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Measuring consumers' willingness to pay at the point of purchase

journal contribution
posted on 2002-05-01, 00:00 authored by K Wertenbroch, Bernd SkieraBernd Skiera
Economists, psychologists, and marketing researchers rely on measures of consumers' willingness to pay (WTP) in estimating demand for private and public goods and in designing optimal price schedules. Existing market research techniques for measuring WTP differ in whether they provide an incentive to consumers to reveal their true WTP and in whether they simulate actual point-of-purchase contexts. The authors present an-empirical comparison of several procedures for eliciting WTP that are applicable directly at the point of purchase. In particular, the authors test the applicability of Becker, DeGroot, and Marschak's (1964) well-known incentive-compatible procedure for assessing the utility of lotteries to measuring consumers' WTP. In three studies, the authors explore the reliability, validity, and feasibility of the procedure and show that it yields lower WTP estimates than do non-incentive-compatible methods such as open-ended and double-bounded contingent valuation. They show experimentally that differences in WTP estimates arise from the incentive constraint rather than the cognitive effort required in responding. They also control for strategic response behavior.

History

Journal

Journal of marketing research

Volume

39

Issue

2

Pagination

228 - 241

Publisher

American Marketing Association

Location

Chicago, Ill.

ISSN

0022-2437

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2002, [AMA]