Emmyrose Khan’s research while affiliated with Old Dominion University and other places

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Publications (1)


Competent or threatening? When looking like a “salesperson” is disadvantageous
  • Article

March 2019

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66 Reads

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6 Citations

Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services

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Kenneth R. Evans

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Emmyrose Khan

It is unclear why customers perceive some salespeople to be helpful and others to be threatening. Salesperson stereotypes are often considered negative and threatening; however, salesperson stereotypes may also be positive and professional. Based on the concepts of stereotype threat and compound stereotyping, this research proposes that customers form opinions about the threat posed by specific salespeople based on: (1) the extent to which they feel threatened by stereotypical salespeople in an industry, (i.e., stereotype threat), and then (2) the degree to which the salesperson's appearance matches customer stereotypes about salespeople for that industry. Salesperson stereotypes are viewed negatively when they elicit a stereotype threat in customers and viewed positively when they do not. This research investigates an alterable appearance characteristic, salesperson attire, and a fixed demographic characteristic, salesperson gender, using three experimental studies and a field study. When salespeople belong to a demographic that is considered threatening to a particular customer, they can wear less formal attire to avoid stereotype threat. When salespeople are not considered threatening, they should conform to salesperson stereotypes of professionalism.

Citations (1)


... It offers a framework for comprehending how signalers (such as sellers) can use extrinsic cues to communicate information about the quality of their products to receivers (such as consumers), reducing perceived uncertainty and promoting interaction in a context with high information asymmetry ( Wells, Valacich & Hess, 2011 ;Zimmer et al., 2020 ). While signals have primarily been conceived of as intentional effort s made by the salesperson to inform a buyer ( Connelly et al., 2011 ), salesperson characteristics can also be interpreted as signals to buyers ( Arndt et al., 2019 ;Gligor, Newman & Kashmiri, 2021 ;Jones et al., 1998 ). For instance, research finds that the salesperson's race influences consumers' perceptions of a salesperson ( Gligor et al., 2021 ;Jones et al., 1998 ), gender ( Arndt et al., 2019 ;Jones et al., 1998 ), weight ( Cowart & Brady 2014 ), and age ( Perry, Kulik & Bourhis 1996 ). ...

Reference:

Wearing your success on your sleeve: How salesperson luxury brand consumption affects consumers’ perceptions
Competent or threatening? When looking like a “salesperson” is disadvantageous
  • Citing Article
  • March 2019

Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services