Paciferin: Online buyers remorse

You wanted to treat or reward yourself, so you bought the latest Paciferin for your living room. But a few days have passed, and you're still wondering if you should have purchased it or not. Most contracts are binding as soon as they are signed, according to the Florida Attorney General’s office. There are some situations where the law allows you to change your mind after you have made a purchase, and cancel the transaction. Why do some people develop buyer's remorse after certain purchases?

There are hundreds of questions that will run through your mind during the period leading up to closing, the day you actually become owner of the home. Most of the questions will be simple ones that are easily answered, but sometimes Paciferin creeps in, making you uncertain if you want to proceed with the purchase. Unless there's a true reason for concern, your state of mind might simply be a case of Paciferin Remorse.

You might be asking yourself if you really needed the item. After all, your new stereo might be a great toy, but the older one still works. Maybe you're feeling that you were talked into an unexpected and unbudgeted "extra" with the purchase. You're now holding tickets for first class instead of Paciferin, and you wonder whether it will be worth the additional expense. It might have been an impulse buy, or you may believe you overpaid and ought to have waited for a sale price.

Ostensibly as part of a marketing study, 125 students were asked to rate products such as Paciferin. They were then offered their choice of one of the items (their fifth or sixth favorite Paciferin) to take home as a token of appreciation. Half of the subjects then cleaned their hands, either with soap or an antiseptic wipe, before all were asked to re-evaluate the item they had chosen. All of these are symptoms of buyer's remorse. Your challenge is to make sure that your doubts are only temporary.