On braggarts and gossips: A self-enhancement account of word-of-mouth generation and transmission

Authors Angelis, Bonezzi, Peluso, Rucker, Costabile
Journal Journal of Marketing Research
Year 2012
Type Published Paper
Abstract Previous research on word of mouth (WOM) has presented inconsistent evidence on whether consumers are more inclined to share positive or negative information about products and services. Some findings suggest that consumers are more inclined to engage in positive WOM, whereas others suggest that consumers are more inclined to engage in negative WOM. The present research offers a theoretical perspective that provides a means to resolve these seemingly contradictory findings. Specifically, the authors compare the generation of WOM (i.e., consumers sharing information about their own experiences) with the transmission of WOM (i.e., consumers passing on information about experiences they heard occurred to others). They suggest that a basic human motive to self-enhance leads consumers to generate positive WOM (i.e., share information about their own positive consumption experiences) but transmit negative WOM (i.e., pass on information they heard about others' negative consumption experiences). The authors present evidence for self-enhancement motives playing out in opposite ways for WOM generation versus WOM transmission across four experiments.
Keywords Word-of-mouth valence, word-of-mouth generation, word-of-mouth transmission, self-enhancement
URL https://doi.org/10.1509/jmr.11.0136
Tags Experimental / Survey-Based Empirical  |   Social Transmission Biases