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Need for distinction moderates customer responses to preferential treatment

Vivian Pontes (The University of Queensland Business School, St Lucia, Australia)
Dominique A. Greer (QUT Business School, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia)
Nicolas Pontes (The University of Queensland Business School, St Lucia, Australia)
Amanda Beatson (QUT Business School, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia)

Journal of Services Marketing

ISSN: 0887-6045

Article publication date: 16 March 2022

Issue publication date: 23 March 2023

355

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to examine how individuals’ need for distinction moderates the effect of perceived harm to others as a result of preferential treatment on customers’ attitudes towards the service provider.

Design/methodology/approach

Two experiments test the hypothesis that when a customer receives preferential treatment, the effect of perceived harm to others on the customer’s attitudes towards the service provider is moderated by their need for distinction and mediated by negative moral emotions, such that mediation occurs for customers with a lower (but not higher) need for distinction.

Findings

When customers have a lower need for distinction, they scan the environment to seek information about others when judging their own experience. In contrast, customers with a higher need for distinction tend to disregard others’ opinions and feelings, focusing solely on the benefits they receive from the service provider and avoiding moral emotions. Our results show that customers with a higher need for distinction tend to evaluate the service provider more favourably than those with a lower need for distinction in scenarios where the benefit given to an advantage customer imposes a disadvantage on other customers.

Originality/value

To the best of author’s knowledge, this research is the first to examine the interaction between perceived harm to others and one’s need for distinction as drivers of customers’ response to preferential treatment. The authors are the first to show that negative moral emotions may arise for customers with a lower need for distinction but not for those with a higher need for distinction.

Keywords

Citation

Pontes, V., Greer, D.A., Pontes, N. and Beatson, A. (2023), "Need for distinction moderates customer responses to preferential treatment", Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 37 No. 4, pp. 409-419. https://doi.org/10.1108/JSM-02-2021-0053

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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