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An Explorative Study of How Visceral States Influence the Relationship between Social Proof Heuristics and Donation Behavior When Consumers Are Using Self-Service Kiosks

An Explorative Study of How Visceral States Influence the Relationship between Social Proof Heuristics and Donation Behavior When Consumers Are Using Self-Service Kiosks


Title: An Explorative Study of How Visceral States Influence the Relationship between Social Proof Heuristics and Donation Behavior When Consumers Are Using Self-Service Kiosks
Author: Pawar, Sanchit
Fagerstrøm, Asle
Sigurdsson, Valdimar   orcid.org/0000-0002-2420-4863
Date: 2020-11-14
Language: English
Scope: 9477
University/Institute: Háskólinn í Reykjavík
Reykjavik University
School: Samfélagssvið (HR)
School of Social Sciences (RU)
Department: Viðskiptadeild (HR)
Department of Business Administration (RU)
Series: Sustainability;12(22)
ISSN: 2071-1050 (eISSN)
DOI: 10.3390/su12229477
Subject: Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment; Visceral states; Cause related marketing; Donation behavior; Self-service kiosks; Conjoint study; Sjálfbærni; Samfélagsábyrgð; Markaðssetning; Samfélagsáhrif; Góðgerðarmál; Gjafir; Neytendur; Hungur; Kauphegðun; Söluturnar
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/2515

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Citation:

Pawar, S., Fagerstrom, A., & Sigurdsson, V. (2020). An Explorative Study of How Visceral States Influence the Relationship between Social Proof Heuristics and Donation Behavior When Consumers Are Using Self-Service Kiosks. Sustainability, 12(22), 9477. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12229477

Abstract:

Self-service kiosks are increasingly being used in situations where a person is out to buy food and/or drinks. Several cause-related marketing initiatives have capitalized on using self-service technology to include small donation requests at the point of purchase. In this context, it is highly likely that during such purchase situations, a person is under the influence of a visceral state like hunger or thirst. This study investigated how a simulated visceral state of thirst could influence donation behavior. More specifically, how donation social proof indicators presented on self-service kiosk screens can impact likelihood to buy. Results of a conjoint study (n = 83) demonstrate that, in a visceral state situation, only a high level of social proof related to donation has a positive impact on likelihood to buy. Any other level of social proof (medium, low and not mentioned), decrease the likelihood to buy in such situations. A scenario simulation analysis shows that cases which included a high level of social proof have relatively higher preference. Consequently, antecedent situational variables like visceral states must be taken into consideration when cause-related marketing activities such as social proof (related to donation) are used in self-service kiosks.

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This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution(CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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