Anmerkungen:
In: Journal of the Association for Consumer Research, Volume 6, Issue 1 - Special Issue on Behavioral Pricing, 2019
Nach Informationen von SSRN wurde die ursprüngliche Fassung des Dokuments October 18, 2019 erstellt
Beschreibung:
9-ending prices, which comprise between 40%–95% of retail prices, are popular because shoppers perceive them as being low. We study whether this belief is justified using scanner price-data with over 98-million observations from a large US grocery-chain. We find that 9-ending prices are higher than non 9-ending prices, by as much as 18%. Two factors explain why shoppers believe, mistakenly, that 9-ending prices are low. First, we find that among sale-prices, 9-ending prices are indeed lower than non 9-ending prices, giving 9-ending prices an aura of being low. Second, at first, 9-ending prices were indeed lower than other prices. Shoppers, therefore, learned to associate 9-endings with low prices. Over time, however, 9-ending prices rose substantially, which shoppers failed to notice, because the continuous use of 9-ending prices for promoting deep price cuts draws shoppers' attention to them, and helps to maintain-and-preserve the image of 9-ending prices as bargain prices