Article: Monday, 22 January 2018
Car-sharing schemes can reduce the environmental impact of driving. But how do you entice car owners that are extremely attached to their own cars? Research by Joshua Paundra of Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University (RSM) and a team of researchers shows that such car lovers need more arguments to switch to sharing schemes than just the lower price per trip and sustainability of car-sharing. The study suggests that to these people, car-sharing should not be marketed as a replacement, but as a mode of transport for when their cherished vehicle is unavailable.
Over the last 10 years, people have been offered more options for getting around than just owning a car, says researcher Paundra. Particularly in cities, car-sharing schemes allow people to travel by car without the burden of car ownership. These options are more sustainable than having everybody own their own car that is typically in use only five per cent of the time.
Car-sharing offers other benefits, he continues: it is cheaper than owning and using a personal car, reduces the demand for parking spaces because shared cars have designated parking areas, and users can access the newest electric vehicles with the least emissions.
It’s simple to see how some people are extremely attached to the idea of owning a car – to the point at which car ownership becomes an extension of their identity. The researchers suspected that a high level of possessive feelings, called ‘psychological ownership’, can make people less open to the idea of using car-sharing schemes and reduce their intention to sign up for them. If so, then policy makers aiming to increase the use of car-sharing schemes may need to approach this group differently: simply pointing out the usual advantages of car-sharing schemes might not work here.
The researchers’ online experiment showed that in general, everyone is sensitive to price: when car-sharing schemes become cheaper, they become more attractive. But for people with a high level of psychological ownership this effect is reduced. They continue to use their own car, even when they know this will cost more than car-sharing.
The results also showed that when people with low levels of psychological ownership are offered a shared and relatively clean electric vehicle, they are willing to pay the relatively high price. This effect is a lot less powerful with people that are very attached to their cars. These people often will not pay extra for the opportunity to drive an electric vehicle.
Paundra says this study shows that everyone has a different psychological attitude towards owning a car, and this calls for a diversified approach to attract them to car-sharing schemes.
To convince people to try out car-sharing, policy makers and marketers could emphasise its potential as an alternative form of transport when their regular transport is unavailable. This could be when a partner or family member is using the car, when it is being serviced, or when a specific type of car is needed.
It’s a way to invite these people to discover car-sharing without implying they should sell their own car – which is often a turn-off. Once people become more familiar with the car-sharing scheme and its advantages, they might eventually become more willing to sell their own car and switch to a sharing scheme entirely, the researcher concludes.
Department of Technology and Operations Management
Rotterdam School of Management (RSM)
Erasmus University Rotterdam
Joshua Paundra, Laurens Rook, Jan van Dalen, Wolfgang Ketter, Preferences for car sharing services: Effects of instrumental attributes and psychological ownership, Journal of Environmental Psychology Volume 53, November 2017, Pages 121-130 Female Representation in Male-Led Ventures.
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