Posted
Nov 2008
Jack of All Trades or Master of One?
Performance perceptions of multi-feature products
Based on the Research of Alexander Chernev
Does an iPod play music better than an iPhone? Does a standalone printer make higher quality printouts than an all-in-one printer/fax/copy machine? Does a laundry detergent promising great cleaning power remove stains better than a laundry detergent that promises both great cleaning power and enhanced protection against fading?
When designing products, companies often choose one of two positioning strategies. They can opt for a narrow, specialized positioning, whereby the product is presented as a master of one, characterized by a single feature. Alternatively, companies can choose a broad, all-in-one positioning, whereby the product is described as a jack of all trades, combining different attributes in an all-in-one solution. For example, Era is positioned by Procter & Gamble as the detergent with “powerful stain removal,” Cheer promises to “help protect against fading,” Gain offers “great cleaning power,” while Tide combines all of the above features.
The widely used strategy of pricing all-in-one products at parity with specialized products might be self-defeating or destructive.Which of these two positioning strategies works best? Alexander Chernev, professor of marketing at the Kellogg School of Management, set out to answer this question, studying how consumers evaluate specialized products (masters of one) relative to all-in-one products (jacks of all trades). To investigate this issue, Chernev conducted a series of experiments in which participants were presented with choice sets composed of both specialized and all-in-one products. Respondents were then asked to rate the different alternatives on various attributes and make hypothetical purchase decisions.
Perceived Performance
An initial experiment was intended to examine how the perceived performance of all-in-one products on different attributes is influenced by the presence of specialized products and vice versa. Five product categories were used: laundry detergent, toothpaste, shaving cream, cold relief medicine, and vitamin supplements. Three alternatives were created for each product category: two specialized options described by a single attribute and one all-in-one option combining both of the attributes. For each category, respondents were shown a choice set and were asked to rate the alternatives on different attributes. For example, in the toothpaste category, respondents were first asked to rate the perceived performance of the products in the choice set on the first attribute (cavity protection) and then on the second attribute (tooth whitening). The respondents were then asked to choose which product they would purchase depending on which attribute had primary importance. For example, which toothpaste would they buy if cavity protection was their primary concern? What if tooth whitening was their primary concern?
Chernev found that a product specializing in a single attribute is perceived to be superior in that attribute relative to an all-in-one product having multiple features. This happens even when the two alternatives are clearly described as being equivalent on that attribute. For instance, consumers expect whitening-only toothpaste to whiten teeth better than toothpaste that both whitens and prevents cavities.
This phenomenon is attributed to consumers’ reliance on the so-called “zero-sum heuristic.” Heuristics are simple mental rules that people use to make decisions, form judgments, and solve problems. According to the zero-sum heuristic, individuals believe that the alternatives in a given choice set are balanced in their overall performance. Hence, consumers draw compensatory inferences and conclude that for each option, advantages in one attribute must be compensated for by disadvantages in another attribute. Therefore, when evaluating choice sets comprising both specialized and all-in-one options, consumers tend to consider the overall performance of the alternatives to be equivalent. This leads them to draw two types of compensatory inferences: compensatory devaluation, which lowers the perceived performance of the all-in-one option, and compensatory polarization, which enhances the perceived performance of the specialized options on their differentiating attributes.
Price Matters
In a second study, Chernev examined the role played by price. In particular, he hypothesized that the perceived attractiveness of the all-in-one option can be increased by placing it at a higher price than that of the competing specialized options. This prediction was tested using four product categories: laundry detergent, toothpaste, shaving cream, and vitamin supplements. Three options were created for each product category: two specialized options described by a single attribute and one all-in-one alternative combining both of the attributes. For each category, respondents were shown a choice set in which either all of the options were priced at parity, or one of the options was priced at a premium. Subjects were then asked to rate the perceived attractiveness of the alternatives on different attributes.
Results indicate that when the multi-attribute product is priced higher than the single-attribute alternative, consumers do not engage in compensatory devaluation of the jack of all trades. In effect, the higher price undermines the basic premise of the zero-sum heuristic, suggesting that the alternatives are not balanced in value and justifying the superiority of the all-in-one product on multiple attributes. This finding has important implications, as it suggests that the widely used strategy of pricing all-in-one products at parity with specialized products might in fact be self-defeating or destructive.




7 Comments
Nov 4 2008
Interesting research,
I’m looking at the above from the perspective of software security suites for consumers (or businesses for that matter), which may include a firewall, antivirus, anti-spyware, anti-spam, etc. Buyers have a choice of purchasing these separately, or as a suite.
Several years ago, I saw some research that did suggest that purchasers expected a discount when they purchased the bundle. (In fact, today, there is a negative connotation among some consumers about the word suite). Customers expected the cost of the whole to be less than the sum of the parts. Perhaps a subconscious belief that no one organization could have all of the best of breed components?
From a positioning standpoint, sellers of suites then have to find positioning points other than “best of breed”. In the case of security - single console, single point of contact for questions, ease of updating, etc.
Nov 12 2008
This is really excellent research, and provides further ammunition to those preaching the importance of focus (often seen as sacrifice) in positioning.
Do you have any research insights as to how your hypotheses apply to other categories (e.g. consumer electronics, b2b software, consumer durables)?
Nov 27 2008
I am amazed at not just the insight that Prof Chernev brings to the topic but the ideas that prompted him to research this topic.
My case is, can this also be applied to career patterns and career choices. Some do want to specialise in only one field of study and that alone. They come out so excellent in their professional or academic pursuits to the extent that people feel that they are good in anything else you may assign them even though they may perform abysmally in other areas when actually tried and tested.
I will keep following this research topic as well to find out more.
Dec 8 2008
It is amazing that someone asked if this can be applied to career patterns. I think it absolutely can be applied to career patterns. In my own experience, while moving from an Information Technology audit professional to an Oracle database administrator (DBA), I cited wanting to be a “Master of One as opposed to being Jack of All Trades” as the reason during the interview for the Oracle DBA position.
The “zero-sum heuristic” for me was that while I knew the security aspect of databases, networking, operating systems and web applications, this advantage of knowledge across wide range of systems was compensated by the disadvantage that apart from security knowledge of these systems, I knew nothing about, monitoring, administration, configuration, backup and recovery of these systems.
With no difference in the pay scale for the two jobs, the compensatory polarization made the Oracle DBA job much more attractive than the compensatory devaluation that made the IT Audit job less attractive.
Now that I read the last part of this article and begin to think that if the IT Audit job had a significantly higher pay package than the Oracle DBA job, I probably would have continued to remain in IT Audit.
Dec 24 2008
Interesting research, really, it helps to understand for us a lot of customers decisions. Otherwise, I think there are certain fields where all-in-one products are more efficient than single-attribute ones, and also markets, where the idea ” to buy something and get everything” considerations are still stronger than the specific ones. A detergent for a dishwasher machine which is categorized as it cleans fine glasses and dirty pots as well, can be much more comfortable in a household wife’s daily procedure - running only a single dishwasher program - , than the specialized one for glasses, and a separate one for the pots. Professional/industrial use makes different decision, all-in-ones stay on shelves, while specialized products will be bought. However, I would say, - in rough figures it can be true - low-class markets are more for multi-purpose products, and well-situated markets better for single-attributed or half-industrial (looking/promising) products. Of course in specific areas.
Dec 28 2008
I mean low budgeted customers market, like third world.
Mar 12 2009
We’re practitioners of marketing and sales and write from time to time. A note we wrote recently emphasised that miniaturisation in technoloy has the power to converge devices…a mobile phone that plays music/ shares vidoes/ allows videoconferencing…
technology advancements make it possible that such converged devices perform very well on each attribute (though a nikon camera may be outstanding, it will appear so only to a passionate photographer).
This research puts into perspective the pricing issue on such converged devices. Very interesting.
regards
ritu venkatesh rangachari
rituvenkat12.blogspot.com