Cross-Domain Effects of Guilt on Desire for Self-Improvement Products,

Citation
Allard, Thomas et White, Katherine, Cross-Domain Effects of Guilt on Desire for Self-Improvement Products,, Journal of consumer research JCR;Consumer research , 42(3), 2015, pp. 401-419
ISSN journal
00935301
Volume
42
Issue
3
Year of publication
2015
Pages
401 - 419
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
This research examines the notion that guilt, the negative emotion stemming from a failure to meet a self-held standard of behavior, leads to preferences for products enabling self-improvement, even in domains unrelated to the original source of the guilt. Examining consumer responses to real products, this research shows that such effects arise because guilt.by its focus on previous wrongdoings.activates a general desire to improve the self. This increase in desire for self-improvement products is only observed for choices involving the self (not others), is not observed in response to other negative emotions (e.g., shame, embarrassment, sadness, or envy), and is mitigated when people hold the belief that the self is nonmalleable. Building on past work that focuses on how guilt often leads to the motivation to alleviate feelings of guilt either directly or indirectly, the current research demonstrates an additional, novel downstream consequence of guilt, showing that only guilt has the unique motivational consequence of activating a general desire to improve the self, which subsequently spills into other domains and spurs self-improving product choices. These findings are discussed in light of their implications for research on the distinct motivational consequences of specific emotions and on consumer well-being.