Abstract

Face-to-face interactions are central to many individual choices and decision-making issues, such as customer services, sales, promotions, and negotiations. While the face effect, that is, face-to-face interactions are more effective in inducing compliance than other forms of interactions, has been noted in the literature, its mechanism has rarely been explored. This research helps to fill the theoretical void and provides new insights into the face effect with two lab experiments and one field experiment. Study 1, a field experiment conducted in a beauty salon, and Study 2, a lab experiment, show that the face effect is largely attributable to anticipated facial feedback and that the face effect is stronger when individuals are sensitive to face and when the requester’s face is expressive. Study 3, using video-simulated face-to-face interactions, demonstrates that anticipated facial feedback, not necessarily actual feedback, is enough to drive the face effect. In so doing, this research furthers our understanding of factors that affect individual compliance in face-to-face interactions in both the “sending” and “receiving” stages. We discuss the theoretical and empirical implications, limitations, and future avenues of research.

Highlights

  • Face-to-face interactions are one of the most pervasive and important forms of interpersonal interactions (Kendon et al, 1975)

  • We examine the roles of facial expressiveness and sensitivity to face in amplifying or mitigating anticipated facial feedback, identifying two important boundary conditions of the face effect

  • This study showed that face-toface interactions increased likelihood of customer compliance with the request to buy a membership card, compared with situations without face-to-face interactions

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Face-to-face interactions are one of the most pervasive and important forms of interpersonal interactions (Kendon et al, 1975). Sensitivity-to-Face and Expressiveness in Face Effect of Compliance pictographs including facial expressions to produce emotions and facial feedback similar to those in face to-face interactions, has become popular in e-communications (Kelly and Watts, 2015) These advances suggest that despite technological developments that have changed the ways in which face-to-face interactions occur, such interactions remain critical for individual choices and decisions. Despite the pervasiveness of the face effect on compliance decisions, mechanism of the face effect has rarely been explicitly explored (Gerber and Green, 2000) To address this gap in theory, we propose and test anticipated facial feedback as one important underlying mechanism of the face effect with one field study and two lab experiments. We conclude the article with the theoretical contributions, empirical implications, limitations, and future research directions

LITERATURE REVIEW AND HYPOTHESIS DEVELOPMENT
Results and Discussion
GENERAL DISCUSSION
Limitations and Future
Full Text
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