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Encouraging product reuse and upcycling via creativity priming, imagination and inspiration

Liudmila Tarabashkina (Marketing Department, University of Western Australia Business School, Perth, Australia)
Alua Devine (Marketing Department, University of Western Australia Business School, Perth, Australia)
Pascale G. Quester (Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia)

European Journal of Marketing

ISSN: 0309-0566

Article publication date: 16 May 2022

Issue publication date: 15 July 2022

991

Abstract

Purpose

Consumers seldom consider end-use consumption (reuse or upcycling) when products reach the end of their lifecycle. This study shows that end-use consumption can be encouraged if individuals are primed to think creatively, engage in end-use ideation (imagine end-use) and become inspired by more original ideas.

Design/methodology/approach

Three studies were carried out. Study 1 tested if creativity priming resulted in more effective end-use ideation (greater number of ideas and more original ideas) compared to environmental appeals and no intervention. Study 2 tested the effectiveness of creativity priming in a longitudinal setting. Study 3 demonstrated how creativity priming and end-use ideation could be practically executed using product packaging.

Findings

Creativity priming represents an effective intervention to stimulate end-use consumption with particularly positive results amongst less creative consumers. However, it was not the number of generated ideas, but their originality during end-use ideation that triggered inspiration.

Research limitations/implications

This study demonstrates which interventions are more effective in changing consumer behaviour in favour of more sustainable practices.

Practical implications

Increasing environmental degradation requires consumers to change their behaviour by re-consuming products. This study shows that consumers can adopt end-use if they are primed to think creatively, imagine end-use consumption and generate more original ideas.

Originality/value

Creative thinking has been leveraged at product development stages, but not at the end of products’ lifecycle. This study integrated creativity priming, consumer imagination and inspiration theories to explain the underlying mechanism behind end-use consumption to scale up its adoption by consumers.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the University of Western Australia Business School grant (PG: 10302216).

Citation

Tarabashkina, L., Devine, A. and Quester, P.G. (2022), "Encouraging product reuse and upcycling via creativity priming, imagination and inspiration", European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 56 No. 7, pp. 1956-1984. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJM-06-2020-0442

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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