TY - JOUR
T1 - Keeping the memory but not the possession
T2 - Memory preservation mitigates identity loss from product disposition
AU - Winterich, Karen Page
AU - Reczek, Rebecca Walker
AU - Irwin, Julie R.
N1 - Funding Information:
Karen Page Winterich is Associate Professor of Marketing and Frank and Mary Smeal Research Fellow, Smeal College of Business, Pennsylvania State University (e-mail: kpw2@psu.edu). Rebecca Walker Reczek is Associate Professor of Marketing and Dean’s Faculty Fellow, Fisher College of Business, Ohio State University (e-mail: reczek.3@osu.edu). Julie R. Irwin is Marlene and Morton Meyerson Centennial Professor of Business, McCombs School of Business, University of Texas at Austin (e-mail: julie. irwin@mccombs.utexas.edu). The authors are grateful to David Manos and John Duncan for their collaboration to conduct the two field studies in the Penn State University residence halls and also appreciate the cooperation of St. Vincent de Paul State College Thrift store for the third field study. They thank Courtney Ironside, Mackenzie Ironside, Sarah Miller, Victoria Babb, Gabriel Gonzales, and Daniel Shaffer for their research assistance in the field studies, with a special thank you to Stephanie Ironside for stepping up to assist with the replication field study. They also appreciate helpful comments on this research from Rob Smith, Hari Sridhar, Chris Summers, and Danny Zane and editorial assistance with promotional flyers by Lacey Lepp. This research was supported in part by research grants from the Smeal College of Business and the Smeal College of Business Sustainability Research Initiative. Robert Meyer served as area editor for this article.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, American Marketing Association.
PY - 2017/9
Y1 - 2017/9
N2 - Nonprofit firms' reliance on donations to build inventory distinguishes them from traditional retailers. This reliance on consumer donations means that these organizations face an inherently more volatile supply chain than retailers that source inventory from manufacturers. The authors propose that consumer reluctance to part with possessions with sentimental value causes a bottleneck in the donation process. The goal of this research is therefore to provide nonprofits with tools to increase donations of used goods and provide a theoretical link between the literature streams on prosocial behavior, disposition, memory, and identity. As such, the authors explore the effectiveness of memory preservation strategies (e.g., taking a photo of a good before donating it) in increasing donations to nonprofits. A field study using a donation drive demonstrates that encouraging consumers to take photos of sentimental possessions before donating them increases donations, and five laboratory experiments explicate this result by mapping the proposed psychological process behind the success of memory preservation techniques. Specifically, these techniques operate by ameliorating consumers' perceived identity loss when considering donation of sentimental goods.
AB - Nonprofit firms' reliance on donations to build inventory distinguishes them from traditional retailers. This reliance on consumer donations means that these organizations face an inherently more volatile supply chain than retailers that source inventory from manufacturers. The authors propose that consumer reluctance to part with possessions with sentimental value causes a bottleneck in the donation process. The goal of this research is therefore to provide nonprofits with tools to increase donations of used goods and provide a theoretical link between the literature streams on prosocial behavior, disposition, memory, and identity. As such, the authors explore the effectiveness of memory preservation strategies (e.g., taking a photo of a good before donating it) in increasing donations to nonprofits. A field study using a donation drive demonstrates that encouraging consumers to take photos of sentimental possessions before donating them increases donations, and five laboratory experiments explicate this result by mapping the proposed psychological process behind the success of memory preservation techniques. Specifically, these techniques operate by ameliorating consumers' perceived identity loss when considering donation of sentimental goods.
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U2 - 10.1509/jm.16.0311
DO - 10.1509/jm.16.0311
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85028750275
SN - 0022-2429
VL - 81
SP - 104
EP - 120
JO - Journal of Marketing
JF - Journal of Marketing
IS - 5
ER -