A Cross-Cultural Study on the Effects of Envy-Evoking Ads

Author:

Ahn Sowon1ORCID,Jo Myung-Soo2,Sarigollu Emine2,Kim Chang Soo3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Business Administration, Seoul National University of Science and Technology, Seoul, Korea

2. Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada

3. Business School, Korea University, Seoul, Korea

Abstract

Ads often feature celebrities or others similar to the target viewer and thereby evoke envy. Envy occurs when people make an upward social comparison, and evoked envy can be either benign or malicious. The authors propose that people with different self-construals feel different degrees of benign and malicious envy depending on who is being envied: a celebrity or a similar other. Three studies were conducted comparing Americans to Koreans (Study 1), Americans to the Chinese (Study 2), and Koreans with different self-construals (Study 3). The results showed that people with high independence showed less benign envy toward the celebrity ad than toward the similar others ad, while people with low independence showed the opposite pattern. People with high interdependence showed less malicious envy toward the celebrity ad than toward the similar others ad, while people with low interdependence showed the opposite pattern.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Marketing,Economics and Econometrics,Business and International Management

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