract

People want to have fun, and they are more likely to have fun if the situation allows them to justify it. This research studies how people's need for justifying hedonic consumption drives two choice patterns that are observed in typical purchase contexts. First, relative preferences between hedonic and utilitarian alternatives can reverse, depending on how the immediate purchase situation presents itself. A hedonic alternative tends to be rated more highly than a comparable utilitarian alternative when each is presented singly, but the utilitarian alternative tends to be chosen over the hedonic alternative when the two are presented jointly. Second, people have preferences for expending different combinations…

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1,045
total citations
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35.99
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100%
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50
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Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Consumption (sociology)
  • Economics
  • Consumer choice
  • Hedonism
  • Microeconomics
  • Marketing
  • Psychology
  • Business
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