Abstract

Green products are appealing. Thus, labeling products as environmentally friendly is an effective strategy to increase sales. However, the labels often promise more than the products can actually deliver. In the present research, we examined the expectation that consumers with high ecological motivation have strong preferences for green-labeled products – even when presented product information contradicts the label’s image. This unsettling hypothesis is grounded in the labels’ potential to create a cognitive match between the labeled product and consumers’ motives. For labels indicating environmental friendliness (green product labels), this link should be strongest when consumers’ ecological motivation is high. Findings in a series of three experiments support our assumption, showing that consumers with high ecological motivation had strong preferences (i.e., product evaluations, purchase intentions, and simulated purchase decisions) for green-labeled products as compared to consumers with low ecological motivation (Studies 1–3). Crucially, these preferences were robust, despite contradicting environmental product information (Studies 1 and 2). We extended our findings by additionally examining the impact of product labels and motivation on moral self-regulation processes. This was established by assessing participants’ pro-social behavior after the purchase task: participants with high ecological motivation acted, consistent with their motives, more pro-socially in post-decision occasions. In accordance with moral cleansing effects, pro-social behavior was intensified after purchasing conventional products (Studies 2 and 3). Green labels protected participants with high ecological motivation from moral threats due to the purchase, thus making pro-social behavior less likely. Findings suggest that highly ecologically motivated consumers are most susceptible to green labels, which may override detailed product information.

Highlights

  • We aimed to examine the extent to which the provided product information resulted in a relative decrease or increase in participants’ individual product evaluations

  • There was a significant direct effect of actual self-congruity on the relative evaluation change score (b4 = 0.38, 95% CI [0.21, 0.54], t = 4.59, p < 0.001) showing that high self-congruity resulted in a relative decrease in product evaluations after product information was provided

  • Conditional direct effects revealed a negative relationship between ecological motivation and the relative change in product evaluation in the conventional label condition (b1 | Label = conv = –0.17, 95% CI [–0.33, –0.02], t = –2.18, p = 0.03) and a positive trend in the green label condition (b1 | Label = green = –0.14, 95% CI [–0.01, 0.28], t = –1.83, p = 0.07)

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Summary

Introduction

Marketing products as “green” has become an important retail strategy: an increasing amount of products on the market are labeled as environmentally friendly (Solomon, 2013). Green labels may lead consumers to automatically infer that the products are environmentally friendly (Gruber et al, 2014) even when they are not. In this vein, previous research has shown that labeling products as “eco-friendly” (or organic) strongly impacts purchase-relevant judgments such as perceptions of the product’s environmental attributes and beyond (e.g., Lee et al, 2013; Sörqvist et al, 2013, 2015b)

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