A second life for second-hand products: the role of anthropomorphism and taboo trade-offs

IF 3.7 3区 管理学 Q2 BUSINESS
Jing Wan, Pankaj Aggarwal
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose

Trade-offs that involve secular values of money and sacred human values are often seen as taboo. This paper aims to examine how consumers avoid making taboo trade-offs with anthropomorphized products, by choosing options that ensure the well-being of the humanized products, even at a financial cost to themselves.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors conducted five experiments, across different marketplace contexts (i.e. repairing, buying and selling), to test the broad generalizability of the extent to which consumers are willing to incur a financial cost due to concern for the well-being of anthropomorphized products.

Findings

The results reveal that consumers are willing to accept financially inferior options to protect the humanness endowed upon anthropomorphized products. The effect is mediated by consumers’ concern for the treatment of the anthropomorphized product. The effect is moderated by consumers’ trait empathy level, such that those low in empathy are willing to sacrifice human value for the sake of greater financial gain.

Research limitations/implications

Future research could examine, in the context of anthropomorphized products, if there are types of human values that are less inviolable, leading consumers to be more willing to trade them off for monetary gains.

Practical implications

The findings have direct implications for second-hand markets. For potential buyers of anthropomorphized products, they should signal concern for the product; for sellers, anthropomorphizing their products can reduce haggling behavior. From a sustainability perspective, consumers may be more motivated to repair or recycle their products if it is framed as “infusing new life” into their products.

Originality/value

This work highlights a novel effect of anthropomorphism: when marketplace decisions are involved, anthropomorphizing a product can introduce a tension between secular monetary values and sacred human values. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this work is the first to show that consumers are willing to incur a monetary loss to protect the humanness of anthropomorphized product, driven by their concern for the proper treatment of such humanized products.

二手产品的第二次生命:拟人化和禁忌权衡的作用
目的涉及世俗的金钱价值和神圣的人类价值的权衡往往被视为禁忌。本文旨在研究消费者如何通过选择确保人性化产品福祉的方案来避免对拟人化产品做出禁忌权衡,即使自己要为此付出经济代价。结果结果显示,消费者愿意接受经济上较差的选择,以保护拟人化产品的人性。消费者对拟人化产品所受待遇的关注会对这一效应产生中介作用。该效应受消费者特质移情水平的调节,即移情水平低的消费者愿意为了更大的经济利益而牺牲人类价值。研究局限/启示未来的研究可以在拟人化产品的背景下,探讨是否有一些类型的人类价值不太不可侵犯,从而导致消费者更愿意为了金钱利益而牺牲它们。对于拟人化产品的潜在买家来说,他们应该对产品表示关注;对于卖家来说,拟人化他们的产品可以减少讨价还价的行为。从可持续发展的角度来看,如果将产品拟人化为 "注入新的生命",消费者可能会更有动力修理或回收他们的产品。据作者所知,这项研究首次表明,消费者愿意承担金钱损失,以保护拟人化产品的人性,这是出于他们对正确对待这种人性化产品的关注。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
13.60%
发文量
126
期刊介绍: The EJM is receptive to all areas of research which are relevant to marketing academic research, some examples are: ■Sustainability and ethical issues in marketing ■Consumer behaviour ■Advertising and branding issues ■Sales management and personal selling ■Methodology and metatheory of marketing research ■International and export marketing ■Services marketing ■New product development and innovation ■Retailing and distribution ■Macromarketing and societal issues ■Pricing and economic decision making in marketing ■Marketing models
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