When imitation doesn't flatter: When do consumers care about mimicry?

Imitation flattery
Although past research suggests that people are often motivated to avoid choosing the same products as dissimilar others or outgroup members, the researchers found that being copied by similar others leads to avoidance behaviors such as throwing products away, re-customising them, or exchanging the item for a new one.

Consumers react strongly to their product choices being copied. They really dislike it when the copycat is someone similar to them, says new research.

"Have you ever gone to a party only to learn upon arrival that another guest is wearing the same dress or shirt as you?" ask researchers Katherine White (University of British Columbia) and Jennifer J Argo (University of Alberta). The researchers looked at what happens when someone else copies a consumer's product choice.

Although past research suggests that people are often motivated to avoid choosing the same products as dissimilar others or outgroup members, the researchers found that being copied by similar others leads to avoidance behaviors such as throwing products away, re-customising them, or exchanging the item for a new one.

"This effect is driven by consumer desire to be distinct and unique individuals," the authors say. They found that study participants only wanted to get rid of products that were copied when the possessions were symbolic in nature. "It is more threatening to a person's sense of distinctiveness to be copied on our perfume selection, rather than something more mundane like an iron," the authors write. They also found that the rejection of the products was less strong when the consumer exerted a low degree of effort to obtain the possession.

"From a consumer standpoint, it is interesting to better understand why we might be upset and how we might respond when a close friend (or similar other) copies a product selection," they say. They found that participants showed a surprising willingness change or get rid of products that had nothing wrong with them, simply because of the social context.

Marketers might want to look at additional ways for consumers to assert their distinctiveness through products. "Examples of this include changing the style of the face plate on a cellular phone, to altering to color of a watch wrist-band, to changing one's options on an automobile," the researchers say.

The findings have been published in a recent issue of the Journal of Consumer Research.