Investigating impulse buying and variety seeking: towards a general theory of Hedonic Purchase Behaviors

Although impulse buying (IB) and variety seeking (VS) are both low-effort feelings-based behaviors with similar underlying psycho-social processes, there is no general theory to explain such hedonic purchase behaviors. This paper explores similarities and differences between these behaviors using a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marshall, R (Author), Sharma, P (Author), Sivakumaran, B (Author)
Format: Others
Published: Association for Consumer Research, 2012-01-27T22:05:56Z.
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Summary:Although impulse buying (IB) and variety seeking (VS) are both low-effort feelings-based behaviors with similar underlying psycho-social processes, there is no general theory to explain such hedonic purchase behaviors. This paper explores similarities and differences between these behaviors using a conceptual framework incorporating three relevant consumer traits - consumer impulsiveness, optimum stimulation level and self-monitoring. The findings from two studies across student and retail customer samples, show that consumer impulsiveness and optimum stimulation level influence both behaviors positively, whereas self-monitoring influences IB negatively and VS positively. Self-monitoring also moderates the influence of consumer impulsiveness and optimum stimulation level on purchase decisions, negatively for IB and positively for VS.
Item Description:Advances in Consumer Research, vol.33 pp.388 - 389