Yangjie Gu

Yangjie Gu
HEC Paris | HEC · Department of Marketing

About

5
Publications
3,756
Reads
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176
Citations
Citations since 2017
3 Research Items
112 Citations
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201720182019202020212022202305101520
201720182019202020212022202305101520
201720182019202020212022202305101520
Introduction
Skills and Expertise
Additional affiliations
September 2015 - present
HEC Paris
Position
  • Professor
September 2013 - July 2015
Tilburg University
Position
  • Professor
Education
August 2008 - August 2013
London Business School
Field of study
  • Marketing

Publications

Publications (5)
Article
Full-text available
Consumers gain choice closure when they perceive a sense of finality over a past decision and limit comparisons between the selected and the forgone options. We investigate consumers’ ability to make strategic use of choice closure to enhance outcome satisfaction. Seven studies show that consumers experience greater satisfaction when they achieve c...
Article
Full-text available
Although choosing from large assortments has often been found to be demotivating, a robust finding in the marketing literature is that consumers generally prefer larger product assortments. Standard explanations for this preference for larger assortments have focused on reason-based considerations revolving around large assortments enabling potenti...
Article
Full-text available
Thankfully, most product consumption experiences are positive. Unfortunately, however, those positive experiences are not always guaranteed, and defects creep into the consumer experience. Though its assertion runs counter to most prescriptions, the current research proposes that exposing consumers to the mere possibility of negative experiences oc...
Article
After having made a purchase decision, consumers often revisit their choice and ponder forgone alternatives. This tendency can lower satisfaction with the selected alternative, especially when choices are difficult. We introduce the concept of “choice closure”—defined as the psychological process by which consumers come to perceive a decision to be...
Article
Full-text available
We offer a framework about when and how specifications (e.g., megapixels of a camera and number of air bags in a massage chair) influence consumer preferences and report five studies that test the framework. Studies 1-3 show that even when consumers can directly experience the relevant products and the specifications carry little or no new informat...

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