COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > CJBS Marketing Group Seminars > Filling the Void or Showing the Love? How Romantic Rejection vs. Acceptance Affects Men’s and Women’s Willingness-to-Pay for Conspicuous Goods
Filling the Void or Showing the Love? How Romantic Rejection vs. Acceptance Affects Men’s and Women’s Willingness-to-Pay for Conspicuous GoodsAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Luke Slater. Interpersonal relationships, particularly romantic relationships, are an important yet underexamined area of consumer behavior. In the current research, we experimentally test the association between people’s actual romantic relationship experiences and their willingness-to-pay for a conspicuous luxury good. In two studies, we demonstrate a novel result that men and women exhibit opposite patterns of willingness-to-pay based on the type of romantic experience they recall. Study 1 finds that men are willing-to-pay more for a conspicuous good when recalling a romantic rejection (vs. acceptance) while women are willing-to-pay more when recalling a romantic acceptance (vs. rejection), particularly when thinking about the public aspects of the experience. Study 2 (involving people currently in serious romantic relationships) shows that these findings are specific to conspicuous goods, and that the effect is mediated by social self-esteem (for men). The findings are discussed in light of sexual economics theory and social signaling, and offer intriguing insights and future research directions into how romantic relationships affect consumer purchase behavior. This talk is part of the CJBS Marketing Group Seminars series. This talk is included in these lists:Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsPathways to Manufacturing Bullard Laboratories Tea Time Talks Biophysical Techniques Lecture Series 2017 Trinity Hall History Society Profitable business investment proposal, notify me if interested CamBioScience's Two-day Intensive courses in Emerging Life Science TechnologiesOther talksBrest-Litovsk and the Making of Modern Ukraine and Russia Debtors’ schedules: a new source for understanding the economy in 18th-century England Anthropology, mass graves and the politics of the dead Internal Displacement in Cyprus and childhood: The view from genetic social psychology Determining structures in situ using cryo-electron tomography:enveloped viruses and coated vesicles |