2018
DOI: 10.1002/bdm.2103
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The polite wiggle‐room effect in charity donation decisions

Abstract: We extend research on charity donations by exploring an everyday tactic for increasing compliance: asking politely. We consider three possible effects of politeness on charity donations: a positive effect, a negative effect, and a wiggle room effect where the perception of the request is adjusted to decline donating without feeling selfish. Results from six experiments systematically supported the polite wiggle room effect. In hypothetical donations contexts, indirect requests were judged more polite. In real … Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…We expected to replicate past findings that non-donors would perceive the request more negatively than donors (Juanchich et al, 2019) (H1), but we expected that this could be because either donors or non-donors resorted to politeness redefinition relative to control participants (H2a and H2b). Furthermore, we expected that this redefinition could boost the positive effect of donating and reduce the negative effect of refusing to donate (H3: effect of donation on emotion, H4: boost of the effect of the decision via politeness redefinition).…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 79%
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“…We expected to replicate past findings that non-donors would perceive the request more negatively than donors (Juanchich et al, 2019) (H1), but we expected that this could be because either donors or non-donors resorted to politeness redefinition relative to control participants (H2a and H2b). Furthermore, we expected that this redefinition could boost the positive effect of donating and reduce the negative effect of refusing to donate (H3: effect of donation on emotion, H4: boost of the effect of the decision via politeness redefinition).…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 79%
“…From this, we expected to have 99 participants in the control group and 297 for the experimental group, of which 40% of donors (119 donors and 178 non-donors). Such sample size would enable to detect the critical effect of the donation decision on politeness perception estimated conservatively as a medium-effect of Cohen's d = 0.35 (assuming α = .05, power = .90), smaller than those observed in past research (Cohen's d = 0.71-1.41 in Juanchich et al, 2019).…”
Section: Participantsmentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…This is because consumers want to avoid situations where they are faced with engaging in prosocial behaviors. In fact, individuals tend to leverage any aspect of a situation (Juanchich et al, 2019) and act in their own self-interest when “situational excuses for selfish behavior exist” (Regner, 2018, p. 780). For instance, people choose not to participate in incentivized prosocial activities (Schwartz et al, 2019) and avoid supermarket entrances where volunteers are positioned to ask for donations (Andreoni et al, 2017).…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, people choose not to participate in incentivized prosocial activities (Schwartz et al, 2019) and avoid supermarket entrances where volunteers are positioned to ask for donations (Andreoni et al, 2017). People also make all sorts of excuses for refusing to comply with prosocial requests by finding fault in the way the donation was requested and say that the request was not phrased in a polite way (Juanchich et al, 2019).…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%