Abstract

Purpose This study aims to introduce the duration of uniqueness, an important dimension of unique products. It studies how choices between products with long versus short duration of uniqueness are influenced by the interaction between pressure and consumers’ need for uniqueness (NFU). Design/methodology/approach This research uses a multi-method study approach. A pilot field-study tested the novelty and importance of the research by asking retail professionals to predict the choice of a hypothetical consumer. A retrospective study assessed the importance of duration of uniqueness in unique product choices, by asking consumers about a real and recent unique product purchase. Four additional experimental studies directly tested hypotheses by manipulating pressure and by measuring or manipulating uniqueness motivations. Findings The pilot field-study showed the novelty and relevance of this research for professionals. Study 1 revealed that, retrospectively, uniqueness duration was considered important for the choice of unique products, by high-NFU consumers under pressure. Studies 2 and 3 demonstrated that pressure increases the tendency of high-NFU, but not low-NFU, consumers to choose products with long over short uniqueness duration. Study 4 provided initial evidence for the process behind the effect. Study 5 showed that considerations of uniqueness duration when choosing mediated the effects. Research limitations/implications The results of the pilot field-study and retrospective study might be affected by recall bias or lay theories. The findings need to be replicated with other sources of pressure and uniqueness. This calls for further research. Practical implications Results are important for companies marketing unique products and they suggest that pressure-based marketing appeals can be used strategically to increase sales of products with long uniqueness duration but decrease sales of products with short uniqueness duration. Although the research provides these guidelines, managers should consider the ethical implications of pressure strategies. Originality/value This is the first attempt to empirically investigate the duration of uniqueness. Although extant research has examined choices between products with different degrees of uniqueness, this research studies choice of products with similar degrees of uniqueness, but different uniqueness duration. Thus, this research adds to the scarce literature studying the duration of symbolic benefits. Moreover, although pressure and NFU frequently co-exist in uniqueness consumption settings, this study is the first to study their joint effects.

Highlights

  • Uniqueness is an important benefit that consumers seek in products (Lynn and Harris, 1997a), resulting in annual transactions worth e262bn (D’Arpizio et al, 2017)

  • A similar regression, with the sole difference of having importance of durability as the dependent variable, revealed no significant interaction effect between pressure and need for uniqueness (NFU) (b = 0.19, t = 1.52, p < 0.13). This retrospective study showed that, first, consumers find that duration of uniqueness is as important as other established benefits relevant to the choices of unique products, such as uniqueness, prestige, credibility and intimacy (Bairrada et al, 2018; Berthon et al, 2009)

  • This study provided initial support for our theory: high-NFU participants find that duration of uniqueness is more important for the purchase of unique products under higher than under lower pressure

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Summary

Introduction

Uniqueness is an important benefit that consumers seek in products (Lynn and Harris, 1997a), resulting in annual transactions worth e262bn (D’Arpizio et al, 2017). Consumers seeking uniqueness frequently decide between products with a similar degree, but the different duration of uniqueness. How do these consumers make these choices? Consider a consumer with high-NFU choosing between two exclusive and “limited edition” bags Both bags will help the consumer project uniqueness to the same degree. One bag will offer uniqueness for many years (e.g. an iconic Louis Vuitton bag), whereas the other will offer uniqueness for a limited period (e.g. a seasonal Louis Vuitton bag) As both bags are exclusive and limited in availability, the consumer is under pressure to decide. How do pressure and NFU interact to affect choices between products that differ in the duration of uniqueness that they offer? Would this pressure affect the choice of this consumer? More generally, how do pressure and NFU interact to affect choices between products that differ in the duration of uniqueness that they offer?

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