Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
884971 | Journal of Economic Psychology | 2013 | 10 Pages |
In bargaining, buyers aim to spend as little money as they can on the items they seek to purchase. Compared to promotion-oriented people, prevention-oriented people seek to avoid losses rather than to secure gains. Employing different negotiation scenarios, three lab experiments tested the prediction that prevention-oriented buyers would thus display higher negotiation aversion than promotion-oriented buyers. Results showed that prevention-oriented people in the role of a potential buyer were willing to accept lower monetary compensation to refrain from entering the negotiation and were more likely to exit the negotiation when such an opportunity was presented to them. We discuss these findings and their contribution to our understanding of how regulatory focus influences consumers’ economic decisions.
► In bargaining, buyers aim to minimize the price they pay for goods. ► Prevention oriented buyers (not sellers) display negotiation aversion. ► Prevention oriented buyers avoid negotiation more than promotion oriented buyers. ► Prevention oriented buyers exit negotiation more than promotion oriented buyers.