This study investigates whether cognitive or emotional informational priming better drives purchase intention among wine tourists in a direct-to-consumer setting. Through a randomized field experiment conducted at a premium Valpolicella winery, two groups received contrasting pre-tasting digital content: one focused on emotional storytelling, the other on technical and attribute-based data. Results show that cognitive priming generated a significantly higher mean purchase intention (M=5.94) compared to emotional priming (M=4.65), representing a 27.7% increase confirmed by a robust ANOVA (F=30.4, p<.001). A complementary lexical analysis of the tasting speech revealed its intrinsically narrative nature, suggesting that cognitive priming acted as a complementary "technical scaffold" rather than redundant information. The findings support the "Cognitive Alibi" hypothesis: rational, data-driven framing lowers the psychological cost of hedonic spending, offering wineries a scalable, low-cost strategy to improve conversion without restructuring the visitor experience.

Measuring the Sales Impact of Cognitive vs Emotional Priming in Wine Tourism: Evidence from a Field Experiment

Alessio Sartore;Davide Gaeta
2026-01-01

Abstract

This study investigates whether cognitive or emotional informational priming better drives purchase intention among wine tourists in a direct-to-consumer setting. Through a randomized field experiment conducted at a premium Valpolicella winery, two groups received contrasting pre-tasting digital content: one focused on emotional storytelling, the other on technical and attribute-based data. Results show that cognitive priming generated a significantly higher mean purchase intention (M=5.94) compared to emotional priming (M=4.65), representing a 27.7% increase confirmed by a robust ANOVA (F=30.4, p<.001). A complementary lexical analysis of the tasting speech revealed its intrinsically narrative nature, suggesting that cognitive priming acted as a complementary "technical scaffold" rather than redundant information. The findings support the "Cognitive Alibi" hypothesis: rational, data-driven framing lowers the psychological cost of hedonic spending, offering wineries a scalable, low-cost strategy to improve conversion without restructuring the visitor experience.
2026
Inglese
ELETTRONICO
5th Conference of the European Association of Wine Economists (EuAWE)
Trieste (Italy), Koper (Slovenia)
June 2026
5th Conference of the European Association of Wine Economists (EuAWE)
1
50
50
wine tourism, direct-to-consumer, cognitive priming, information framing
open
Sartore, Alessio; Gaeta, Davide
04 Contributo in atti di convegno::04.02 Abstract in Atti di convegno
274
2
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11562/1184873
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