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Is kindness invaluable? The impact of benefit and cost on prosocial behavior intentions

Chyi Jaw (Department of Business Administration, National Yunlin University of Science and Technology, Taiwan, ROC)
Kuei-Ju Chi (Department of Business Administration, National Yunlin University of Science and Technology, Taiwan, ROC)
Guan-Jia Li (Department of Business Administration, National Yunlin University of Science and Technology, Taiwan, ROC)

Asia Pacific Journal of Marketing and Logistics

ISSN: 1355-5855

Article publication date: 5 August 2022

Issue publication date: 25 April 2023

537

Abstract

Purpose

In the modern increasingly competitive milieu of cause marketing activities, both profit and nonprofit organizations expect their advocation of prosocial programs to gain the support of target customers. Previous research shows the effect from adding participant's personal attributes or social influence factors. This study considers the effects of benefit incentives and cost/reward influences to enhance prosocial behaviors.

Design/methodology/approach

Three between-subject experiments were conducted and SPSS Statistics ANOVA was employed to analyze the experimental results.

Findings

Rewarding time delays and prosocial efforts have no significant impact on the relationship between other-benefit incentives and willingness to engage in prosocial behaviors, but do significantly impact the self-benefit incentives condition. However, the negative effect of self-benefit condition can be mitigated by high rewards.

Research limitations/implications

Since prosocial campaigns proposed by organizations in this study include both profit and nonprofit organizations, perhaps two category organization types should be attentively classified to evaluate the effects.

Practical implications

Under social marketing campaigns with self-benefit incentives conditions, the empirical findings of this study show that profit and nonprofit organizations can provide higher reward values to mitigate the adverse effects of high participating costs.

Social implications

Social marketing campaigns with other-benefit incentives are less affected by high participating costs and highlight the value of altruism.

Originality/value

This study provides valuable suggestions for both profit and nonprofit organizations to use self-benefit/other-benefit incentives under cost related factors influence to encourage customers' prosocial behaviors.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Compliance with ethical standards: This manuscript has not been submitted and is not under consideration for publication elsewhere. All authors have read the manuscript and have approved this submission. The manuscript has been carefully reviewed by an experienced proofreading editor whose first language is English.

Funding: This work is funded by the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST), Taiwan, R.O.C. (MOST 107-2410-H-224 -013 -MY3).

Citation

Jaw, C., Chi, K.-J. and Li, G.-J. (2023), "Is kindness invaluable? The impact of benefit and cost on prosocial behavior intentions", Asia Pacific Journal of Marketing and Logistics, Vol. 35 No. 5, pp. 1245-1261. https://doi.org/10.1108/APJML-02-2022-0125

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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