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Alixandra Barasch
Visiting Associate Professor of Marketing
Keywords
Joint Decision Making; No Preference; Decision Difficulty; Communication; Consumption Utility; Social Perception
Journal Article
In many joint consumption decisions, such as choosing a restaurant or a movie to watch together, one party often communicates to the other that they do not have any particular preference among the options (e.g., “I have no preference” or “I’m fine with any option”). Despite their prevalence, little is known about how communications of no preference impact joint decision making and the consumption experience. Do consumers take the other party’s indifference at face value? Does the decision become easier to make without one party’s preference to incorporate? How will such communications ultimately impact consumption and social utility?