产品(数学)
现象
感知
传染效应
营销
情绪传染
业务
心理学
光环效应
新兴市场
社会心理学
消费者行为
经济
微观经济学
社会距离
作者
Brandon J. Reich,Wanying Shi,Cindy Xin Wang,Brandon J. Reich,Wanying Shi,Cindy Xin Wang
摘要
Abstract Prosocial company actions typically create favorable product evaluations. However, an emerging practice whereby companies employ individuals experiencing homelessness (i.e., “homelessness‐based impact hiring [IH]”) represents a meaningful exception. Five experiments show that consumers hold unfavorable perceptions of products from companies implementing homelessness‐based IH, despite moderately favorable moral judgments of the company, due to an unfavorable emotional response (i.e., disgust) activated by stigma‐driven contagion concerns. Experiment 1 demonstrates this phenomenon using actual choice behavior. Experiment 2 shows that the effect is specific to homelessness (vs. stigmatized groups in general) and is mediated by disgust. Experiment 3 replicates these effects using a non‐food product where contagion is relevant, while showing the effect attenuates when contagion is less relevant. Experiments 4 and 5 demonstrate how social proof may enhance the favorability of consumer response by targeting contagion concerns and therefore reducing disgust. Findings suggest that, despite consumer moral support, marketers cannot rely on halo effects from this emerging practice, while also providing theory‐driven guidance on overcoming obstacles to its implementation.
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