Monday, January 20, 2025

Utilize Imagination of Consuming Units

Studies at Michigan State University, Baylor University, and Virginia Tech indicate that “A Multipack of Four Body Washes for $16.00” will sell better than “A Multipack of Four Body Washes for $15.30” at an equivalent store in another town.
     A potential explanation for this is how a $16.00 price is simpler for the consumer’s brain to process than is a $15.30 price. But the researcher’s explanation is that the multipack’s easily-divisible price of $16.00 by its quantity of four draws attention from the whole bundle to each unit in the multipack. This facilitates consumption visions, such as each $4.00 body wash being used by multiple family members or in multiple locations, situations, and times. Consequently, buying this multipack is more easily justified than buying a multipack whose price is not easily divisible by its quantity, even though $15.30 is a lower amount.
     The researchers also found this effect with multipacks of six tissue boxes, eight toothbrushes, and eleven bags of cashews.
     Divisibility and consumption visions also play a part in how customers eat from multipacks. People eat less from what’s in a big package than from what’s in a set of small packages containing the same quantity as what’s in the big package. Researchers at Technical University of Lisbon and at Tilburg University in the Netherlands found that people hesitant about eating a food were more likely to overcome their hesitations when presented with small packages than when presented the equivalent amount in a large package.
     In addition, the people who got started on the small packages ended up eating more than did those who dug into the large package. The participants said they had believed small packages would help them limit their consumption. The opposite proved to be true. When faced with an additional small package, the dieter says, “Oh, it would be only a little bit more.” The explanation has less to do with the degree to which eating from a small versus large package sates hunger.
     Still, studies at Hofstra University and Baruch College find that consuming the entire contents of a single serving package gives more of a feeling of fulfillment than consuming the equivalent amount, and therefore not the entire contents, from a multi-serving package. And it applies to medicine, not only food. Patients feel a two-pill dose has been more effective when taking them from a two-pill container than from a twelve-pill container.

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Hit Shoppers with a Two-by-Four 
Image at top of post based on photo by Roberto Sorin from Unsplash

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