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The impact of reversibility on the decision to disclose personal information

Eyal Peer (Graduate School of Business Administration, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel)
Alessandro Acquisti (Heinz College, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA)

Journal of Consumer Marketing

ISSN: 0736-3761

Article publication date: 12 September 2016

990

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to examine how reversibility in disclosing personal information – that is, having (vs not having) to option to later revise or retract personal information – can impact consumers’ willingness to divulge personal information.

Design/methodology/approach

Three studies examined how informing consumers they may (reversible condition) or may not (irreversible condition) revise their personal information in the future affected their propensity to disclose personal information, compared to a control condition.

Findings

Study 1 (which included three experiments with different time intervals between initial and revised disclosure) showed that consumers disclose less in both the reversible and irreversible conditions, compared to the control condition. Studies 2 and 3 showed that this is because consumers treat reversibility as a cue to the sensitivity of the information they are asked to divulge, and that leads them to disclose less when reversibility or irreversibility is made explicitly salient beforehand.

Practical implications

As many marketers are interested in hoarding consumers’ personal information, privacy advocates call for methods that would ensure careful and well-informed disclosure. Offering reversibility to a decision to disclose personal information, or merely pointing out the irreversibility of that decision, can make consumers reevaluate the sensitivity of the situation, leading to more careful disclosures.

Originality/value

Although previous research on reversibility in consumer behavior focused on product return policies and showed that reversibility increases purchases, none have studied how reversibility affects self-disclosure and how it can decrease it.

Keywords

Citation

Peer, E. and Acquisti, A. (2016), "The impact of reversibility on the decision to disclose personal information", Journal of Consumer Marketing, Vol. 33 No. 6, pp. 428-436. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCM-07-2015-1487

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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