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Why consumers get stuck in trivial choices?

Washington, Fri, 16 Mar 2012 ANI

Washington, March 16(ANI): If you get confused on which toothbrush or breakfast cereal to buy while in a store, researchers now know why.

 

A new study has explained why consumers get stuck in store aisles contemplating the dizzying array of options.

 

"Why do people get mired in seemingly trivial decisions? Why do we agonize over what toothbrush to buy, struggle with what sandwich to pick, and labour over which shade of white to paint the kitchen?" asked researchers Aner Sela (University of Florida) and Jonah Berger (University of Pennsylvania).

 

The researchers have said that this "decision quicksand" results from people assuming that a difficult decision is an important one. Then they increase the amount of time and effort they spend.

 

"For example, instead of realizing that picking a toothbrush is a trivial decision, we confuse the array of options and excess of information with decision importance, which then leads our brain to conclude that this decision is worth more time and attention," the researchers wrote.

 

Ironically, this is more likely to happen when decisions initially seem unimportant, because people expect them to be easier.

 

In one experiment, the researchers gave participants a selection of airline flight options. One group chose their options in small, low-contrast font (difficult condition), while another group chose the same options in a larger, high-contrast font (easy condition).

 

Not surprisingly, the hard-to-read font led to increased deliberation time because people were forced to decipher their options.

 

"What was more interesting is that this extra effort led to perceptions of increased importance: The flight options now seemed like a weighty decision," the researchers explained.

 

"Moreover, this effect was strongest when people were initially led to believe that the choice of flights was actually unimportant!" they wrote.

 

The researchers also found that unexpected difficulty caused people to voluntarily seek more options, which increased decision difficulty even more.

 

"Our findings suggest that people sometimes fall into a recursive loop between deliberation time, difficulty, and perceived importance," they wrote.

 

"Inferences from difficulty may not only impact immediate deliberation, but may kick off a quicksand cycle that leads people to spend more and more time on a decision that initially seemed rather unimportant. Decision quicksand sucks people in, but the worse it seems, the more we struggle," they added.

 

The study was published in the Journal of Consumer Research. (ANI)

 


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