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Too much of a good thing? High volumes of positive WOM can undermine adopters of new technology products

David L. Alexander () and Sarah G. Moore ()
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David L. Alexander: University of St. Thomas
Sarah G. Moore: University of Alberta

Marketing Letters, 2025, vol. 36, issue 1, No 8, 136 pages

Abstract: Abstract We explore how first-time adopters of complex new technology products are influenced by the volume of positive WOM that they receive prior to adoption. Such positive WOM can flow through to alter adopter’s goals during initial product use, with consequences for their usage experiences and strategies. Two longitudinal surveys and an experiment reveal a potential downside of positive WOM. Specifically, receiving a greater volume of positive WOM about a new technology product can establish normative standards for adopter’s performance during product use. This leads adopters to feel pressure to meet those standards, prompting avoidance-oriented performance goals for initial use of their new product. Together, these processes undermine adopter’s experiences with their new product, as well as their strategies for using it. Our findings offer insights for marketers and researchers by identifying and explaining an ironic post-adoption effect of PWOM. Too much of a good thing? High volumes of positive WOM can undermine adopters of new technology products.

Keywords: Word-of-mouth; New products; Product adoption; Achievement goals; Performance-avoidance goals; Social pressure (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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DOI: 10.1007/s11002-024-09734-6

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