TY - JOUR
T1 - Managerial Empathy Facilitates Egocentric Predictions of Consumer Preferences
AU - Hattula, Johannes
AU - Herzog, Walter
AU - Dahl, Darren W.
AU - Reinecke, Sven
PY - 2015/4
Y1 - 2015/4
N2 - Common wisdom suggests that managerial empathy (i.e., the mental process of taking a consumer perspective) helps executives separate their personal consumption preferences from those of consumers, thereby preventing egocentric preference predictions. The results of the present investigation, however, show exactly the opposite. First, the authors find that managerial empathy ironically accelerates self-reference in predictions of consumer preferences. Second, managers’ self-referential tendencies increase with empathy because taking a consumer perspective activates managers’ private consumer identity and, thus, their personal consumption preferences. Third, empathic managers’ self-referential preference predictions make them less likely to use market research results. Fourth, the findings imply that when explicitly instructed to do so, managers are capable of suppressing their private consumer identity in the process of perspective taking, which helps them reduce self-referential preference predictions. To support their conclusions, the authors present four empirical studies with 480 experienced marketing managers and show that incautiously taking the perspective of consumers causes self-referential decisions in four contexts: product development, communication management, pricing, and celebrity endorsement.
AB - Common wisdom suggests that managerial empathy (i.e., the mental process of taking a consumer perspective) helps executives separate their personal consumption preferences from those of consumers, thereby preventing egocentric preference predictions. The results of the present investigation, however, show exactly the opposite. First, the authors find that managerial empathy ironically accelerates self-reference in predictions of consumer preferences. Second, managers’ self-referential tendencies increase with empathy because taking a consumer perspective activates managers’ private consumer identity and, thus, their personal consumption preferences. Third, empathic managers’ self-referential preference predictions make them less likely to use market research results. Fourth, the findings imply that when explicitly instructed to do so, managers are capable of suppressing their private consumer identity in the process of perspective taking, which helps them reduce self-referential preference predictions. To support their conclusions, the authors present four empirical studies with 480 experienced marketing managers and show that incautiously taking the perspective of consumers causes self-referential decisions in four contexts: product development, communication management, pricing, and celebrity endorsement.
KW - Consumer preference predictions
KW - Managerial empathy
KW - Managers' consumer identity
KW - Managerial decision making
KW - Responsiveness to market research
KW - Consumer preference predictions
KW - Managerial empathy
KW - Managers' consumer identity
KW - Managerial decision making
KW - Responsiveness to market research
U2 - 10.1509/jmr.13.0296
DO - 10.1509/jmr.13.0296
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0022-2437
VL - 52
SP - 235
EP - 252
JO - Journal of Marketing Research
JF - Journal of Marketing Research
IS - 2
ER -