The Pitfalls of Flaunting Your Social Status

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Using luxury goods could make you seem like a poor team player, according to new research from experts at Wharton and INSEAD.

The following article was written by Deborah Small, former professor of marketing at the Wharton School (currently at Yale School of Management); Alixandra Barasch, a visiting associate professor of marketing at INSEAD Business School and associate professor at NYU Stern; and Shalena Srna, assistant professor of marketing at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business.

Ditch the Luxury Logos if You Want To Be Seen as a Cooperative Team Player

In life, impressions matter. Whether we’re meeting with a client, attending a class reunion, or going on a date, how others perceive us can make or break our goals. Many people wear luxury clothes, watches, and handbags to signal their social status or success, whether real or assumed. If you’re one of them, be warned: Displays of this sort can backfire.

In a new paper published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, we show that a person who uses luxury goods tends to be perceived as trying to boost their own social value and hence selfish and a poor team player. As a result, they are less likely to inspire cooperation or be chosen by others for their teams. By contrast, in competitive situations, the same ostentatious person is often favored over more modest rivals.

Our findings suggest that, contrary to what past research might indicate, we ought to be more judicious in signaling our social status. One-upmanship is generally not a good idea when you’re trying to be part of a team.

The Devil Wears Prada

The use of high-end products and brands to bolster one’s social standing has been well-documented as far back as the 19th century. Sociologist Thorstein Veblen coined the term “conspicuous consumption” in 1899 to describe people acquiring luxury goods and services not just for their superior quality but also as a visible sign of their wealth and status. Witness how luxury brands, in catering to the demand for outward displays of success and standing, have created instantly recognizable logos and motifs such as Louis Vuitton’s “LV” and Burberry’s plaid and used them liberally in their products.

Dig deeper into the psyche of conspicuous consumers, however, and you’ll find unvarnished Darwinian logic beneath the pursuit of status. Research shows that people covet high status for its many social benefits: High-status people tend to be admired and listened to; they are more successful in negotiations; and high-status men are more dateable. Status is especially valued in cultures characterized by hierarchy and tradition.

Given all that, it is perhaps no surprise that the global personal luxury goods market was valued at €283 billion last year, and is expected to reach €380 billion by 2025. Even a once-in-a-century pandemic was only a blip in this upward trajectory.

However, more recent studies indicate that conspicuous consumption could also be counterproductive. Ostentatious consumers tend to be seen as more arrogant, less warm, and even less moral. Miranda Priestly, the sharply-dressed, icy fashion doyen in The Devil Wears Prada, is fictional but the association between luxury spenders and emotional frostiness is very real.

Modesty as Social Strategy

Perceptions aside, how do people behave towards conspicuous consumers? In six experiments involving 3,600 participants from 27 countries, we zoomed in on the relationship between conspicuous consumption and cooperation/competition. Our findings point to conspicuous consumption being a bad idea in cooperative contexts but a sound strategy in competitive ones.

Across our experiments, participants consistently responded less favorably towards conspicuous consumers in situations (playing a game or building a collaborative group) that called for cooperation. They perceived the show-offs as less warm, were less likely to cooperate with them, and were less likely to recommend them to a cooperative group.

In one study, participants decided whether to cooperate with a partner in a Prisoner’s Dilemma game, a famous economic game that highlights the trade-off between cooperation and self-interest. Participants saw an avatar representing their partner, which sometimes included luxury logos on the avatar’s clothing. Participants cooperated less when paired with a partner whose avatar was dressed in luxury clothing compared to when their partner’s avatar wore more modest clothing. They made a strategic calculation that the partner who was signaling status was not going to be cooperative, and so they chose not to cooperate as well.

In other studies, when participants needed to pick someone for a group seeking cooperative people, they were less likely to select those whose social media profiles included status symbols. But when the goal was to select members for a competitive group, the results were reversed.

We also found that people could readily choose to be what we call “strategically modest”. When participants in our research were told that they were the ones evaluated for cooperative tasks or inclusion in cooperative groups, they refrained from displaying status symbols. It would appear that people are instinctively aware of the benefits of modesty when the context clearly values cooperation.

Different Contexts Call for Different Signals

Life, however, is not always so clear-cut. Flaunting your taste for the finer things in life may impress your companions in one setting but becomes a turn-off in the next. To successfully navigate different contexts, ask yourself: What is my primary goal in this situation? What is the most important attribute that I want to communicate about myself?

If the goal is to convey your success, to compete and exert influence, or to win in a negotiation, it makes sense to wear your best clothes, name-drop your fancy contacts or use luxury hashtags on social media. But if you’re looking to cooperate and inspire cooperation in others, or to appear warm, modesty is a better approach.

It is worth noting that status signaling is not just about displaying material wealth or hinting at career success. Green credentials, altruism (Veblen also created the term “conspicuous compassion”), non-conformity, and “coolness” are also worn as badges of status, depending on the social circle. For example, a hybrid car — or other green purchases — may be more of a status symbol than an expensive sedan in certain parts of the United States.

Whatever the context may be, it helps to think strategically about the fit between your goals and the signals you send through your consumption choices. The designer Tom Ford understands this intuitively. He dresses “A-list” celebrities but usually draws the line at dressing public servants, judging his clothing inappropriate for the likes of Hilary Clinton, Michelle Obama, and Melania Trump.

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This article first appeared in knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu

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