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by matham
841 days ago
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What you're quoting is their literature review, not their study. Their study was: >... conducted in a medium-size store operated by a large, nationally known chain of supermarkets ... The study covered a nine-week period starting on January 28 and ending on March 31, 1980... ... M0=no music, M1=slow, M2=fast music... ...they measured (1) traffic speed (2) daily gross sales (3)... ...for (1) they found: traffic flow was significantly slower with the slow tempo music (Ml mean = 127.53 seconds) than for the faster tempo music (M2 mean = 108.93 seconds) ... Ml stimulated an even slower pace than no music (a mean of 127.53 seconds for Ml compared to a mean of 119.86 for Mo), although not statistically significant... ...for (2) they found: The higher sales volumes were consistently associated with the slower tempo musical selections while
in contrast, the lower sales figures were consistently associated with the faster tempo music (MI mean = $16,740.23 compared with M2 mean = $12,112.85). This difference is significant... |
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Just some thoughts off the top of my head:
I would imagine that clients with a higher median age in general prefer slower music.
I would also imagine that clients with a higher median age in general are more affluent (or more likely to be shopping for more than one person).
As a result, I would expect spend to be higher in areas with an older customer base.
Managers with an older customer base would likely select music that appeals to their customer base, likely slower music. Shoppers who do not like the manager's music taste may opt to instead shop somewhere where the music is more in line with their own tastes, so I'm not sure that the independent variable here can be properly controlled.
Therefore, the study may actually be finding a correlation which depends rather on the affluence of the community, rather than what they purport to have discovered.