Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Tell me where you come from and I know what mak...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Tell me where you come from and I know what makes you tick: Managing the consumer personality–satisfaction link in diverse cultures

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Tell me where you come from and I know what makes you tick: Managing the consumer personality–satisfaction link in diverse cultures. / Mooradian, Todd; Matzler, Kurt; Strobl, Andreas et al.
In: Journal of Consumer Behaviour, Vol. 22, No. 2, 31.03.2023, p. 253-271.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Mooradian T, Matzler K, Strobl A, Teichmann K. Tell me where you come from and I know what makes you tick: Managing the consumer personality–satisfaction link in diverse cultures. Journal of Consumer Behaviour. 2023 Mar 31;22(2):253-271. Epub 2022 Nov 21. doi: 10.1002/cb.2123

Author

Mooradian, Todd ; Matzler, Kurt ; Strobl, Andreas et al. / Tell me where you come from and I know what makes you tick : Managing the consumer personality–satisfaction link in diverse cultures. In: Journal of Consumer Behaviour. 2023 ; Vol. 22, No. 2. pp. 253-271.

Bibtex

@article{a8ad2f816d894f699aec16a6f7e8db60,
title = "Tell me where you come from and I know what makes you tick: Managing the consumer personality–satisfaction link in diverse cultures",
abstract = "Marketing programs that evoke high satisfaction and marketing success in one culture often fail in others, but the understanding of those cultural differences is insufficient. The question of how culture is linked to consumer satisfaction is still not answered satisfactorily. One promising paradigm for exploring such questions comes from progress in cross-cultural personality psychology. Thus, we examine the influence of individual-level cultural orientations on personality, and the role of personality and affect in satisfaction formation across cultures. Based on experimental data, we show that a high individualism orientation triggers higher levels of extraversion; a high uncertainty-avoidance orientation triggers higher levels of neuroticism. Based on field data from Japan, Spain, and the United States, we identify equivalent relationships amongst personality-related antecedent processes shaping satisfaction indicating universality across these cultures. The findings demonstrate the usefulness of cross-cultural personality psychology theory and methods for understanding and predicting consumer responses to marketing actions across cultures.",
author = "Todd Mooradian and Kurt Matzler and Andreas Strobl and Karin Teichmann",
year = "2023",
month = mar,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1002/cb.2123",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "253--271",
journal = "Journal of Consumer Behaviour",
issn = "1472-0817",
publisher = "John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tell me where you come from and I know what makes you tick

T2 - Managing the consumer personality–satisfaction link in diverse cultures

AU - Mooradian, Todd

AU - Matzler, Kurt

AU - Strobl, Andreas

AU - Teichmann, Karin

PY - 2023/3/31

Y1 - 2023/3/31

N2 - Marketing programs that evoke high satisfaction and marketing success in one culture often fail in others, but the understanding of those cultural differences is insufficient. The question of how culture is linked to consumer satisfaction is still not answered satisfactorily. One promising paradigm for exploring such questions comes from progress in cross-cultural personality psychology. Thus, we examine the influence of individual-level cultural orientations on personality, and the role of personality and affect in satisfaction formation across cultures. Based on experimental data, we show that a high individualism orientation triggers higher levels of extraversion; a high uncertainty-avoidance orientation triggers higher levels of neuroticism. Based on field data from Japan, Spain, and the United States, we identify equivalent relationships amongst personality-related antecedent processes shaping satisfaction indicating universality across these cultures. The findings demonstrate the usefulness of cross-cultural personality psychology theory and methods for understanding and predicting consumer responses to marketing actions across cultures.

AB - Marketing programs that evoke high satisfaction and marketing success in one culture often fail in others, but the understanding of those cultural differences is insufficient. The question of how culture is linked to consumer satisfaction is still not answered satisfactorily. One promising paradigm for exploring such questions comes from progress in cross-cultural personality psychology. Thus, we examine the influence of individual-level cultural orientations on personality, and the role of personality and affect in satisfaction formation across cultures. Based on experimental data, we show that a high individualism orientation triggers higher levels of extraversion; a high uncertainty-avoidance orientation triggers higher levels of neuroticism. Based on field data from Japan, Spain, and the United States, we identify equivalent relationships amongst personality-related antecedent processes shaping satisfaction indicating universality across these cultures. The findings demonstrate the usefulness of cross-cultural personality psychology theory and methods for understanding and predicting consumer responses to marketing actions across cultures.

U2 - 10.1002/cb.2123

DO - 10.1002/cb.2123

M3 - Journal article

VL - 22

SP - 253

EP - 271

JO - Journal of Consumer Behaviour

JF - Journal of Consumer Behaviour

SN - 1472-0817

IS - 2

ER -