Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
882278 Journal of Consumer Psychology 2011 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The potential of using implementation intentions—action plans that link a critical situational cue to a specific goal-directed behavior—to bridge the intention–behavior gap in consumer behavior has been limited by the practice of using explicit instructions to induce the construct. In two studies, we therefore tested the effectiveness of an indirect, persuasive strategy that benefits from the positive consequences of implementation intentions by ‘mimicking’ their underlying psychological processes. Experiment 1 showed that a strategy presenting vivid information on critical cues and appropriate behavioral responses affected mental imagery. Experiment 2 demonstrated that this strategy affected actual purchase behavior.

Research Highlights► Implementation intentions have mainly been induced with explicit instructions. ► An indirect, persuasive strategy is tested that can also induce the construct. ► This strategy is most effective when using vivid information on cues and responses.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Marketing
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