TY - JOUR
T1 - Understanding investors' decisions to purchase innovative products
T2 - Drivers of adoption timing and range
AU - Hoffmann, A.O.I.
AU - Broekhuizen, T.L.J.
PY - 2010/12
Y1 - 2010/12
N2 - This paper integrates findings from marketing and finance literature to increase our understanding of consumers' decisions to purchase innovative investment products. Two different surveys administered to individual investors examine the psychological and sociological drivers of dispositional innovativeness and its effects on adoption timing and range of adoption for five new investment products. Study 1 shows that consumer psychographics (e.g.. market mavenism, product-category involvement, and ambiguity intolerance) rather than socio-demographics (e.g., age, education, and risk profile) explain dispositional innovativeness and that dispositional innovativeness strongly impacts time of adoption and ownership of new investment products. Study 2 cross-validates the results of Study 1 and investigates the indirect effects of dispositional innovativeness on adoption timing through consumers' perceptions of new investment products' complexity, riskiness, and visibility (exposure to and engagement in word-of-mouth). Individuals who score high on dispositional innovativeness adopt new investment products quickly because they perceive lower complexity and greater visibility, not because they perceive lower risk. The combined results of Studies 1 and 2 show that individual investors' psychological and sociological roots systematically explain their innovative adoption behavior and indicate that - counter to standard finance predictions they incorporate more than just risk-return trade-offs in their investment choices. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
AB - This paper integrates findings from marketing and finance literature to increase our understanding of consumers' decisions to purchase innovative investment products. Two different surveys administered to individual investors examine the psychological and sociological drivers of dispositional innovativeness and its effects on adoption timing and range of adoption for five new investment products. Study 1 shows that consumer psychographics (e.g.. market mavenism, product-category involvement, and ambiguity intolerance) rather than socio-demographics (e.g., age, education, and risk profile) explain dispositional innovativeness and that dispositional innovativeness strongly impacts time of adoption and ownership of new investment products. Study 2 cross-validates the results of Study 1 and investigates the indirect effects of dispositional innovativeness on adoption timing through consumers' perceptions of new investment products' complexity, riskiness, and visibility (exposure to and engagement in word-of-mouth). Individuals who score high on dispositional innovativeness adopt new investment products quickly because they perceive lower complexity and greater visibility, not because they perceive lower risk. The combined results of Studies 1 and 2 show that individual investors' psychological and sociological roots systematically explain their innovative adoption behavior and indicate that - counter to standard finance predictions they incorporate more than just risk-return trade-offs in their investment choices. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
KW - Dispositional innovativeness
KW - Consumer financial decision-making
KW - Individual investor decision-making
KW - Marketing finance interface
KW - New product adoption
KW - INNATE CONSUMER INNOVATIVENESS
KW - STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODELS
KW - OPTIMUM STIMULATION LEVEL
KW - PERCEIVED-RISK
KW - BEHAVIOR
KW - GOALS
KW - BIAS
KW - INFORMATION
KW - PERSONALITY
KW - PERFORMANCE
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijresmar.2010.08.002
DO - 10.1016/j.ijresmar.2010.08.002
M3 - Article
VL - 27
SP - 342
EP - 355
JO - International Journal of Research in Marketing
JF - International Journal of Research in Marketing
IS - 4
ER -