How culture shapes consumer responses to anthropomorphic products

Anecdotal evidence suggests that Eastern consumers respond more favorably to anthropomorphic products than their Western counterparts. In the present work, we examine the validity of this common intuition and uncover the specific cultural dimension underlying this difference in consumer response. Sp...

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Main Authors: Baskentli, S, Hadi, R, Lee, L
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023
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author Baskentli, S
Hadi, R
Lee, L
author_facet Baskentli, S
Hadi, R
Lee, L
author_sort Baskentli, S
collection OXFORD
description Anecdotal evidence suggests that Eastern consumers respond more favorably to anthropomorphic products than their Western counterparts. In the present work, we examine the validity of this common intuition and uncover the specific cultural dimension underlying this difference in consumer response. Specifically, across a cross-national field study and three controlled experiments, we demonstrate that collectivistic consumers favor anthropomorphic products more than non-anthropomorphic products, whereas non-collectivistic consumers do not display this relative preference. This interactive effect holds across various product categories, regardless of whether collectivistic thinking is measured, manipulated, or operationalized based on nationality or ethnicity. We offer managerial and theoretical implications that stem from our findings.
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spelling oxford-uuid:a7718a56-10d5-41ad-8c85-4e3cd9fcc7ec2025-01-02T12:43:48ZHow culture shapes consumer responses to anthropomorphic productsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:a7718a56-10d5-41ad-8c85-4e3cd9fcc7ecEnglishSymplectic ElementsElsevier2023Baskentli, SHadi, RLee, LAnecdotal evidence suggests that Eastern consumers respond more favorably to anthropomorphic products than their Western counterparts. In the present work, we examine the validity of this common intuition and uncover the specific cultural dimension underlying this difference in consumer response. Specifically, across a cross-national field study and three controlled experiments, we demonstrate that collectivistic consumers favor anthropomorphic products more than non-anthropomorphic products, whereas non-collectivistic consumers do not display this relative preference. This interactive effect holds across various product categories, regardless of whether collectivistic thinking is measured, manipulated, or operationalized based on nationality or ethnicity. We offer managerial and theoretical implications that stem from our findings.
spellingShingle Baskentli, S
Hadi, R
Lee, L
How culture shapes consumer responses to anthropomorphic products
title How culture shapes consumer responses to anthropomorphic products
title_full How culture shapes consumer responses to anthropomorphic products
title_fullStr How culture shapes consumer responses to anthropomorphic products
title_full_unstemmed How culture shapes consumer responses to anthropomorphic products
title_short How culture shapes consumer responses to anthropomorphic products
title_sort how culture shapes consumer responses to anthropomorphic products
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