Sports ingroup love does not make me like the sponsor's beverage but gets me buying it.

PLoS One

Department of Computer Engineering, Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal.

Published: November 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous research indicates that social identity impacts how consumers choose branded products, but its effect on sensory perception related to ingroup (or outgroup) brands remains underexplored.
  • This study analyzed how identifying with a football team influenced participants' sensory experiences and purchase intentions towards a sponsored beverage linked to their team or the rival team.
  • Results showed that while participants expressed positive feelings toward the beverage, physiological measures indicated negative emotions, suggesting that identification with a team significantly boosts willingness to purchase the product, regardless of taste or quality.

Article Abstract

Previous literature has shown that social identity influences consumer decision-making towards branded products. However, its influence on ones' own sensory perception of an ingroup (or outgroup) associated brand's product (i.e. sponsor) is seldom documented and little understood. Here, we investigate the impact of social identity (i.e. team identification) with a football team on the sensorial experience and willingness to buy a beverage, said to be sponsoring the ingroup or the outgroup team. Ninety subjects participated in one of three sensorial experience conditions (matched identity: ingroup beverage; mismatched identity: outgroup beverage; control: no group preference). Each participant tasted the new sponsoring beverage and answered a questionnaire about their subjective sensorial experience of the beverage. EEG and BVP were synchronously collected throughout. Analyses revealed that team identification does not influence subjective responses and only slightly modulates physiological signals. All participants reported high valence and arousal values while physiological signals consistently translated negative affects across groups, which showed that participants reported to be happy/excited about trying the beverage while their physiological signals showed that they were feeling sad/depressed/angry. Crucially, despite a similar sensorial experience, and similar socially desirable report of the subjective experience, only participants in the matched identity group demonstrate higher willingness to buy, showing that the level of team identification, but not taste or beverage quality, influences willingness to buy the said sponsor's product.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8318299PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0254940PLOS

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