Il nostro partner in Romania ๐๐ฆ๐ฅ๐ ๐๐ฒ๐ป๐๐ฒ๐ฟ ha publicato il seguente articolo che ci fa piacere condividere:
How promotion mechanics shape credibility
Shoppers donโt judge all โequal valueโ promotions equally. There are moments when math matches but trust does not. In Episode 3 of ISRA & Revista Piaศaโs series on Romaniansโ trust in temporary price reductions (TPR), we find that the mechanic of a promotion can raise or depress credibility even when the benefit is mathematically identical.
๐ Discounts of โ2 for 1โ are better trusted vs โ-50%โ (mean credibility score 3.4 vs. 3.2), consistently across demographics.
๐ โ3 for 2โ (~33%) secures very good trust (51%, with avg. 3.5), but a straight โ-35%โ lags by comparison (just over 40%, with avg. 3.2). It performs similarly to โ6+2 freeโ (avg. 3.2) which would also translate into ~33% off as benefit.
๐ There are in some cases clusters of parity such as the one proved for ~25% benefit. This is shown by โ4 for 3โ, โ-25%โ, and โ-50% on the 2ndโ all landing around 3.4 average trust scores.
๐ Quantity bonus vs %-off: โ500g + 100g freeโ (~16.7%) is less credible than โ-15%โ (3.3 vs. 3.5).
๐ โ-20% on the 2nd productโ (~10%) is less trusted than a simple โ-10%โ (average scores of trust: 3.4 vs. 3.6).
๐ช๐ต๐ ๐ถ๐ ๐บ๐ฎ๐๐๐ฒ๐ฟ๐
When economics are equal, it is important to choose the mechanic that signals clarity and fairness to shoppers. Results recommend to keep the math simple (e.g., โ2 for 1โ or clean %-off) and avoid bundle/quantity bonuses that look more complex than they are.
https://isracenter.com/same-discount-different-trust-why-mechanics-matter-2025/



