On the flexibility of self‐repair: How holistic versus analytic thinking style impacts fluid compensatory consumption

Consumers often respond to a self‐discrepancy in a certain domain by engaging in consumption that may restore their perceived standing in that domain. However, less is known about when and why consumers seek products that affirm the self in domains that are important to their self‐worth, yet unrelat...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of consumer psychology Vol. 33; no. 1; pp. 3 - 20
Main Authors Wang, Qin, Lisjak, Monika, Mandel, Naomi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.01.2023
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Summary:Consumers often respond to a self‐discrepancy in a certain domain by engaging in consumption that may restore their perceived standing in that domain. However, less is known about when and why consumers seek products that affirm the self in domains that are important to their self‐worth, yet unrelated to the discrepancy (known as fluid compensation). We address this gap by identifying an important factor that influences fluid compensation: thinking style. Across five studies and three follow‐up studies, we find that people with a temporarily activated or dispositional holistic thinking style are more likely to engage in fluid compensation than people with an analytic thinking style. This phenomenon occurs because, by perceiving parts as more functionally related to a larger whole, holistic (vs. analytic) thinkers are more likely to view fluid compensation as instrumental to enhancing global self‐worth. Holistic (vs. analytic) thinkers' greater propensity to engage in fluid compensation, in turn, better enables them to restore their global self‐worth. These findings contribute to the literature on compensatory consumption, thinking style, and consumer wellbeing.
Bibliography:Accepted by Lauren Block, Editor; Associate Editor, Patti Williams.
Funding information
This article is based on a portion of the first author's dissertation, which won the 2020–2021 SCP Schumann Dissertation Competition Award and received an honorable mention at the 2019 ACR/Sheth Foundation Dissertation Award for Cross‐Cultural Research. The authors thank the editor, associate editor, and reviewers for their insightful and helpful comments. The authors are also grateful to the W. P. Carey School of Business Robert B. Cialdini Behavioral Research Laboratory for their support of this research and to Andrea Morales and Derek Rucker for valuable comments and suggestions at the early stages of this research.
This work was supported by the Department of Marketing, Arizona State University.
ISSN:1057-7408
1532-7663
DOI:10.1002/jcpy.1295