You Fooled Me, So I’ll Tell You about Myself! Personnel-Related Brand Betrayal Experiences and Disclosure of Personal Information

Teck Ming Tan, Jari Salo, Jaakko Aspara

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Past research has extensively studied the negative effects of brand betrayals on consumer attitudes, but largely ignored their potential positive consequences. Also, while previous research has focused on betrayals made by the brand itself, it has paid less attention to betrayals by the brand's personnel. This paper focuses on one potentially important positive consequence of brand personnel betrayal experiences (a consumer's feeling of being betrayed by the brand staff members): the increased willingness of consumers to share personal insights and information with the brand after experiencing a brand personnel betrayal. A field data set and two online experiments show that consumers are more prepared to share personal information with the brand when experiencing brand personnel betrayals than when experiencing other types of service or brand failures. The effect is mediated by consumers’ social affirmation mindset and moderated by privacy concerns.

Original languageEnglish
Article number114367
Peer-reviewed scientific journalJournal of Business Research
Volume171
ISSN0148-2963
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15.11.2023
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article - refereed

Keywords

  • Customers and Relations
  • 512 Business and Management
  • consumer disclosure
  • brand betrayal
  • privacy concerns
  • social
  • affirmation
  • mindset
  • brand relationship
  • service recovery

Areas of Strength and Areas of High Potential (AoS and AoHP)

  • AoS: Competition economics and service strategy - Quantitative consumer behaviour and competition economics
  • AoS: Competition economics and service strategy - Service and customer-oriented management

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