What is it about?

Purpose: To investigate the impact of gift-givers’ perception of relational closeness on their gift-selection attitude and eventual selection when the gift is not a requested-gift. Design / Methodology / Approach: A conceptual framework was constructed on the basis of five hypotheses, which were tested by field data collected through surveys of urban Indian gift-givers while they shopped for a gift. Logistic regressions were used for validating hypotheses. Mediation effect was computed using the PROCESS macro in SPSS. Findings: The giver may have either a ‘recipient-centric’ or a ‘giver-centric’ attitude towards gift-selection. It was found that givers who feel greater closeness towards recipients are less likely to be ‘giver-centric’ and more likely to believe that the recipient’s preferences are similar to their own. The givers’ belief that the recipient’s preferences are similar to their own mediates the effect of closeness on attitude. Closeness reduces the odds of making a ‘preference-contrary’ selection among ‘recipient-centric’ givers due to a perceived similarity of preferences.

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Why is it important?

Practical implications: The study found that the odds of making ‘preference-contrary’ gift-selection depends on the closeness of the dyadic relation. This understanding can be used in advertising and promoting products that are used as gifts between close relations. Originality / value: Previous studies postulated and demonstrated that relational closeness affects gift-giving behaviour, but none connected closeness to gift-selection. This research conceptualized gift-giver’s attitude, which influences giver’s selection.

Perspectives

The study was conducted among urban Indian gift-shoppers. Cross-cultural study may be required for general interpretation of the results. Also, the role of reciprocity in determining giver’s attitude and gift-selection was not studied.

Dr Sumit Sarkar
XLRI Jamshedpur School of Business and Human Resources

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This page is a summary of: Gift-selection for close recipients: how perceived similarity of preferences affect giver’s attitude, Journal of Consumer Marketing, January 2019, Emerald,
DOI: 10.1108/jcm-12-2017-2473.
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