Low socioeconomic class and consumer complexity expectations for new product technology
This research improves the field's understanding of subsistence consumers by investigating how low socioeconomic class relates to expectations of complexity from new products. The study tests a model of the relationship between consumer socioeconomic class, self-esteem, self-assessed capabilities, and knowledge about product domains, and the influence of self-esteem, self-assessed capabilities, and product domain knowledge on consumer expectations of complexity when facing a new product technology. A sample of 266 Colombian consumers representing different socio-economic classes is used to test the model using structural equation modeling. The results show that self-esteem, self-assessed capabilities, and product domain knowledge are predictive of expectations of complexity, with low self-esteem, low capabilities, and low product knowledge leading to higher complexity expectations. Socioeconomic status relates closely to self-esteem, self-assessed capabilities, and product domain knowledge and can be used as a surrogate for the individual-level constructs.
Year of publication: |
2010
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Authors: | Trujillo, Carlos A. ; Barrios, Andrés ; Camacho, Sonia M. ; Rosa, José Antonio |
Published in: |
Journal of Business Research. - Elsevier, ISSN 0148-2963. - Vol. 63.2010, 6, p. 538-547
|
Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Adoption of new product technology Complexity expectation Subsistence markets |
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