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How guilt affects consumption intention: the role of rumination, emotional support and shame

Camille Saintives (MArketing Department, INSEEC Business School, Bordeaux, France)
Renaud Lunardo (Department of Marketing, KEDGE Business School, Talence, France)

Journal of Consumer Marketing

ISSN: 0736-3761

Article publication date: 11 January 2016

2712

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to determine how consumers may regulate their guilt through rumination and emotional support and how such regulation affects their consumption. Compelling research indicates that consumption may sometimes induce guilt. Social–psychological literature suggests that a potential way for consumers to regulate their consumption-related guilt is to seek emotional support.

Design/methodology/approach

Two studies, which measure (Study 1) and manipulate (Study 2) guilt, investigate how guilt and rumination affect emotional support and subsequent consumption.

Findings

The results show that guilt and rumination interact and prompt individuals to seek emotional support. The valence (positive or negative) of feedback they receive affects and interacts with their guilt to affect their intention to consume the guilt-inducing product again. Shame is shown to mediate the effect of post-feedback guilt on consumption intentions.

Research limitations/implications

The results extend previous research on guilt by emphasizing emotional support seeking as a specific way of coping in response to guilt feelings and shame as an outcome of guilt. Moreover, the present research shows that guilt can affect behavioural intentions, an effect that surprisingly has not been previously identified in literature.

Practical implications

For brands and retailers providing guilt-inducing products, the results suggest that providing emotional support – for instance through reinsurance messages – may have positive effects on consumer emotions and intentions.

Originality/value

Using two different methods, the research findings offer deeper understanding of how guilt is related to cognitions such as rumination, to emotions such as shame and to behavioural intentions.

Keywords

Citation

Saintives, C. and Lunardo, R. (2016), "How guilt affects consumption intention: the role of rumination, emotional support and shame", Journal of Consumer Marketing, Vol. 33 No. 1, pp. 41-51. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCM-12-2014-1265

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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