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How Consumers Forecast: Buyer-Seller Relationship as a Boundary Condition of the Impact Bias
Marketing Letters (2012)
  • Mona Srivastava Sinha, Kennesaw State University
  • Ashwani Monga, University of South Carolina
  • Michael Tsiros, University of Miami
  • Haipeng Allan Chen, Texas A & M University
Abstract
People frequently overestimate the impact of an event when they imagine it, relative to when they actually experience it. This phenomenon, known as the impact bias, has been well established as an intrapersonal phenomenon. We extend it to the inherently interpersonal marketing setting involving buyer–seller dyads in which the two entities are bound by a relationship, and propose a moderating effect based on the strength of the buyer–seller relationship. An online panel study and three laboratory experiments provide converging evidence such that the impact bias emerges when the buyer–seller relationship is strong, but disappears when the relationship is weak.
Disciplines
Publication Date
March 1, 2012
Citation Information
Mona Srivastava Sinha, Ashwani Monga, Michael Tsiros and Haipeng Allan Chen. "How Consumers Forecast: Buyer-Seller Relationship as a Boundary Condition of the Impact Bias" Marketing Letters Vol. 23 Iss. 1 (2012) p. 31 - 45
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/mona-sinha/2/