Customizing products for self versus close others: the effect of intended recipient on creator perceptions of product uniqueness

Customers of mass customization websites measure the utility of the site by the uniqueness of the products they design, yet the factors influencing customizer perceptions of product uniqueness are underexplored. We examine the effect of the intended recipient (self vs. close others) in three studies...

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Veröffentlicht in:Marketing letters 2020-03, Vol.31 (1), p.73-87
Hauptverfasser: Yin, Jiamin, Wang, Yansu, Pang, Jun, Wang, Kanliang
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Wang, Yansu
Pang, Jun
Wang, Kanliang
description Customers of mass customization websites measure the utility of the site by the uniqueness of the products they design, yet the factors influencing customizer perceptions of product uniqueness are underexplored. We examine the effect of the intended recipient (self vs. close others) in three studies involving real customization tasks. We show that creators (i.e., product customizers) perceive products designed for close others (vs. for themselves) to be more unique, with thoughtfulness in design as the mediator. This recipient effect is not found when third parties evaluate product uniqueness, suggesting that recipient identity does not influence design outcomes but merely creator perceptions of those outcomes. In the design-for-others context wherein creators are usually gift givers, gift recipients perceive designed products to be more unique than do the gift givers (i.e., creators), and these perceptions enhance the recipient’s feelings of appreciation via the mediating effect of the perceived thoughtfulness of gift givers. We close by discussing the theoretical and practical implications of these findings.
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source Business Source Complete; Jstor Complete Legacy; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Appreciation
Business and Management
Customers
Customization
Design
IDEA CORNER
Identity
Marketing
Perceptions
Thoughtfulness
Uniqueness
Websites
title Customizing products for self versus close others: the effect of intended recipient on creator perceptions of product uniqueness
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