在线调查数据中的镜像效应:营销理论和战略的证据与启示

Lara Stocchi, Steve Bellman, Naser Pourazad, N. Michaelidou, Malcolm Wright
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这项研究揭示了在线调查数据中存在心理学实验室研究中记录的一种关键模式:镜像效应。当不熟悉的刺激意外地与熟悉的刺激一样被准确识别,甚至识别得更准确时,就会出现镜像效应。利用一组熟悉和不熟悉的单词(由词频决定),我们首先报告说,我们可以在在线调查中稳健地复制心理学实验室的研究,检测出镜像效应。然后,我们运用同样的分析方法调查了消费者对日常品牌(超市、银行和汽车品牌)的认知情况。我们发现,陌生品牌的识别准确率与熟悉品牌的识别准确率相同,而且这种效应强于数据中存在的年龄和性别记忆偏差。然而,我们发现了品牌应用程序的边界条件,这些应用程序是在高度分散的市场中竞争的极不熟悉的品牌,因此很少有人下载或使用。对于这些数字品牌,我们发现了协和效应,因为大多数受访者发现很难识别高度陌生的品牌应用程序(即下载量少于 5000 次的应用程序)。镜像效应则再次出现在经验丰富的应用程序用户身上。这些结果表明了认知心理学中可推广的经验模式对品牌和广告理论的影响。这项研究成果还可转化为通过在线调查进行品牌绩效测量的实用指南,减轻识别记忆偏差,从而在更准确地解释经验证据的基础上制定营销策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The mirror effect in online survey data: Evidence and implications for marketing theory and strategy
This research reveals the presence, in online survey data, of a key pattern documented in psychology lab research: the Mirror Effect. The Mirror Effect occurs when unfamiliar stimuli are unexpectedly recognized as accurately as familiar stimuli, or more accurately. Using a set of familiar and unfamiliar words (as determined by lexical frequency), we first report that we can robustly replicate psychology lab research in an online survey, detecting the Mirror Effect. We then apply the same analytical approach to surveying consumer recognition of everyday brands (supermarkets, banks and car brands). We find that unfamiliar brands can be recognized with the same level of accuracy as familiar brands, and this effect is stronger than age and gender memory biases present in the data. However, we detect a boundary condition for branded apps, which are extremely unfamiliar brands competing in highly fragmented marketplaces, so very few get downloaded or used. For these digital brands, we find a Concordant Effect, as most respondents find it difficult to recognize highly unfamiliar branded apps (i.e., those with fewer than 5000 downloads). The Mirror Effect re‐emerges for highly experienced app users. These results demonstrate the implications of a generalizable empirical pattern from cognitive psychology for branding and advertising theory. The outcomes of this research also translate into practical guidelines for brand performance measurement via online surveys, mitigating recognition memory bias for the development of marketing strategies based on more accurate interpretation of empirical evidence.
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