捐赠
身份(音乐)
背景(考古学)
心理学
社会心理学
实用主义
类型学
献血者
机制(生物学)
动作(物理)
认识论
社会学
美学
政治学
医学
古生物学
哲学
物理
量子力学
人类学
法学
生物
免疫学
作者
Liliana L. Bove,Danielle A. Chmielewski,Benjamin A. Neville,Jing Lei,Anish Nagpal
摘要
Abstract Identity is a useful lens to understand donation behavior. However, studies have typically conceptualized and examined donor identity as a generic, unidimensional concept. Through in‐depth interviews with 52 blood donors, this study sets out to discover if there is more complexity to donor identity, and what implications this might have for marketing communications, in the context of donation of the self (e.g., blood, organs, time, and effort). We use sentiment polarity and amplification analysis of inductive themes to uncover distinct patterns reflective of four different donor identities. We label these the Savior, Communitarian, Pragmatist, and Elitist, which are underpinned by theories of gift‐giving, sharing, pragmatism, and signaling, respectively. The typology offers a theory‐building mechanism to anticipate the effects of marketing stimuli on donation behavior. We conclude by presenting four theoretical propositions, for which we provide preliminary empirical evidence. The survey data is suggestive of action readiness for donation behavior when a marketing communication message is aligned with its intended donor identity.
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