
November 2005
Why consumers make conflicting choices
Or, why we buy banana splits on our way home from the gym
We buy banana splits on our way home from the gym. We try to save for retirement but take expensive vacations. We go to college to study and, of course, spend our time partying in a musty frat house basement. But there's method to our madness, say researchers. In an important new study forthcoming in the December 2005 issue of the Journal of Consumer Research, researchers from the University of Chicago and Yale University seek to explain the presence of simultaneous, conflicting goals and how they affect consumer behavior.
"[We] explore the theoretical conditions that facilitate the selection of goal-incongruent actions. We propose that the consequence of an initial goal pursuit on subsequent actions is different depending on whether the individual focuses on goal progress or on goal commitment," explain Ayelet Fishbach (U. Chicago) and Ravi Dhar (Yale).
Through four separate experiments, including one that asked dieters to choose between apples and chocolate bars, the authors sought to determine the effect of goals on choice. They found that progress towards a goal frequently liberates people to pursue another, incompatible goal. Furthermore, simply making plans to work towards a goal can lead to the immediate satisfaction of an conflicting desire.
"If people simultaneously hold multiple goals, an account of consumer behavior needs to address the manner in which pursuing each of these goals may justify the subsequent pursuit of another, potentially conflicting goal," write Fishbach and Dhar.
Fishbach, Ayelet and Ravi Dhar. "Goals as Excuses or Guides: The Liberating Effect of Perceived Goal Progress on Choice." Journal of Consumer Research, Dec 2005.