When Country Competence Backfires: Stereotype-Driven Emotions and the Dark Side of Envy

Author(s)
Georgios Halkias, Adamantios Diamantopoulos, Arnd Florack
Abstract

We draw from stereotyping research in social psychology to investigate the mediating role of country-triggered emotions in the relationship between country stereotypes and brand responses. In two empirical studies employing multiple, well-known brands from different product categories and countries, we show that country-triggered admiration and contempt uniformly mediate favorable and unfavorable brand responses respectively. However, the indirect effects through the ambivalent emotion of envy are conditioned on the exact configuration of the stereotype content dimensions such that in the absence of warmth, competence backfires and damages the brand. Findings imply a promotion–prevention function for the two stereotype dimensions, with competence mainly promoting favorable responses, whereas warmth primarily preventing negative affect transfer. Implications of the findings are discussed and future research direction are identified.

Organisation(s)
Department of Accounting, Innovation and Strategy, Department of Occupational, Economic and Social Psychology
Publication date
2019
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
502052 Business administration, 502020 Market research, 501021 Social psychology
Keywords
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/when-country-competence-backfires-stereotypedriven-emotions-and-the-dark-side-of-envy(f72badf4-ec53-459f-a4d7-fe8372909347).html