Wounding pride and infusing affect: the ambivalent emotional experience of checkout charity

IF 2.7 Q2 BUSINESS
Joshua T. Coleman, Michael C. Peasley
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose This study aims to apply the Wounded Pride/Spite model (integral emotions which occur during the donation request) and the Affect Infusion model (incidental emotions primed before encountering the checkout charity request) to check out charity to understand the interactive effects of positive and negative emotional responses. Furthermore, the moderating role of a positive or negative shopping experience is examined. Design/methodology/approach In Study 1, 518 customers participated in an online survey using a controlled scenario describing checkout charity exchanges. In Study 2, 274 students participated in a similar online scenario but were primed with a positive or negative shopping experience. Data were analyzed through structural equation modeling using Mplus v8. Findings Checkout charity is laden with affective experiences that simultaneously produce positive and negative emotions. Customers who are involved with charities and perceive it acceptable for companies to elicit charitable support are more likely to experience feelings of pride and joy during a point-of-sale donation request. However, negative affective responses are more complicated, as personal support of nonprofits was not enough to reduce feelings of guilt and anger during a donation request. Furthermore, in Study 2, the authors discover that as integral emotions influence customers’ affective states during a checkout charity encounter, incidental emotions garnered from the customer’s shopping experience serve as a moderating role in increasing positive affect and mitigating negative affect, highlighting the importance of the holistic shopping experience. Finally, in Study 2, the incongruent reaction of high positive and high negative affect was linked to decreased donation intentions, further emphasizing the importance of creating positive shopping experiences and identifying customers who perceive it to be acceptable for companies to elicit charitable support. Originality/value To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this research is the first to apply these dual theoretical explanations to checkout charity, contributing an affective and customer-based understanding to complement prior work on marketing strategy. The findings both uphold and extend research in this area, providing novel support for the role of the customer in determining the success of checkout charity.
受伤的骄傲和注入的情感:结账慈善机构矛盾的情感体验
目的本研究旨在应用受伤的骄傲/吐口水模型(在捐款请求过程中发生的整体情绪)和情感灌输模型(在遇到结账慈善请求之前引发的偶然情绪)来检查慈善机构,以了解积极和消极情绪反应的交互影响。此外,还考察了积极或消极购物体验的调节作用。设计/方法/方法在研究1中,518名顾客参与了一项在线调查,该调查使用了一个描述结账慈善交流的受控场景。在研究2中,274名学生参与了类似的在线场景,但他们都有积极或消极的购物体验。使用Mplus v8通过结构方程建模对数据进行分析。FindingsCheckout慈善机构充满了同时产生积极和消极情绪的情感体验。参与慈善机构并认为公司可以接受慈善支持的客户更有可能在销售点捐款请求中感受到自豪和喜悦。然而,负面情感反应更为复杂,因为非营利组织的个人支持不足以减少捐款请求中的内疚和愤怒感。此外,在研究2中,作者发现,由于整体情绪会影响顾客在结账慈善活动中的情感状态,从顾客的购物体验中获得的偶然情绪在增加积极情绪和减轻消极情绪方面发挥着调节作用,突出了整体购物体验的重要性。最后,在研究2中,高积极和高消极影响的不协调反应与捐赠意愿的降低有关,进一步强调了创造积极购物体验的重要性,并确定了认为公司可以接受的客户,以获得慈善支持。独创性/价值据作者所知,本研究首次将这些双重理论解释应用于结账慈善,为情感和基于客户的理解做出贡献,以补充之前在营销策略方面的工作。这一发现既支持又扩展了这一领域的研究,为顾客在决定结账慈善成功中的作用提供了新的支持。
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
Journal of Consumer Marketing
Journal of Consumer Marketing Business, Management and Accounting-Business and International Management
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
7.10%
发文量
68
期刊介绍: ■Consumer behaviour ■Customer policy and service ■Practical case studies to illustrate concepts ■The latest thinking and research in marketing planning ■The marketing of services worldwide
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