How a perceived status change increase consumers’ tendency toward consumption through double psychological mechanisms

While previous research has demonstrated that status significantly affects consumer behaviour, most studies have examined objective status rather than perceived status. The present article, therefore, aims to examine how a perceived change in status affects consumers’ status consumption as well as t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Asian journal of social psychology 2018-03, Vol.21 (1-2), p.65-73
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Taiyang, Jin, Xiaotong, Song, Wei, Cui, Hongjing, Ding, Jianlue
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container_end_page 73
container_issue 1-2
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container_title Asian journal of social psychology
container_volume 21
creator Zhao, Taiyang
Jin, Xiaotong
Song, Wei
Cui, Hongjing
Ding, Jianlue
description While previous research has demonstrated that status significantly affects consumer behaviour, most studies have examined objective status rather than perceived status. The present article, therefore, aims to examine how a perceived change in status affects consumers’ status consumption as well as the underlying psychological mechanisms for this behaviour. Study 1 manipulates participants’ perceived status change and measures their tendencies toward status consumption. Results show that both participants undergoing status improvement and those perceiving a threat to their status are more inclined towards status consumption than participants in a control condition. Study 2 manipulates participants’ perceived status change and measures their self‐presentation motivation, self‐compensation motivation, and status consumption tendency. A series of mediation analyses shows that self‐presentation, rather than self‐compensation, mediates the positive effect of status improvement on consumers’ status consumption and that self‐compensation, rather than self‐presentation, mediates the positive effect of status threat on consumers’ status consumption. Results of our studies suggest that consumers who perceive status improvement seek status consumption for self‐presentation purposes, while consumers who perceive status threat seek status consumption for self‐compensation. The article concludes by discussing the theoretical contribution of this research and offering practical suggestions regarding product marketing.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/ajsp.12206
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source Wiley Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Compensation
Consumer behavior
consumer behaviour
Consumers
Consumption
Marketing
Motivation
perceived status change
Psychological research
self‐compensation
self‐presentation
status consumption
subjective status
Threats
title How a perceived status change increase consumers’ tendency toward consumption through double psychological mechanisms
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