Does your skin color matter in buyer–seller negotiations? The implications of being a Black salesperson

被引:0
作者
David Gligor
Christopher Newman
Saim Kashmiri
机构
[1] University of Mississippi,Yvonne and Clyde Edwards Professor and Associate Professor
[2] University of Mississippi,P.M.B. Self Chair of Free Enterprise and Associate Professor of Marketing
[3] University of Mississippi,Mr. and Mrs. James E. King Chair and Associate Professor
来源
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 2021年 / 49卷
关键词
Buyer–seller negotiations; Race; Black; White; Social dominance orientation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Despite the evidence in other domains that Black individuals can experience discriminatory treatment, marketing research offers few insights into how Black salespersons (as compared to White salespersons) are perceived and treated within buyer–seller negotiations. We address this limitation in the literature by conducting three studies. First, our findings show that White buyers with a higher social dominance orientation expect Black salespersons to bargain (i.e., negotiate) less than White salespersons. Second, White buyers with a higher social dominance orientation perceive Black salespersons to have bargained more than White counterparts (who have bargained the same). Third, when negotiating with White buyers with a higher social dominance orientation, Black salespersons receive lower product prices than White salespersons. Fourth, when negotiating with White buyers with a higher social dominance orientation, Black salespersons are less likely to be referred to other prospective buyers than White salespersons. Interestingly, no differences exist for White buyers lower on social dominance orientation. Combined, these findings offer insight into the type of discrimination that Black salespersons can encounter within buyer–seller negotiations by revealing how White buyers perceive (i.e., expect them to negotiate less; perceive them to have bargained more than they actually did), behave (i.e., offer them lower prices) and intend to behave (i.e., less willing to refer them to other buyers) toward Black salespersons as compared to White salespersons.
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页码:969 / 993
页数:24
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