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- Title
The Abercrombie & Fitch Effect: The Impact of Physical Dominance on Male Customers' Status-Signaling Consumption.
- Authors
OTTERBRING, TOBIAS; RINGLER, CHRISTINE; SIRIANNI, NANCY J.; GUSTAFSSON, ANDERS
- Abstract
Consumer lay theory suggests that women will spend more money than men in the presence of a physically dominant male employee, whereas theories of intrasexual competition from evolutionary psychology predict the opposite outcome. A retail field study demonstrates that male customers spend more money and purchase more expensive products than their female counterparts in the presence (vs. absence) of a physically dominant male employee. This effect has a more powerful impact on male customers who lack bodily markers of dominance (shorter stature or measures linked to lower levels of testosterone). When confronted with other physically dominant (vs. nondominant) men, these male customers are particularly prone to signal status through price or logo size. Their elevated feelings of intrasexual (male-to-male) competitiveness drive them to spend more money on status-signaling, but not functional, products and to prefer and draw larger brand logos. Because pictorial exposure is sufficient for the effect to occur, these findings are not limited to in-store interactions with dominant male employees but have broad implications for marketing and advertising.
- Subjects
CONSUMER behavior; MALE consumers; MALE employees; SOCIAL status; MAN-woman relationships -- Psychological aspects; SOCIAL dominance; ABERCROMBIE &; Fitch Co.; LOGOS (Symbols); PSYCHOLOGY
- Publication
Journal of Marketing Research (JMR), 2018, Vol 55, Issue 1, p69
- ISSN
0022-2437
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1509/jmr.15.0247