2017
DOI: 10.1002/mar.21008
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When are Consumers Motivated to Connect with Ethical Brands? The Roles of Guilt and Moral Identity Importance

Abstract: This research adds to the growing literature on what draws consumers to ethical brands. Findings from three studies demonstrate that guilt motivates consumers to connect with ethical brands, especially those consumers with high levels of moral identity importance (MII). Specifically, Study 1 finds that consumers report stronger self-brand connections (SBCs) with an ethical brand when they feel guilty (vs. control). Study 2 finds that guilt particularly motivates consumers with high MII toreport stronger SBCs w… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(30 citation statements)
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References 93 publications
(161 reference statements)
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“…First, when inspecting the form of guilt, the majority of research utilized reactive guilt (Allard & White, 2015;Antonetti & Maklan, 2014aDahl et al, 2005;Goldsmith et al, 2012;Hanks & Mattila, 2014;Miao, 2011;Newman & Trump, 2017;Saintives & Lunardo, 2016;Soscia, 2007) followed by anticipatory guilt (Onwezen et al, 2013;Onwezen et al, 2014aOnwezen et al, , 2014bSteenhaut & Van Kenhove, 2006;Theotokis & Manganari, 2015) while no research has examined existential guilt. Second, in terms of the cause of guilt, the majority of research, in the examined contexts, evaluated guilt that is related to the self (caused by one's actions) (Allard & White, 2015;Newman & Trump, 2017) followed by guilt that is related to societal standards (Theotokis & Manganari, 2015). Limited research examined guilt that is related to others and guilt as result one's inactions (Dahl et al, 2005;Steenhaut & Van Kenhove, 2006).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…First, when inspecting the form of guilt, the majority of research utilized reactive guilt (Allard & White, 2015;Antonetti & Maklan, 2014aDahl et al, 2005;Goldsmith et al, 2012;Hanks & Mattila, 2014;Miao, 2011;Newman & Trump, 2017;Saintives & Lunardo, 2016;Soscia, 2007) followed by anticipatory guilt (Onwezen et al, 2013;Onwezen et al, 2014aOnwezen et al, , 2014bSteenhaut & Van Kenhove, 2006;Theotokis & Manganari, 2015) while no research has examined existential guilt. Second, in terms of the cause of guilt, the majority of research, in the examined contexts, evaluated guilt that is related to the self (caused by one's actions) (Allard & White, 2015;Newman & Trump, 2017) followed by guilt that is related to societal standards (Theotokis & Manganari, 2015). Limited research examined guilt that is related to others and guilt as result one's inactions (Dahl et al, 2005;Steenhaut & Van Kenhove, 2006).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to guilt's effect on pro-environmental intentions, it also has a significant impact on behaviors. Research shows that guilt regulates sustainable consumption decisions (Gans & Groves, 2012), hinders consumers' neutralization efforts (Antonetti & Maklan, 2014b), and prompts consumers to identify with ethical brands (Newman & Trump, 2017). In addition, recent research elaborated on consumers' tendency to experience guilt, also known as guilt proneness, over ethical consumption decisions, indicating that consumers who are predisposed to feeling guilty abstain from engaging in unethical behavior (Arli, Leo, & Tjiptono, 2016).…”
Section: Pro-environmental Consumer Behaviormentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For example, to study embarrassment in products (Londono, Davies, & Elms, 2017), service encounters (Kilian, Steinmann, & Hammes, 2018), and how men and women cope with the embarrassment of buying condoms (Arndt & Ekebas-Turedi, 2017). An additional powerful negative emotion is guilt (Arli, Leo, & Tjiptono, 2016), since guilt and moral identity also help consumers to connect with ethical brands (Newman & Trump, 2017).…”
Section: Interpretive Consumer Behavior Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%