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Journal Article
Construal Matching in Online Search: Applying Text Analysis to Illuminate the Consumer Decision Journey
Journal of Marketing Research
Author(s)
As consumers move through their decision journey, they adopt different goals (e.g., transactional vs. informational). In this
research, the authors propose that consumer goals can be detected through textual analysis of online search queries and that both
marketers and consumers can benefit when paid search results and advertisements match consumer search–related goals. In
bridging construal level theory and textual analysis, the authors show that consumers at different stages of the decision journey
tend to assume different levels of mental construal, or mindsets (i.e., abstract vs. concrete). They find evidence of a fluency-driven
matching effect in online search such that when consumer mindsets are more abstract (more concrete), consumers generate
textual search queries that use more abstract (more concrete) language. Furthermore, they are more likely to click on search
engine results and ad content that matches their mindset, thereby experiencing more search satisfaction and perceiving greater
goal progress. Six empirical studies, including a pilot study, a survey, three lab experiments, and a field experiment involving over
128,000 ad impressions provide support for this construal matching effect in online search
Date Published:
2020
Citations:
Humphreys, Ashlee, Mathew Isaac, Rebecca Wang. 2020. Construal Matching in Online Search: Applying Text Analysis to Illuminate the Consumer Decision Journey. Journal of Marketing Research.