A new study has indicated that strongly identifying with an organization or workplace can change people's lives in profound ways.
A new study has indicated that strongly identifying with an organization or workplace can change people's lives in profound ways. "Managers often hope that consumers identify with organizations they regularly patronize, and firms sometimes encourage labor to encourage employees to identify with firms they work for, because in both cases organizations benefit from such identification," wrote authors Melea Press and Eric J. Arnould (both University of Wyoming, Laramie).
The authors focus on identification formation from the perspective of consumers, whose personal, economic, and social lives are affected by organizations.
They conducted interviews with consumers who had recently joined a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program. They also interviewed employees at an advertising agency, at all levels from receptionist to CEO.
In the interviews, the authors learned how consumers learn to integrate values and behaviours from within and beyond the organization, often in life-changing ways.
"So, a new CSA member learns how and why he should appreciate locally grown organic vegetables, and then begins to find additional opportunities to buy other organic and locally made products more generally," explained the authors.
"Similarly, an employee learns the value of making clear, considered, and creative choices and brings that value into her personal life as she reduces her consumer debt and even makes better choices for romantic partners," they added.
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The study has been published in the Journal of Consumer Research.
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