A Website’s Design Can Influence What You Buy


The reality is quite different.

 

Online persuasion

From user ratings and endorsements to scarcity sales, the evidence suggests that when it comes to shopping, we’re far from immune to hidden persuaders.

In a bid to explore this further, a group of researchers manipulated the background colours and images of a web page to see whether a website’s design would impact the product choices made by consumers [1].

Here’s what they found.

 

The nudge

When users were asked to choose between 2 products in the same category (such as an Audi or a Lexus – both cars), they found that visitors who had been primed on money (the website’s background was green with pennies on it) looked at price information longer than those who had been primed on safety. Similarly, consumers who had been primed on comfort looked at comfort information longer than those primed on money. 

What’s surprising is not that this effect was found to exist, but rather that it held true even when the user was a seasoned expert in that particular category of product.

 

Priming for profits

If any visitor can be primed to change their search behaviours and subsequent choices simply by using the appropriate background image, the implications to online business could be huge.

For instance if you’re selling a washing machine that rates poorly on energy consumption but runs a fast cycle, you could potentially prime your visitors for speed and influence them into comparing the speed of your machine against the speed of others. Getting your consumers to pay attention to speed and not price could result in greater sales for you, and a blow to your competitors.

 

Shop-savvy

Despite the fact that online shopping enables us to search for products more easily and with greater autonomy, the fact that our buying behaviours can be dramatically influenced by even subtle changes in our online environment is a sobering one.

Whether you’re a boffin or a newbie, when it comes to online shopping it might pay to consider all the features that are important to you before you hit the online shops – otherwise you might come away with a bit more than you bargained for.

 

…

 

[1] N. Mandel and E. J. Johnson (2002). When Web Pages Influence Choice: Effects of Visual Primes on Experts and Novices. Journal of Consumer Research, 29(2), pp. 235 – 245

 

Tags:
amazon, array, background colours, behaviours, blogs, boom, colour scheme, commerce, commercial websites, consumers, deign, desires, endorsements, evidence suggests that, hidden persuaders, influence, lexus, logical decision, nbsp, pennies, priming, product choices, sales, scarcity, shopping, web page, web psychology, website

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