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The effects of masstige on loss of scarcity and behavioral intentions for traditional luxury consumers

The effects of masstige on loss of scarcity and behavioral intentions for traditional luxury consumers
The effects of masstige on loss of scarcity and behavioral intentions for traditional luxury consumers

An increasing middle-class segment, eager to trade up in product qualities and consumption behavior, is causing a paradigmatic change in how traditional luxury consumers ascribe value to luxury brands. Guided by commodity theory, we develop three experiments where we show that masstige branding (vs non-masstige) leads to reduced behavioral intentions for traditional luxury consumers (Study 1) both for public (Studies 1 and 2) and for private goods (Study 3). These effects are mediated by loss of scarcity of the brand (Studies 2 and 3). Finally, we also examine a boundary condition, self-brand connection (Study 3), and show that high self-brand connection can help mitigate the negative effects of loss of scarcity on traditional consumers’ behavioral intentions. Overall, this study significantly extends research on masstige and luxury branding and offers important implications. For instance, high self-brand connection leads to a greater likelihood of purchasing masstige brands among traditional luxury consumers.

Commodity theory, Loss of scarcity, Luxury, Masstige, Self-brand connection
0148-2963
Rosendo-Rios, Veronica
f9a656c9-d07c-4500-8a0d-9f0578f359d5
Shukla, Paurav
d3acd968-350b-40cf-890b-12c2e7aaa49d
Rosendo-Rios, Veronica
f9a656c9-d07c-4500-8a0d-9f0578f359d5
Shukla, Paurav
d3acd968-350b-40cf-890b-12c2e7aaa49d

Rosendo-Rios, Veronica and Shukla, Paurav (2023) The effects of masstige on loss of scarcity and behavioral intentions for traditional luxury consumers. Journal of Business Research, 156, [113490]. (doi:10.1016/j.jbusres.2022.113490).

Record type: Article

Abstract

An increasing middle-class segment, eager to trade up in product qualities and consumption behavior, is causing a paradigmatic change in how traditional luxury consumers ascribe value to luxury brands. Guided by commodity theory, we develop three experiments where we show that masstige branding (vs non-masstige) leads to reduced behavioral intentions for traditional luxury consumers (Study 1) both for public (Studies 1 and 2) and for private goods (Study 3). These effects are mediated by loss of scarcity of the brand (Studies 2 and 3). Finally, we also examine a boundary condition, self-brand connection (Study 3), and show that high self-brand connection can help mitigate the negative effects of loss of scarcity on traditional consumers’ behavioral intentions. Overall, this study significantly extends research on masstige and luxury branding and offers important implications. For instance, high self-brand connection leads to a greater likelihood of purchasing masstige brands among traditional luxury consumers.

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Accepted/In Press date: 22 November 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 November 2022
Published date: 1 February 2023
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2022 Elsevier Inc.
Keywords: Commodity theory, Loss of scarcity, Luxury, Masstige, Self-brand connection

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475186
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475186
ISSN: 0148-2963
PURE UUID: 86514a64-b3f0-4254-9f04-d258ac18d918
ORCID for Paurav Shukla: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1957-8622

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Date deposited: 13 Mar 2023 17:51
Last modified: 04 Dec 2024 05:01

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Contributors

Author: Veronica Rosendo-Rios
Author: Paurav Shukla ORCID iD

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