Signaling Success: Word of Mouth as Self-Enhancement

被引:0
作者
Andrea C. Wojnicki
David Godes
机构
[1] Independent Marketing and Strategy Consultant and Fine Artist,Robert H. Smith School of Business
[2] University of Maryland,undefined
关键词
Word of mouth; Satisfaction; Signaling; Social networks; Expertise; Self-enhancement;
D O I
10.1007/s40547-017-0077-8
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper highlights the significance and implications of self-enhancement as an important motivation for consumers’ word-of-mouth behaviors. The authors predict and demonstrate that following a given positive consumption experience, experts generate more WOM than if the experience was negative and more than novices. They do so because WOM regarding positive, successful experiences can serve as an indicator, or signal, of expertise. Four controlled experiments and one empirical study support the theory. This pattern is intensified when consumers’ expertise self-concepts are salient, and it diminishes when the context does not present the opportunity to self-enhance because the outcome of the experience is not attributable to the consumer’s expertise or because the distinction between good and bad products does not require expertise.
引用
收藏
页码:68 / 82
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Elucidating the neural correlates of egoistic and moralistic self-enhancement
    Barrios, Veronica
    Kwan, Virginia S. Y.
    Ganis, Giorgio
    Gorman, Jaime
    Romanowski, Jennifer
    Keenan, Julian Paul
    CONSCIOUSNESS AND COGNITION, 2008, 17 (02) : 451 - 456
  • [42] Conceptualizing and assessing self-enhancement bias: A componential approach
    Kwan, Virginia S. Y.
    John, Oliver P.
    Robins, Richard W.
    Kuang, Lu Lu
    JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2008, 94 (06) : 1062 - 1077
  • [44] Effects of Self-Enhancement on Eye Movements During Reading
    Lou, Ya
    Cai, Huajian
    Liu, Xuewei
    Li, Xingshan
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 10
  • [45] Self-enhancement and theory-based correction processes
    McCaslin, Michael J.
    Petty, Richard E.
    Wegener, Duane T.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2010, 46 (05) : 830 - 835
  • [46] Self-enhancement and physical health: A meta-analysis
    Sedikides, Constantine
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 62 (01) : 583 - 599
  • [47] Assistive technology for promoting self-enhancement of persons with dementia
    Takezawa, Tomohiro
    Inoue, Takenobu
    Ishiwata, Rina
    Miyanaga, Kazuo
    Hoshiba, Isao
    SELECTED PAPERS FROM THE JAPANESE CONFERENCE ON THE ADVANCEMENT OF ASSISTIVE AND REHABILITATION TECHNOLOGY, 2011, 28 : 161 - 165
  • [48] Leader self-enhancement values: curvilinear and congruence effects
    Dust, Scott
    Rode, Joseph
    Wang, Peng
    LEADERSHIP & ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT JOURNAL, 2020, 41 (05) : 687 - 701
  • [49] Self-enhancement and self-criticism in Japanese culture - An experimental analysis
    Takata, T
    JOURNAL OF CROSS-CULTURAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2003, 34 (05) : 542 - 551
  • [50] Feedback Seeking in Early Adolescence: Self-Enhancement or Self-Verification?
    Rosen, Lisa H.
    Principe, Connor P.
    Langlois, Judith H.
    JOURNAL OF EARLY ADOLESCENCE, 2013, 33 (03) : 363 - 377