Abstract
•Left-digit effects are stronger when consumers rely more on heuristics.•Consumers who score higher in lay rationalism are less prone to left-digit effects.•Consumers who have higher income levels are less swayed by left-digit effects.•Not providing discount percentage strengthens left-digit effects.•Relatively arousing promotion signage strengthens left-digit effects.
When designing price promotions, many retailers employ left-digit effects (i.e., when the price is reduced, it changes the leftmost digit of the price). While left-digit effects can influence consumer evaluations, there is little work that examines for which (i) segments of consumers, or (ii) types of managerially relevant display elements are left-digit changes more effective. This paper builds from the insight that the left-digit effect is a heuristic and then—building from work on heuristics—uses multiple studies to examine individual differences and contextual factors that can enhance the effectiveness of price promotions involving left-digit changes. This paper examines an important substantive domain—price promotions—and proposes contributions to both theory and practice by showing that left-digit effects are stronger (i) for consumer segments that rely more on their feelings when making decisions, (ii) when the retail signage induces arousal, and (iii) when retail signage does not indicate the actual percentage discount. Put another way, noting that left-digit effects can be triggered by merely changing prices by a penny or so, this paper outlines how retailers can “get the most for that penny.”
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