4.4 Article

The Uncertain Self: How Self-Concept Structure Affects Subscription Choice

Journal

JOURNAL OF CONSUMER RESEARCH
Volume 46, Issue 5, Pages 887-903

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jcr/ucz022

Keywords

self-concept clarity; subscription services; self-signaling; retention choice; self-concept structure; identity signaling

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Whether it is clothing, meals or an exercise regimen, consumers purchase a wide range of goods on a recurring basis using a subscription model. While past research indicates that people continue to subscribe to these services even when they rarely use them, no work to date has examined how identity considerations affect preferences in this domain. Building on research on signaling and self-concept structure, we propose that quitting an ongoing subscription can threaten the stability of the self-concept by signaling a change in identity. Consumers who are uncertain about their self-concept (i.e., low self-concept clarity) and motivated to maintain a stable self-concept are thus more likely to keep unused subscriptions than those who are more certain. In support of the underlying mechanism, we demonstrate that self-concept clarity affects choices only for identity-relevant subscription choices, and that it affects choices for subscriptions, but not one-shot product choices that are a weaker signal of identity. Finally, because signing up for a new subscription also signals an identity change that can threaten the stability of the self, consumers with low self-concept clarity are also less likely to subscribe to a new service compared to those with more certain self-concepts.

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