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From fear to loathing? how emotion influences the evaluation and early use of innovations
Innovation adoption is rarely a short process for consumers; accordingly, recent research has explored adoption as a dynamic process that is characterized by changing patterns, or diffusion, of consumer use of the innovation. This research suggests that adoption is rarely a neutral process and that consumers can experience strong emotions in the initial use of innovations. However, given such emotions, two opposing arguments can be made as to whether the inclusion of emotional responses increases the predictive power of traditional models of diffusion. On the one hand, experienced emotion may simply be a function of gained benefits and, as such, may already be captured in extant models through cognitive assessments of net benefits. On the other hand, and as data from two empirical and longitudinal studies demonstrate, the learning process is potentially emotion generating (independent of new benefits), and this emotion colors product evaluations. The emotional influence is sizable and, importantly, not a straightforward case of "easier is better." In this work, the authors present the E3(expectation (right arrow) emotion (right arrow) evaluation) model, which describes how managers can better predict and influence the successful diffusion of complex technological products..Printed Journal
Call Number | Location | Available |
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PSB lt.dasar - Pascasarjana | 1 |
Penerbit | American Marketing Association., |
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Edisi | - |
Subjek | Consumer attitudes Statistical analysis Emotions Innovations Market research studies |
ISBN/ISSN | 222429 |
Klasifikasi | - |
Deskripsi Fisik | - |
Info Detail Spesifik | - |
Other Version/Related | Tidak tersedia versi lain |
Lampiran Berkas | Tidak Ada Data |