Title
Interventionist external agents make specific advice less demotivating
Source of Publication
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Abstract
© 2017 Across four experiments, we explored how reminders of powerful external agents—interventionist Gods and reliable corporate institutions—influence people's motivation in the realm of financial goals. We found evidence that when people receive specific financial advice, they feel demotivated by the overwhelming flow of concrete instructions for achieving success. We found further that, under these circumstances specifically, reminders of interventionist agents bolster motivation, but that these same agents under different circumstances (i.e., when people receive vague advice) instead undermine motivation. Our findings shed light on the effects of specific (versus vague) goal focus, and on the dynamics of compensatory control in consumer settings.
Document Type
Article
First Page
189
Last Page
196
Publication Date
1-1-2017
DOI
10.1016/j.jesp.2017.07.003
Recommended Citation
Khenfer, Jamel; Laurin, Kristin; Tafani, Eric; Roux, Elyette; and Kay, Aaron C., "Interventionist external agents make specific advice less demotivating" (2017). Scopus Indexed Articles. 1455.
https://zuscholars.zu.ac.ae/scopus-indexed-articles/1455