Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

The Variation of Consumer Anthropomorphism across Cultures


Affiliations
1 Assistant Professor of Marketing, Westfield State University, 577 Western Avenue, Westfield, MA 01086, United States
2 Assistant Professor of Marketing, Indian Institute of Management Udaipur, MLSU Campus, Udaipur - 313 001, Rajasthan, India
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


Over the last 8 years, marketing research has begun to empirically probe consumer anthropomorphism or instances when consumers treat a product as human in one or more ways. Though theories of anthropomorphism commonly recognize that the phenomenon varies across cultures, no empirical effort in marketing or any other discipline has demonstrated this. The present research conducted a survey in India and the United States regarding four products commonly owned by students. The results demonstrated that for Indian consumers, product anthropomorphism is more commonplace, but less influential on their product evaluations as compared to American consumers.

Keywords

Anthropomorphism, Cross-Cultural, India, USA

Paper Submission Date : January 11, 2015 ; Paper sent back for Revision : May 19, 2015 ; Paper Acceptance Date : July 23, 2015.

User
Subscription Login to verify subscription
Notifications
Font Size

Abstract Views: 218

PDF Views: 0




  • The Variation of Consumer Anthropomorphism across Cultures

Abstract Views: 218  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

Phillip M. Hart
Assistant Professor of Marketing, Westfield State University, 577 Western Avenue, Westfield, MA 01086, United States
Subhash Jha
Assistant Professor of Marketing, Indian Institute of Management Udaipur, MLSU Campus, Udaipur - 313 001, Rajasthan, India

Abstract


Over the last 8 years, marketing research has begun to empirically probe consumer anthropomorphism or instances when consumers treat a product as human in one or more ways. Though theories of anthropomorphism commonly recognize that the phenomenon varies across cultures, no empirical effort in marketing or any other discipline has demonstrated this. The present research conducted a survey in India and the United States regarding four products commonly owned by students. The results demonstrated that for Indian consumers, product anthropomorphism is more commonplace, but less influential on their product evaluations as compared to American consumers.

Keywords


Anthropomorphism, Cross-Cultural, India, USA

Paper Submission Date : January 11, 2015 ; Paper sent back for Revision : May 19, 2015 ; Paper Acceptance Date : July 23, 2015.




DOI: https://doi.org/10.17010/ijom%2F2015%2Fv45%2Fi11%2F81873