articleJournal of Marketing ResearchFeb 1, 2006Closed access

The Goal-Gradient Hypothesis Resurrected: Purchase Acceleration, Illusionary Goal Progress, and Customer Retention

Northern Plains Agricultural Research Laboratory · Graduate School USA · +1 more institution

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Abstract

The goal-gradient hypothesis denotes the classic finding from behaviorism that animals expend more effort as they approach a reward. Building on this hypothesis, the authors generate new propositions for the human psychology of rewards. They test these propositions using field experiments, secondary customer data, paper-and-pencil problems, and Tobit and logit models. The key findings indicate that (1) participants in a real café reward program purchase coffee more frequently the closer they are to earning a free coffee; (2) Internet users who rate songs in return for reward certificates visit the rating Web site more often, rate more songs per visit, and persist longer in the rating effort as they approach…

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Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Marketing
  • Customer retention
  • Goal orientation
  • Acceleration
  • Goal setting
  • Psychology
  • Business
  • Advertising
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