Psychogenic antecedents and apparel customization: moderating effects of gender

Abstract The impact of gender is critical in consumer behavior; however, gender differences have been overlooked in consumer studies. The purpose of this study is to examine how behavior-inducing psychogenic needs (i.e., need for uniqueness, self-promotion, and social identity) influence the way ind...

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Main Authors: Su-kyung Seo, Chunmin Lang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-07-01
Series:Fashion and Textiles
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40691-019-0175-3
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spelling doaj-c82df34bf2cf46bb9a7a16f696f1e05d2020-11-25T03:41:24ZengSpringerOpenFashion and Textiles2198-08022019-07-016111910.1186/s40691-019-0175-3Psychogenic antecedents and apparel customization: moderating effects of genderSu-kyung Seo0Chunmin Lang1PhD Candidate, Department of Consumer, Apparel, and Retail Studies, The Bryan School of Business and Economics, University of North Carolina at GreensboroAssistant Professor, Department of Textiles, Apparel Design & Merchandising, Louisiana State UniversityAbstract The impact of gender is critical in consumer behavior; however, gender differences have been overlooked in consumer studies. The purpose of this study is to examine how behavior-inducing psychogenic needs (i.e., need for uniqueness, self-promotion, and social identity) influence the way individuals perceive apparel customization, leading to buying intention of customized apparel products. Further, to identify whether gender plays a moderating role in the relationships between those psychogenic needs and the perception of apparel customization. The conceptual model was tested by conducting an online survey of 338 samples from college students in the United States. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was utilized for hypotheses testing. The structural multi-group model was conducted and path coefficient comparisons were made to test the moderating effects of gender. The results indicated that need for uniqueness and social identity are strong determinant factors in eliciting positive perceptions of customization, ultimately resulting in buying intention of customized apparel products; however, the effects of self-promotion was not significant. The results also illustrated that differences exist in antecedents toward customization perception between genders. Both genders are commonly motivated by need for uniqueness. However, males are more driven by social identity and need for uniqueness, whereas females are more inspired by self-promotion. The results offer managerial implications by providing retailers with consumers’ behavior toward fashion customization based on gender differences.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40691-019-0175-3Apparel customizationNeed for uniquenessSelf-promotionSocial identityModerating effectsGender
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Su-kyung Seo
Chunmin Lang
spellingShingle Su-kyung Seo
Chunmin Lang
Psychogenic antecedents and apparel customization: moderating effects of gender
Fashion and Textiles
Apparel customization
Need for uniqueness
Self-promotion
Social identity
Moderating effects
Gender
author_facet Su-kyung Seo
Chunmin Lang
author_sort Su-kyung Seo
title Psychogenic antecedents and apparel customization: moderating effects of gender
title_short Psychogenic antecedents and apparel customization: moderating effects of gender
title_full Psychogenic antecedents and apparel customization: moderating effects of gender
title_fullStr Psychogenic antecedents and apparel customization: moderating effects of gender
title_full_unstemmed Psychogenic antecedents and apparel customization: moderating effects of gender
title_sort psychogenic antecedents and apparel customization: moderating effects of gender
publisher SpringerOpen
series Fashion and Textiles
issn 2198-0802
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Abstract The impact of gender is critical in consumer behavior; however, gender differences have been overlooked in consumer studies. The purpose of this study is to examine how behavior-inducing psychogenic needs (i.e., need for uniqueness, self-promotion, and social identity) influence the way individuals perceive apparel customization, leading to buying intention of customized apparel products. Further, to identify whether gender plays a moderating role in the relationships between those psychogenic needs and the perception of apparel customization. The conceptual model was tested by conducting an online survey of 338 samples from college students in the United States. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was utilized for hypotheses testing. The structural multi-group model was conducted and path coefficient comparisons were made to test the moderating effects of gender. The results indicated that need for uniqueness and social identity are strong determinant factors in eliciting positive perceptions of customization, ultimately resulting in buying intention of customized apparel products; however, the effects of self-promotion was not significant. The results also illustrated that differences exist in antecedents toward customization perception between genders. Both genders are commonly motivated by need for uniqueness. However, males are more driven by social identity and need for uniqueness, whereas females are more inspired by self-promotion. The results offer managerial implications by providing retailers with consumers’ behavior toward fashion customization based on gender differences.
topic Apparel customization
Need for uniqueness
Self-promotion
Social identity
Moderating effects
Gender
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40691-019-0175-3
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