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Market Share Response When Consumers Seek Variety

Authors :
Fred M. Feinberg
Barbara E. Kahn
Leigh McAlister
Source :
Journal of Marketing Research. 29:227-237
Publication Year :
1992
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 1992.

Abstract

Using a model of consumer variety-seeking, the authors study the long-term market share implications of changes in variety-seeking intensity, brand preferences, and pairwise similarities between brands. Those analytically derived guidelines are examined in three-brand and five-brand markets through simulation. The least preferred brand is found generally to gain market share as variety-seeking intensifies whereas the most preferred brand tends to lose share. If two brands are perceived as having become more similar without a change in overall preferences, the repositioned brands are likely to lose market share while uninvolved brands gain share. If two brands are perceived as having become more similar in a way that increases overall preference for those repositioned brands, they should gain market share while uninvolved brands lose it. A behavioral experiment provides preliminary empirical support for some of the findings.

Details

ISSN :
15477193 and 00222437
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Marketing Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....39ffa821fdd3cd7832e80aa00213e89c