Print Email Facebook Twitter Buying new or refurbished? Title Buying new or refurbished?: The influence of the product's durability and attractiveness, contamination risk and consumers' environmental concern on purchase intentions of refurbished and new products Author Wallner, T.S. (TU Delft Marketing and Consumer Research) Magnier, L.B.M. (TU Delft Marketing and Consumer Research) Mugge, R. (TU Delft Marketing and Consumer Research; TU Delft Design, Organisation and Strategy) Contributor Fitzpatrick, C. (editor) Department Design, Organisation and Strategy Date 2022 Abstract This research investigates how a durable and attractive product appearance, the perceived contamination risk, and consumers' environmental concern influence the purchase intentions of refurbished products. Consumers often have lower purchase intentions of refurbished products because they associate them with lower durability and fear that they are contaminated with a former user's traces. The environmental friendliness and lower price incentivise consumers to purchase refurbished products. Limitations of prior research are that it has focused strongly on qualitative research, and a comparison to the factors influencing the adoption of new products is lacking. This research contributes by investigating which factors significantly influence the purchase intentions of refurbished products. It additionally aims to uncover how these factors differ from those influencing purchase intentions of new products. In an online survey, we exposed 351 participants to a blender or headphones and informed them that product was either new or refurbished. Two versions for each product were created to vary in terms durability and attractiveness. Participants rated multi-item constructs on products' durability, attractiveness, contamination risk, their environmental concern and indicated their purchase intentions. The results indicate that product-related factors, such as durability and attractiveness, are important across the different phases of a circular life. Other factors, such as the contamination risk and the consumers' environmental concern, however, play an essential role in the decision to purchase refurbished products specifically. Underlining the cleanness of refurbished products and that they are a sustainable choice could be worthwhile strategies for increasing the desirability of refurbished products. Subject Circular EconomyCitiesCollaborationEngagementScaling Innovation To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:10147730-f228-4f39-b2d0-0b547f11c9f5 DOI https://doi.org/10.31880/10344/10172 Publisher University of Limerick Source 4th Conference on Product Lifetimes and the Environment (PLATE) Event PLATE 2021, 2021-05-26 → 2021-05-28, Virtual conference at Limerick, Ireland Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type conference paper Rights © 2022 T.S. Wallner, L.B.M. Magnier, R. Mugge Files PDF Wallner_et_al_2021_Choosi ... bished.pdf 723.95 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:10147730-f228-4f39-b2d0-0b547f11c9f5/datastream/OBJ/view