Control Deprivation Motivates Acquisition of Utilitarian Products

Citation
Y. Chen, Charlene et al., Control Deprivation Motivates Acquisition of Utilitarian Products, Journal of consumer research JCR;Consumer research , 43(6), 2017, pp. 1031-1047
ISSN journal
00935301
Volume
43
Issue
6
Year of publication
2017
Pages
1031 - 1047
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
This research investigates how the fundamental desire for control affects product acquisition. The authors propose that consumers compensate for a loss of perceived control by buying utilitarian products (e.g., household cleaning agents) because of these products. association with problem solving, a quality that promotes a sense of control. Study 1 demonstrates this basic effect in a field setting involving real purchases, while studies 2 and 3 show that framing a product as utilitarian (vs. hedonic) moderates the effect of control on purchase intentions. Study 4 shows that a generalized problem-solving tendency mediates the effect of control on eagerness to pursue utilitarian consumption. Given the pervasiveness and ease of using product acquisition as a means to cope with psychological threat, this research has important implications for theory and practice.