Gifts to say goodbye: consumer preferences for farewell gifts

Dongjin HE, Qianqian Esther LIU, Xing-Yu Marcos CHU, Meng WANG*, Yuwei JIANG

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal PublicationsJournal Article (refereed)peer-review

Abstract

This research examines consumers’ gift preferences in the context of farewell gifting. Six primary studies and two studies reported in the Web Appendix demonstrate that consumers tend to choose a gift linked to their own identities when it is to be sent as a farewell gift (vs. a non-farewell gift). This effect is driven by consumers’ heightened reminding motive (i.e., the motive to remind the recipient of the giver). The effect of the gifting context on givers’ preferences for giver-identity-linked gifts is attenuated when they select gifts for socially distant recipients or when they perceive a low threat to their relationship with the recipient. Furthermore, the recipient can detect the giver’s reminding motive via giver-identity-linked gifts, and they appreciate giver-identity-linked farewell gifts more than giver-identity-unlinked farewell gifts. This research contributes to the literature on gifting and identity, and offers suggestions for gift promotions.
Original languageEnglish
Article number115553
Pages (from-to)115553
JournalJournal of Business Research
Volume199
Early online date28 Jun 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 28 Jun 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Inc.

Funding

This research was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China ( 72425015 awarded to Yuwei Jiang; 72272074 awarded to Xing-Yu (Marcos) Chu); the Lam Woo Research Fund ( LWP20017 ), the Direct Grant ( DR25B8 ), and the Faculty Research Grant ( DB24A1 & DB25A1 ) from Lingnan University awarded to Dongjin He; the Start-up Research Grant ( SRG2024-00052-FBA ) from University of Macau awarded to Qianqian (Esther) Liu; and grants from National Natural Science Foundation of China ( 72302158 ) and Scientific Foundation for Youth Scholars of Shenzhen University ( 1032157 ) awarded to Meng Wang.

Keywords

  • Farewell gifting
  • Identity-linked products
  • Relationship closeness
  • Relationship threat
  • Reminding motive

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