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The Fresh Deadline Effect: First of the Month Deadlines Increase Motivation by Decreasing Perceived Time

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  • Rebecca L. Chae
  • Katherine A. Burson

Abstract

Deadlines are a common tool for motivating consumer behavior, yet their effectiveness can depend on subtle features of temporal framing. Across eight experiments (N=3,045 including a posttest and two studies reported in the appendix, available onlineappendix), we identify a novel phenomenon—the fresh deadline effect—wherein deadlines that fall on the first of the month compress the perceived time during which a task must be completed and increase motivation to complete the task. Time intervals ending on the first feel subjectively shorter than equivalent durations ending within the same month or later in the following month, despite objective duration being held constant. This perceptual time compression increased motivation toward a deadline. A field experiment further showed that an expiration on the first increased coupon redemption rates. These findings contribute to research on time perception, temporal landmarks, and motivation, and offer practical insights for marketers and organizations designing time-sensitive interventions.

Suggested Citation

  • Rebecca L. Chae & Katherine A. Burson, 2026. "The Fresh Deadline Effect: First of the Month Deadlines Increase Motivation by Decreasing Perceived Time," Journal of the Association for Consumer Research, University of Chicago Press, vol. 11(3), pages 242-252.
  • Handle: RePEc:ucp:jacres:doi:10.1086/740290
    DOI: 10.1086/740290
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