Positive gender congruency effects on shopper responses: Field evidence from a gender egalitarian culture |
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Institution: | 1. University of Agder, School of Business and Law, Department of Management, Universitetsveien 17, 4630, Kristiansand, Norway;2. Aarhus University, Department of Management, Fuglesangs Allé 4, 8210, Aarhus V, Denmark;3. Karlstad Business School & CTF, Service Research Center, Karlstad University, Universitetsgatan 2, 65281, Karlstad, Sweden;4. Toulouse Business School, 20 Boulevard Lascrosses, 31068, Toulouse, France;5. Institute of Retail Economics, Regeringsgatan 60, 103 29, Stockholm, Sweden |
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Abstract: | This field study examined how customer-employee interactions are affected by the congruency between an employee's gender and the perceived gender image of the consumption context in one of the most gender equal cultures in the world (Scandinavia). Mystery shoppers had a service encounter with an employee across a set of physical commercial settings that were classified according to their gender image. The mystery shoppers noted the gender of the employee, provided employee evaluations, and indicated word-of-mouth (WOM) ratings. Shoppers who had a gender congruent service encounter (e.g., a female employee in a “feminine” consumption context) reported more favorable employee evaluations and WOM ratings than shoppers who had a gender incongruent service encounter (e.g., a female employee in a “masculine” consumption context), with the impact of gender congruency on WOM ratings mediated by employee evaluations, particularly with respect to competence inferences. These findings highlight the ethical dilemma of a positive gender congruency effect, as it can generate superior consumer responses but also risks resulting in gender occupational segregation. |
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Keywords: | Gender Gendered marketing Stereotypes Gender equality Congruency Masculinity Femininity Processing fluency Word-of-mouth Employee evaluations |
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