Talk:Credence good
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The contents of the Credence good page were merged into SEC classification of goods and services on 12 August 2018 and it now redirects there. For the contribution history and old versions of the merged article please see its history. |
Merge search, experience and credence good articles
[edit]I propose that the three articles, search good, experience good and credence good be merged into a single article entitled search-experience-credence (SEC) classification of goods and services (or similar title). Both economists and marketers make use of the Search→Experience→ Credence (SEC) classification of goods and services. The classification scheme is based on the ease or difficulty of consumer evaluation activities and information acquisition activities. These days most economics and marketers treat the three classes of goods as a continuum.
Justification for merge
(1) It makes little sense to have three separate articles, when a single article containing all three types would highlight the inter-relationships between the three and also focus on the nature of the continuum (which is sadly lacking in the three separate articles. In other words, merging adds value to the overall meaning.
(2) The classification scheme has become a standard feature of economics and marketing texts. It is widely considered as a framework for understanding the differences between goods and services, and the implications arising from those differences. In other words, treating these as a single typology or classification is entirely consisten with the way that scholars treat these concepts.
(3) The quality of the three articles, search good, experience good and credence good varies enormously. Merging them will help to lift the overall standard because it will eliminate the need to write three separate intros and explain the context in each separate article.
Definitions
For the record, brief definitions follow and selected references are added at the end.
- Search goods: are those which possess attributes that can evaluated prior to purchase or consumption. Consumers rely on prior experience, direct product inspection and other information search activities to locate information that assists in the evaluation process. Most products fall into the search goods category (e.g. clothing, office stationery, home furnishings).
- Experience goods: are goods or services that can be accurately evaluated only after the product has been purchased and experiences. Many personal services fall into this category (e.g. restaurant, hairdresser, beauty salon, theme park, travel, holiday).
- Credence claims: are goods or services that are difficult or impossible to evaluate even after consumption has occured. Evaluation difficulties may arise because the consumer lacks the knowledge or technical expertise to make a realistic evaluation or, alternatively because the cost of information-acquisition may outweigh the value of the information available. Many professional services fall into this category (e.g. accountant, legal services, medical diagnosis/treatment, cosmetic surgery)
Suggested References
Ford, G.T., Smith, D.B. and Swasy, J.L. "An Empirical Test of the Search, Experience and Credence Attributes Framework", in Advances in Consumer Research, Vol. 15, Micheal J. Houston (ed.), Provo, UT : Association for Consumer Research, pp 239-244 <Online: http://acrwebsite.org/volumes/6817/volumes/v15/NA-15>
Mitra,K., Reiss, M.C. and Capella, L.M., "An Examination of Perceived risk, Information Search and Behavioral Intentions in Search, Experience and Credence Services", Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 13, no.: 3, 1999, pp 208-228
Benz, Men-Andri, Strategies in Markets for Experience and Credence Goods [E-book], Springer, 2007 ISBN 978-3-8350-9580-9 - especially see Chapter 1 'Experience and Credence Goods: An Introduction' - pp 1-5 <online: http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-8350-9580-9_1>
Harsh V. Verma, Services Marketing: Text and Cases, 2nd ed, India, Dorling-Kinderly, 2012, pp 261-264
(Google Books, https://books.google.com.au/books?id=nfszVjvXj1QC&pg=PA262&lpg=PA262&dq=search+experience+credence+goods+%22services+marketing%22&source=bl&ots=gfuhRegdDD&sig=-WeDt_mTJ5yLVPENxhgXSrfJIMA&hl=en&sa=X&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=search%20experience%20credence%20goods%20%22services%20marketing%22&f=false BronHiggs (talk) 22:22, 2 January 2017 (UTC)
Discussion
- Merge. You put forward a strong argument. All three terms derive from the same underlying principle. Each would require repetition in order to constitute a good Wikipedia article. --ChrisSampson87 (talk) 16:54, 10 January 2017 (UTC)
- The new page title is a bit of a challenge. Just SEC Classification is used for something quite different; any objection to SEC classification of goods and services? My feeling is that Search-experience-credence (SEC) classification of goods and services is a bit long. Klbrain (talk) 19:55, 23 July 2018 (UTC)
- Merger complete. Klbrain (talk) 22:30, 12 August 2018 (UTC)