Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/48167
Title: Leveraging mental imagery to create an enhanced online shopping experience
Authors: DOUCE, Lieve 
WILLEMS, Kim 
MOENS, Sofie 
RADEMAKERS, Felitsa 
Issue Date: 2025
Publisher: Jönköping University
Source: Jafari , Hamid; Brusset, Xavier; Frasquet, Marta; Teller, Christoph; Kotzab, Herbert (Ed.). 9th Colloquium on European Research in Retailing: Book of Abstracts, Jönköping University, p. 75 -81
Abstract: Online shopping takes on an ever-increasing role in the current retail environment. In 2029 retail e-commerce sales are estimated to exceed 6.4 trillion U.S. dollars worldwide, which would signify a nearly threefold increase in e-commerce revenue over 10 years (Statista, 2024). However, consumers face the challenge of not being able to physically touch and test products before making a purchase. This limitation in tangible product experience can lead to uncertainty and hesitation (Kim & Krishnan, 2015). This issue is particularly pronounced in the beauty and personal care sector, where the tactile qualities of products are critical to consumer satisfaction. Lacking the technologies to engage the other senses, webshops still mainly rely on visual information. To compensate for the lack of physical interaction opportunities, our research examines whether we can leverage consumers’ own resources, more specifically mental imagery. By encouraging consumers to imagine how a product would feel and function, we seek to replicate a physical store’s comprehensive sensory information, where consumers can touch, feel, and test products before purchasing. Eliciting mental imagery has been used as a persuasive communication strategy for years. Especially in advertising, consumers are often encouraged to imagine the use of the product, leading to better product evaluation, stronger product desire, and greater purchase intentions (Krishna et al., 2016; Elder & Krishna, 2012). Two types of mental sensory imagery can be distinguished: deliberate (i.e. consumers being instructed to form an image) and automatic mental imagery (i.e. more spontaneous imagination, for example, by reading a description). The effects of both types of imagery have so far mostly been studied in isolation (Elder & Krishna, 2022). Our research compares the efficacy of evoking automatic versus deliberate mental imagery, which is particularly relevant as most webshops only use vivid images (i.e. a form of the automatic imagery evoking technique). By exploring the option of instructing consumers to imagine, we aim to ascertain potential enhancements beyond the current standard in online retail (Bleier et al., 2019).
Keywords: Sensory marketing;E-commerce;Haptic imagery;Consumer reactions;Imaginativeness
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/48167
ISBN: 9789198929539
Category: C1
Type: Proceedings Paper
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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