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Appearance for Females, Functionality for Males? The False Lay Belief about Gender Difference in Product Preference

Author

Listed:
  • Xianchi Dai
  • Yu (Anna) Lin
  • Jianping Liang
  • Chen Yang

Abstract

It is common that marketers design and position pretty products more to female consumers than to male consumers, suggesting that they generally believe that females have a stronger preference than males for product form over function and apply this belief to their marketing practices. However, this research demonstrates that this belief is often inconsistent with actual preferences. Across seven studies and four follow-up studies, involving both hypothetical and field settings, we demonstrate that both marketers and consumers hold such a belief about gender difference and overpredict females’ preference for form-superior (vs. function-superior) products relative to males. Specifically, people tend to choose form-superior (vs. function-superior) products for female (vs. male) others, but female consumers do not choose form-superior (vs. function-superior) products for themselves more than male consumers do. We further provide convergent evidence for the underlying mechanism and boundary conditions by showing that (1) people’s choices for others and themselves are more in line with the lay belief about gender difference when they hold a stronger belief and (2) people’s choices for distant (vs. close) others are more in line with this lay belief. We further assess the effectiveness of several debiasing interventions and show that this lay belief is quite robust.

Suggested Citation

  • Xianchi Dai & Yu (Anna) Lin & Jianping Liang & Chen Yang, 2024. "Appearance for Females, Functionality for Males? The False Lay Belief about Gender Difference in Product Preference," Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Consumer Research Inc., vol. 50(6), pages 1136-1156.
  • Handle: RePEc:oup:jconrs:v:50:y:2024:i:6:p:1136-1156.
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