articleJournal of MarketingOct 8, 2009Closed access

Does In-Store Marketing Work? Effects of the Number and Position of Shelf Facings on Brand Attention and Evaluation at the Point of Purchase

Wharton County Junior College · PATH To Reading

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Abstract

Recent trends in marketing have demonstrated an increased focus on in-store expenditures with the hope of “grabbing consumers” at the point of purchase, but does this make sense? To help answer this question, the authors examine the interplay between in-store and out-of-store factors on consumer attention to and evaluation of brands displayed on supermarket shelves. Using an eye-tracking experiment, they find that the number of facings has a strong impact on evaluation that is entirely mediated by its effect on visual attention and works particularly well for frequent users of the brand, for low-market-share brands, and for young and highly educated consumers who are willing to trade off brand and price. They…

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759
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46.35
Percentile
100%
References
50
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Business
  • Advertising
  • Point of sale
  • Marketing
  • Point (geometry)
  • Store brand
  • Position (finance)
  • Work (physics)
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