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Operant behavioral economics for e-mail marketing: an experiment based on the behavioral perspective model testing the effectiveness of motivational operation, utilitarian and informational stimuli

Operant behavioral economics for e-mail marketing: an experiment based on the behavioral perspective model testing the effectiveness of motivational operation, utilitarian and informational stimuli
Operant behavioral economics for e-mail marketing: an experiment based on the behavioral perspective model testing the effectiveness of motivational operation, utilitarian and informational stimuli
The e-mail marketing literature is limited and scattered and in a search for a more systematic approach to research. The few published studies mostly consist of indirect (attitudinal) measures of behavior instead of a direct measurement of the actual variables of interest-consumer economic choice. Furthermore, published research does not focus on motivational operations despite marketing's emphasis on needs, wants, and personalized marketing. In the current paper, we extend the examination of the Behavioral Perspective Model as a conceptual system for managerial decision making in e-mail marketing. The experiment tested the applicability of motivational operations and utilitarian and informational contingencies for e-mail marketing for a hardware and home improvement chain selling bicycle helmets. A motivational-segmentation analysis of the marketing database was performed prior to the experiment based on the target product appropriateness for consumers. After the segmentation, different types of e-mails based on altered utilitarian contingencies or a combination of utilitarian and informational contingencies were sent to two groups from the same marketing database of registered consumers interested in receiving special offers. The results showed that the e-mail marketing's effectiveness were greatest when motivational-based segmentation and economical (utilitarian) contingencies were applied.
0143-6570
337-344
Sigurdsson, Valdimar
7d4995e2-b6b4-4d04-be74-1ffac6aef3ba
Hinriksson, Hinrik
daba51c1-dac0-43b1-8688-17ffe6a59037
Menon, R. G.Vishnu
cf91657e-cd61-4431-9e25-c6ad94ba9ee0
Sigurdsson, Valdimar
7d4995e2-b6b4-4d04-be74-1ffac6aef3ba
Hinriksson, Hinrik
daba51c1-dac0-43b1-8688-17ffe6a59037
Menon, R. G.Vishnu
cf91657e-cd61-4431-9e25-c6ad94ba9ee0

Sigurdsson, Valdimar, Hinriksson, Hinrik and Menon, R. G.Vishnu (2016) Operant behavioral economics for e-mail marketing: an experiment based on the behavioral perspective model testing the effectiveness of motivational operation, utilitarian and informational stimuli. Managerial and Decision Economics, 37 (4-5), 337-344. (doi:10.1002/mde.2725).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The e-mail marketing literature is limited and scattered and in a search for a more systematic approach to research. The few published studies mostly consist of indirect (attitudinal) measures of behavior instead of a direct measurement of the actual variables of interest-consumer economic choice. Furthermore, published research does not focus on motivational operations despite marketing's emphasis on needs, wants, and personalized marketing. In the current paper, we extend the examination of the Behavioral Perspective Model as a conceptual system for managerial decision making in e-mail marketing. The experiment tested the applicability of motivational operations and utilitarian and informational contingencies for e-mail marketing for a hardware and home improvement chain selling bicycle helmets. A motivational-segmentation analysis of the marketing database was performed prior to the experiment based on the target product appropriateness for consumers. After the segmentation, different types of e-mails based on altered utilitarian contingencies or a combination of utilitarian and informational contingencies were sent to two groups from the same marketing database of registered consumers interested in receiving special offers. The results showed that the e-mail marketing's effectiveness were greatest when motivational-based segmentation and economical (utilitarian) contingencies were applied.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 18 May 2015
Published date: 1 June 2016
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495032
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495032
ISSN: 0143-6570
PURE UUID: 5ba1b37b-aac2-4d1a-802b-5f04cd7f37ae
ORCID for R. G.Vishnu Menon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0835-5338

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Date deposited: 25 Oct 2024 17:06
Last modified: 26 Oct 2024 02:12

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Contributors

Author: Valdimar Sigurdsson
Author: Hinrik Hinriksson
Author: R. G.Vishnu Menon ORCID iD

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