4.4 Article

Bridging Imagination Gaps on the Path to Purchase with Augmented Reality: Field and Experimental Evidence

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERACTIVE MARKETING
Volume 57, Issue 2, Pages 356-375

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/10949968221083555

Keywords

augmented reality; mental imagery; imagination gaps; purchase funnel; product bundles

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The study investigates how augmented reality (AR) technology can assist customers in bridging imagination gaps, leading to increased purchase intentions and behavior. Specifically, AR-generated imagery of bundled products at the point-of-sale enhances both intended and actual purchases. Additionally, AR deployed at distant points in the purchase funnel improves purchases through enhanced self-projection, with effects moderated by customers' thinking styles.
Many firms use augmented reality (AR) that projects lifelike product holograms into the physical environment to assist customers in bridging so-called imagination gaps, which can arise on their path to purchase. However, research has not yet studied whether and how AR might help customers address two pertinent sources of such imagination gaps: (1) increased cognitive load when evaluating multiple products together (e.g., in a bundle) and (2) extended physical distance to the point-of-sale (e.g., out-of-store, at home). Building on mental imagery theorizing, we explain how AR supports customers in bridging these gaps, and, through a series of field and experimental studies, we evidence effects on customer purchase intentions and behavior. Specifically, we show that AR-generated imagery of bundled (versus individual) products enhances intended and actual purchases at the point-of-sale. Furthermore, when deployed at distant points in the purchase funnel (out-of-store, at-home), AR increases purchases through improved self-projection, which we describe as the psychological mechanism customers use to mentally bridge distance to the point-of-sale. We qualify this mediating mechanism through an important moderating process, where the effect of AR-generated imagery on self-projection is suppressed for customers with a holistic (versus analytic) thinking style.

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