Abstract

Understanding the visual attention and psychological responses of consumers to marketing pictures allows hotel managers to design more attractive advertisements. Therefore, the purposes of the present study were to use an eye-tracking analysis to explore whether there were different effects from tourist hotels’ wellness service pictures based on whether they had natural or built clues. The psychological responses with regard to perceived well-being and willingness to pay were also examined. Eighty-five older consumers were recruited. Their eye movement performance while observing marketing pictures with different visual clues and their subsequent psychological responses were measured. It was found that wellness service pictures with natural clues captured more visual attention and induced higher willingness-to-pay perceptions than those with built clues in these older consumers. The present results suggest that marketing pictures with natural clues may create positive visual responses in older customers and further enhance their purchase intention.

Highlights

  • To design an effective wellness service image and promote the development of the wellness service market, this research aims to confirm the influence of marketing images based on natural or built servicescapes on the visual attention and psychological responses of older customers in terms of their well-being and willingness to pay

  • When older consumers look at wellness service pictures for a limited period of time, they selectively prefer those with nature clues [7]

  • The findings show that wellness service pictures with nature clues elicited higher levels of visual attention in the older consumers under consideration, and led to willingness to pay

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Summary

Objectives

To design an effective wellness service image and promote the development of the wellness service market, this research aims to confirm the influence of marketing images based on natural or built servicescapes on the visual attention and psychological responses of older customers in terms of their well-being and willingness to pay

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