That’s a description of findings from researchers now at University of California at Berkeley and University of Pennsylvania regarding what are called probabilistic price discounts—where shoppers are offered a specified percentage chance of getting a specified price reduction: “Present this coupon when buying the set and there’s a 25% chance you’ll get an additional 25% off on the purchase price.”
Every smart shopper who can easily locate the coupon will present it. It makes no sense to pass up the offer. But a question more relevant to marketers is whether shoppers are more likely to buy when offered, let’s say, either a sure 20% discount on the one hand or, on the other hand, a 40% chance to get a 50% discount.
The answer from the studies is that it depends on the amount of money involved. When the sure discount feels quite small to shoppers, they’ll tend to opt for the probabilistic deal. This pattern is related to what researchers call the peanuts effect. “The money amounts I’m considering are just peanuts” In one of the studies, consumers were more likely to select a probabilistic discount on a hotel stay when the price for the hotel stay was $48 than when it was $480.
Other studies in the set verified how it is a feeling of relatively low size of the sure discount—not only an objectively low size—which matters. Presenting the same sure discount in the context of large discounts made the same sure discount feel smaller. Also, presenting the same sure discount in the form of a percentage rather than a dollar amount was found to make the sure discount seem smaller and to therefore increase the attractiveness of the probabilistic option.
Prior studies concluded that compared to when the probability of winning the discount is low, when the probability of winning the discount is high, shoppers are more likely to prefer a sure discount. However, this current research indicates that the most important consideration is the shopper’s perceived size of the sure discount, not the size of the chance of receiving the discount or the perceived size of the discount with the probabilistic option. When the sure discount you’d be offering is likely to be perceived as just peanuts, offer a probabilistic discount.
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Relieve the Pain with Probabilistic Discounts





