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  • Keywords:

    Children, peer-

    pressure, brands,

    poverty,

    symbolism, fashion

    Richard ElliottWarwick Business

    School,

    University of

    Warwick,

    Warwick, CV4 7AL,

    UK

    Tel: +44 024 7652 4800

    Fax: +44 01392 263242

    e-mail: richard.elliott@

    relliott.demon.co.uk

    Peer pressure and poverty:Exploring fashion brands andconsumption symbolism amongchildren of the British poorReceived in revised form.

    Richard Elliottis Professor of Marketing and Consumer Research at Warwick Business School and a

    Fellow of St Annes College, Oxford. He is Associate Editor of the British Journal of

    Management and European Editor of the Journal of Product and Brand Management. His

    research focuses on the symbolic meaning of brands, consumer culture and identity

    and the dynamics of brand ecology.

    Clare Leonardgraduated in Management from Exeter University and is currently travelling the

    world.

    AbstractAttitudes towards fashion brands (trainers/athletic shoes) and their symbolic meanings areexplored among a sample of 30 children aged 812 years from poor homes in the UK, in aninterpretive study using projective methods. The children form stereotypes about theowners of trainers: if the trainers are obviously branded and expensive the children believethe owner to be rich and young, if the trainer is unbranded and inexpensive looking thechildren believe the owner to be poor and old. If a child is wearing branded trainers they areseen as popular and able to fit in with their peers. These opinions are so strongly held thatthe children would prefer to talk to someone wearing branded trainers than unbrandedtrainers. The children also feel pressure to wear the trainers that their friends wear, partlyto make friends and fit in and partly because of the teasing experienced if they are wearingunbranded clothes or are clearly from a poor home.

    INTRODUCTION

    Despite anecdotal evidence that peers

    exert a very powerful influence over

    childrens consumer behaviour, there

    has been a surprising lack of research on

    the topic (Bachmann et al., 1993). Peer

    pressure is most likely to be experienced

    for public luxuries such as branded

    fashion items (Childers and Rao, 1992)

    and the authors concentrate here on the

    case of branded trainers (athletic shoes)

    rather than clothes, as they are

    considered to be a high fashion item,

    but do not have the extreme variance in

    their types that clothing does.

    The emergence of a British

    underclass, of which single mothers

    and children are a major element, has

    been widely discussed (Murray, 1990;

    Smith, 1992) and an international

    lifestyle segmentation study identified a

    unique social group termed the British

    poor who make up 10 per cent of the

    UK population (Solomon et al., 1999).

    The pressures felt by inner-city young

    people to fit in with the prevailing

    fashions are discussed by Chin (1992).

    The almighty dollar is the guiding factor.Kids as young as 9 got involved (with thedrug trade) just to get a dollar to get whatother kids have. The peer pressure isunbelievable, especially for material

    Journal of Consumer Behaviour Vol. 3, 4, 347359 #Henry Stewart Publications 1479-1838 347

  • things. They wear gold chains, $120pump Nike Air sneaks, $300 sweat suits.Kids who cant get those things suffer andare the centre of teasing.

    Page and Ridgway (2001) point out that

    little attention has been focused on the

    consumption patterns of economically

    disadvantaged children and Chin

    (1997) argues that consumption has not

    been examined often as a medium

    through which social inequality is

    engendered. This studys informants

    were children aged 812 years referred

    by Social Services Departments for help

    from a voluntary agency because of

    being on the At Risk register.

    Placement on the register is highly

    correlated with poverty (Kumar, 1993)

    and with the British underclass (Smith,

    1992).

    CHILDREN AND PEER PRESSURE

    Probably the strongest influence on

    children is their peer groups: friends

    and siblings (Pilgrim and Lawrence,

    2001), starting as early as six years old

    (McNeal, 1987) and becoming

    particularly significant as they enter

    adolescence when they learn about

    their peers product favourites and take

    them into account when evaluating

    products on their own (Gunter and

    Furnham, 1998). This influence is at its

    height in relation to symbolic goods

    such as clothes and fashion items

    (Brittain, 1963).

    POVERTYAND ITS EFFECTS ON

    CONSUMPTION

    The poor are often treated as strangers

    who are outside the concerns of

    mainstream consumer and marketing

    research (Alwitt, 1996). Low-income

    households have more restricted

    shopping scope and know less about

    shopping alternatives available, because

    they have physical and psychological

    restrictions on mobility (Goldman,

    1976). In addition, the poor have little

    knowledge about less well-known

    brands and prefer information about

    more popular brands, thus spending

    more (Coe, 1971). This suggests that

    branded items are purchased by poorer

    families, not just because children have

    a huge desire to own them but because

    their parents choose the most readily

    available and most well-known option.

    Darley and Johnson (1985) suggest

    that generations hand down a design

    for living, which gives the poor a

    different set of values to those of the

    middle class. This implies that both

    parents and children have a similar

    perception of branded items, and that

    parents may understand fully their

    childrens desire to own branded

    trainers.

    Belk et al. (1982) explored perceptions

    of product ownership and consumer

    stereotypes among young children and

    found that product owners who were

    judged to be more successful were also

    more likely to be the subjects of

    aspiration. Lower social class children

    saw these persons as lucky, higher

    social class children saw them as the

    type of person they would like to be.

    Lower social class people seem to be

    more fatalistic and believe in external

    control of their lives while higher social

    class people appear to believe that they

    have personal control over their lives

    (Herzog, 1963). It has been

    demonstrated that children with low

    self-esteem are more likely to be

    susceptible to peer-group purchase

    influence (Achenreiner, 1997).

    BRANDS AS SYMBOLIC RESOURCES

    Consumers do not make consumption

    choices based solely on products

    utilities but also utilise their symbolic

    meanings; social symbolism and self-

    identity are provided largely by

    advertising and are transferred to

    brands, allowing the consumer to

    exercise free will to form images of who

    or what he or she wants to be (Elliott

    and Wattanasuwan, 1998). Children

    may learn much of the symbolic

    meaning of goods from their peers,

    however (Gunter and Furnham, 1998).

    The possession of branded goods may

    348 Journal of Consumer Behaviour Vol. 3, 4, 347359 #Henry Stewart Publications 1479-1838

    Richard Elliott and Clare Leonard

  • be an aspect of symbolic self-

    completion where individuals who

    perceive themselves as lacking in a

    personal quality attempt to fill the gap

    using symbolic resources (Wicklund

    and Gollwitzer, 1982). This suggests that

    a poor family may be more likely to buy

    their child branded trainers because

    they are aware of the absence of money

    in their life and are using the symbolic

    meaning of branded goods to fill that

    gap.

    RESEARCH QUESTIONS

    Do poor children own branded

    trainers? This will consider the

    brands they own, the circumstances

    in which they receive them and the

    importance they place on them.

    To what extent do children form

    stereotypes about the owners of

    trainers? This will consider the

    symbolic meaning of brands, the

    links the children form between

    individuals and their trainers and

    any connections with the childrens

    view of themselves and their future.

    To what extent does peer pressure

    influence perceptions of brands?

    How do the children feel about it?

    To what extent can brands influence

    the childrens popularity? This will

    consider the childrens perceptions

    of their peers beliefs about branded

    trainers, any bullying related to the

    brands the children do or do not

    own and any bullying relating to

    the childrens financial situation.

    METHODOLOGY

    General issues when conducting

    research with children

    It is important to ensure that children

    understand the questions being asked,

    reading out questions to the younger

    children ensures that the reading ability

    of the children does not affect the results

    (Achenreiner, 1997). Audio-taping is

    necessary to ensure that childrens

    answers are not limited by their writing

    skills, nor the speed at which the

    interviewer can write.

    Children in the age group 812 years

    are in Piagets cognitive stage of

    Concrete Operational Thought, and it is

    important to recognise that they can

    only work with concepts related to

    concrete objects (Roedder John, 1999).

    Belk et al. (1982) used paired pictures of

    three houses and four automobiles, and

    then elicited a response from

    participants to measure impressions of

    the owners of each object. The

    methodology of showing pictures to

    respondents appears successful as it

    gives the respondents something

    tangible with which to frame their

    answer. This method is appropriate here

    as children may struggle to form and

    articulate clear opinions without a

    concrete stimulus.

    Elliott (1993) highlights another

    problem of data collection when

    working with children, which is that of

    the double meaning of words such as

    bad which can mean both cool and

    rubbish, ie children are likely to use

    slang of which the interviewer may not

    be aware. Therefore the interviewer

    must endeavour to offer the children

    terms that they use in their everyday

    lives (Peracchio, 1990).

    The environmental context is a vital

    issue in research with children as an

    unfamiliar environment may severely

    inhibit a childs ability to respond

    accurately (Peracchio, 1990). In this case,

    the children were used to travelling in a

    minibus every week to and from fun

    activities. This was a familiar and

    friendly environment which, although

    far from ideal from a research point of

    view, meant that the children could be

    interviewed singly by talking to them at

    the rear of the bus but without taking

    them out of the relaxed surroundings.

    Development of an appropriate

    methodology

    The choice of research methodology

    was based on the specifics of the group

    being interviewed. It proved difficult to

    access children from poor families, as

    within the UK education system

    Journal of Consumer Behaviour Vol. 3, 4, 347359 #Henry Stewart Publications 1479-1838 349

    Peer pressure and poverty

  • enquiries about access from researchers

    at a Business School were treated with

    some suspicion. Eventually, direct

    access was obtained to 30 children, 18

    girls and 12 boys, aged between 8 and

    12, who had been referred by Social

    Services Departments for help from a

    voluntary agency because they were on

    the At Risk register. All of the

    childrens parents or guardians proved

    willing to allow their children to be

    interviewed if they could remain

    anonymous. To ensure anonymity the

    names of the children were changed in

    the transcripts and in any discussion of

    the data. These children were all from

    socially disadvantaged backgrounds,

    with the vast majority being from

    single-parent homes and also

    experiencing quite severe financial

    difficulties. This had the drawback,

    however, of making it impossible to

    access a directly comparable sample of

    children. Consequently, this must be

    treated as an exploratory study focused

    on only one sociodemographic group.

    One-to-one interviews were deemed

    the most appropriate method of data

    collection. As the reading and writing

    skills of the children to be interviewed

    were known to be poor, a decision was

    taken to eliminate the need for any

    reading and writing by reading the

    questions out to the children and audio-

    taping their replies.

    The method for research was

    interpretive in order to glean rich,

    descriptive data from the children

    without the limitations of the closed-end

    measures of experimental research

    (Moore and Lutz, 2000). The authors

    pretested asking questions with a more

    quantitative focus, with the hope that

    the children would find this easy to

    understand and reply to. It was found

    that after asking a small sample group

    of children if they had recently bought a

    new pair of trainers and whether they

    had seen them advertised, however,

    that a very limited spectrum of what the

    children thought was actually being

    represented. In addition, the questions

    used also meant that no feedback was

    received about their motivations for

    buying trainers or what they thought

    about themselves and their friends

    based on their purchases. Therefore, it

    was decided to adopt a more projective

    approach and show the children

    detailed picture boards and lists of

    words as stimuli and ask for a response

    to more probing questions which asked

    the children to point out pictures and

    words which described the person they

    thought would wear a certain pair of

    trainers. This was again tested on a

    small sample of children, and it was

    discovered that the task was too difficult

    for the children, as they struggled to

    take in all the available information and

    to answer coherently. In addition, the

    back of the bus where the children were

    to be interviewed had limited light so

    complex pictures were unsuitable.

    The successful approach proved to be

    asking the children factual questions to

    get them used to being interviewed,

    such as what brands of trainers they had

    and which is their favourite (see the

    Appendix). This gave an overview of

    the childrens brand awareness and

    which trainers they desired, before

    moving on to the questions they found

    harder. Pictures of trainers were used as

    a stimulus for the children and they

    were asked to choose a trainer they

    liked the most and the least, and to

    comment on who might wear them (see

    Figure 1). The interviews were informal

    and unstructured, all children were

    asked the same questions, but when an

    interesting topic came up additional

    questions were asked to glean further

    information. This flexible method

    helped to produce interesting and rich

    data and made the children more

    relaxed as they were able to say as much

    or as little as they wished.

    The children also found it hard to

    understand the idea of imagining a

    person being described from their

    trainers. Some of the children tried to

    think of someone they knew who

    actually wore the trainers described.

    350 Journal of Consumer Behaviour Vol. 3, 4, 347359 #Henry Stewart Publications 1479-1838

    Richard Elliott and Clare Leonard

  • No. Brand Retail Price (approx.)1 Nike Air Turbulence 802 Amulet (Reebok) 283 Unbranded shoe for men (Kee) 224 Nike Air Max 90 1055 Walk-Lite (Hi-Tec) 306 Detroit 207 Unbranded shoe for women (Kee) 228 Nike Air Tremble Cross 909 Nike Air International Trait 3 90

    1

    3

    5

    6

    8

    9

    7

    4

    2

    Figure 1: Stimulus board

    Journal of Consumer Behaviour Vol. 3, 4, 347359 #Henry Stewart Publications 1479-1838 351

    Peer pressure and poverty

  • The analogy of the playground would

    you talk to someone who wore these

    shoes worked well, however, as did

    making the interviewer the subject

    what kind of person would I be if I

    wore these.

    The interviews were audio-taped,

    fully transcribed, and analysed for

    interpretive themes, relationships with

    the literature and assumptions using

    pattern-coding methods (Miles and

    Huberman, 1984).

    FINDINGS

    Brands The dominance of Nike

    Almost all the children interviewed said

    that they owned branded trainers; this is

    surprising considering the relative

    poverty of many of the children. Some

    of the branded trainers were from the

    cheaper end of the market and had been

    worn until ripped and frayed. The range

    of trainers the children owned varied

    from Nike to Donnay, but the range of

    trainers the children wished to own was

    far narrower, with the majority wishing

    to own Nike. The childrens reasons for

    wanting to own Nike varied, but most

    of the children came up with a practical

    and then an emotional response.

    . . . why did you choose Nike ones?L (girl) cos I have had Nike ones before

    and they are really, really, reallysoft on the feet and they donthurt when you run

    did you choose them because they are comfy,or cos they looked cool?L cos they are comfy and coolwhich is the coolest trainer?L Nike

    The majority of the children desired

    branded trainers, and they particularly

    asked for Nike shoes. This may be

    because they are the most well known

    and are perceived to be the most

    expensive trainer on the market; the

    children appeared to desire goods

    which they were aware cost a lot of

    money, perhaps because of the lack of

    money in their own lives. All of the

    children expressed a preference for the

    expensive, flash and branded trainers;

    once again this may be explained by the

    childrens poverty and their desire to

    have what they could not afford.

    . . . if you could buy any trainer in the worldever, if money was no object, what would youhave?D (boy) the most expensive pair everwhat make are those?D Nike

    Consumption symbolism and brand

    stereotyping

    When asked to describe the kind of

    person who might wear the trainers that

    they liked, the children portrayed the

    potential wearer in a positive light.

    . . . imagine someone walking down the streetwearing these shoes (indicating the ones shelikes) tell me what they would be likeB (girl) they would be happy and they

    would be nice and fun wearingthem

    . . . what sort of person would they be?B they would have lots of childrenwhy do you think that?B cos cos they have got, cos they

    are richwhy do you think they are rich?B cos they buy decent stuff like

    them shoes and like that

    Conversely, they described the wearers

    of the trainers they did not like in a

    negative way. The majority of the

    children chose number 7 (unbranded) as

    the trainer they disliked most and, in

    contrast to imagery associated with the

    trainers they prefered, the image they

    formed about the wearer of the trainers

    was homogenous.

    so what about number 7, why dont you likethat one?L (girl) because it looks like something

    my grandma would wearso imagine walking along behind a grannywho wears those, tell me other stuff about thisgrannyL I think this granny would be

    wearing a flowery skirt and along woolly jumper

    which trainers dont you like?J (boy) number 7what is wrong with those?J well an old granny would wear

    them and I dont think any of my

    352 Journal of Consumer Behaviour Vol. 3, 4, 347359 #Henry Stewart Publications 1479-1838

    Richard Elliott and Clare Leonard

  • friends would wear themso if you went into school wearing number 7what would your friends say to you?J oohhh look who is a little granny,

    or something, I dont know

    The children described the wearers of

    the trainers they liked best in a positive

    way. There is a strong positive

    correlation between these characteristics

    and the descriptions the children gave

    of who they wanted to be when they

    were older. They appeared to desire,

    and identify with, the positive

    characteristics they used to describe the

    wearers of the trainers they prefered.

    imagine if you met me for the first time ever,and you saw me wearing those trainers(number 8), you didnt know anything aboutme at all, all you saw was the trainers, whatsort of person do you think I was like?T (boy) very good paid job. . . in 20 years time what would you reallylike to be doing? Would you like to have kidsor have a big house, anything like that?T Id have a big mansionyeah, why do you want that?T out in a big field, so I have a big

    enough field to ride a motorbikein

    and in 20 years time what kind of trainerswould you like to be wearing?T number 8 again

    When the children were asked what

    they would like to be when they grew

    up, almost all answered with the job

    they would like to do. All the children

    chose aspirational careers such as

    lawyers and pop stars; these well-paid

    and successful careers again correlate

    with their choice of trainers, as they

    chose expensive, flash trainers that

    their parents currently could not afford.

    Their choice of trainer appears to reflect

    how they would like to see themselves,

    and how they hoped to be in the future.

    When asked to look at the pictures of

    trainers and talk about what they

    thought the owner might look like, the

    children associated the more expensive

    and more obviously branded trainers

    with richer and younger owners.

    so you talked about the kind of person who

    might wear these trainers, can you tell meanything else about them?S (girl) they would be young peoplewhy do you think they would be young?S because I dont think old people

    would wear these trainersok, would they be rich or poor?S quite richwhy do you think that?S because some parents wont buy

    those trainers for their childrenwhat kind of parent doesnt buy trainers fortheir children?S like ordinary people . . . cos not

    many people can afford trainerslike that

    In addition they associated the

    unbranded, old-fashioned trainers

    with poorer and older owners.

    what about number 7?Z (girl) poorwhy?Z cos they are not that good, and

    number 9 is better and bigger

    The children formed very strong

    opinions regarding money and trainers

    and they formed stereotypes of who

    would wear a certain trainer brand or

    style. The opinion seemed to be that if

    someone is wearing expensive-looking

    shoes, they could not be poor, as

    ordinary parents cannot afford to buy

    branded trainers.

    so if you saw someone in number 9 you wouldthink, they cant be poor?J (boy) yeah

    Poverty is an important factor in the

    consumption of branded trainers, few of

    the children said that they had ever

    been bought trainers because they

    wanted a new pair, most children said

    that they had got new trainers because

    the old ones were worn out or too small.

    . . . when you last got your trainers, why didyou get them?T (boy) I got my last pair cos my shoe

    size got bigger and my trainersgot smaller so I had to get a newpair

    The children also appeared to value the

    trainers physical attributes as well as

    Journal of Consumer Behaviour Vol. 3, 4, 347359 #Henry Stewart Publications 1479-1838 353

    Peer pressure and poverty

  • the brand; this may be a message they

    have learnt from their parents. They

    were aware of their parents financial

    situation and were expressing the same

    frugal views as them, demonstrating an

    understanding that trainers are for

    practical purposes as well as being

    fashion accessories.

    can you remember why you chose the onesyou did?V (boy) um cos the leather ones are if

    when you fall they wont getscratched and the others Iwanted them cos when I playfootball I always kick it so hardthey cant beat me

    so can you remember when you were walkingaround the shop why you chose the exact onesthat you did?V I wanted to choose the pair

    because cos they have got quitegood grip on the bottom

    In addition to the childrens

    understanding of the importance of the

    practical need for trainers, there is also

    evidence that the children shared

    trainers and that they are passed down

    from other family members when they

    have been grown out of.

    why did you get some (new trainers) B?B (girl) um well I didnt get them, my

    sister did because like Tess gotthem for me, cos they are veryspecial and they are from mysister

    Once again this implies that the children

    had less say in the brand of trainers they

    wore and that a practical or financial

    issue dictated what they wore, in this

    case what an older sister passed down.

    The family also appeared to have an

    effect on the consumption choices of

    children with many children citing their

    family as a motivation for wanting a

    particular trainer.

    why did you choose those shoes?E (girl) because I was copying my sisterhas she got a pair of Nikes?E cos she always gets the good

    stuff, so I thought I would copyher

    so you wanted the same shoes as her, does shelook good in hers?

    E yeahdid you want to look good like her?E yeahdo you think now that you have them you lookkind of like your sister a bit?E yeah

    E thought that her sister looks good in

    her Nike trainers and her jealousy of the

    sister who always gets the good stuff

    seemed to prompt her to ask for the

    same brand. She appeared to want to

    emulate her sister by is asking for the

    same trainers as her in order to help

    effect this transformation.

    Some of the children seemed to be

    defensive about, and aware of, being

    poor. One girl said she would like to be

    a pop star so that she could give her

    mother more money. She also confided

    that money was tight at home.

    W (girl) I said to my mum that if I everget really rich I will give hersome of my money, cos my mumdoesnt really get much moneyto pay her bills and stuff, so Iwould like to give it to my mum

    is it sometimes hard for you at home, makingsure you have got trainers like number oneand stuff?W yeah, but I always make mine

    last cos my mum hasnt gotmuch money

    Many of the children displayed this

    attitude, they were very keen to own

    branded trainers, but they were aware

    of the financial trouble at home and

    wanted to help out if they could. The

    children were also very conscious of the

    stigma and difficulty of being poor and

    did not want the other children at

    school to know about the financial

    troubles at home.

    is it hard to be poor do you think?F (girl) yeah, I think its very hard to be

    poorwhy do you think that?F cos you wouldnt have much

    money so you couldnt buy foodfor your kids and things like that

    would they (friends at school) think that youcouldnt afford to buy other trainers?

    J (boy) yeahdo you mind if they thought that?

    354 Journal of Consumer Behaviour Vol. 3, 4, 347359 #Henry Stewart Publications 1479-1838

    Richard Elliott and Clare Leonard

  • J yeahso if they thought, oh look J cant afford to buynumber 8 would you be sad?J yeah

    Peer pressure

    People with decent trainers also

    appeared to be popular with their peers,

    the children seemed to fit into gangs

    and groups of friends easier if they were

    appropriately dressed, one interviewee

    saying my best friends wear trainers

    that I like. This peer pressure seemed to

    lead to many of the children wanting

    branded trainers to fit in with their

    friends and the popular children at

    school.

    why are they (shoes you are now wearing)decent?R (boy) because everyone at my school

    wears them. . . why do you want to wear the same as theothers?R because then I dont feel left out. . . so if tomorrow everyone decided that theywant to wear Nike trainers you would try andget some as well?R yeah

    When asked who they would talk to

    first in the playground, the person

    wearing the trainers they liked or those

    they disliked, almost all of the children

    said that they would talk to the person

    wearing the shoes they liked first.

    so would you prefer to be friends withsomeone who wears trainer number 1 ortrainer number 3?Q (boy) trainer number 1why do you think that?Q cos they look more decent than

    number 3yeah, so would you be embarrassed to be aperson in number 3? If your friend cametowards you in those would you be umm aahhnot too happy?Q well if they were my friend I

    would like them, but if they werenot I would take the mick out ofthem

    do you prefer to talk to people wearing thekind of trainers you like?Q if they are my friends, if they are

    my best friends, they have mybest trainers on that I like

    do you choose people to be friends who wearthe stuff you like?Q um I change my friends so they

    are wearing the stuff that I like

    They appeared to see the choice of

    trainers as a good indicator of what the

    other child was like, and a way to help

    them decide who to talk to if they did

    not know anything about a group of

    people. Z was the only person who said

    she would talk to the person wearing

    the trainers she did not like, however,

    her answer is more telling us she was

    merely being charitable.

    ok, imagine the first day of school right andyou have been introduced to a couple ofpeople, one wearing trainer number 4 and onewearing trainer number 7, who would youtalk to first?Z (girl) trainer number 7 . . . cos you can

    see that they are not as well off asthe others and if you go tonumber 7 and you complementthem on their trainers, eventhough you dont think they areok, just tell a little white lie, thenmaybe it would cheer them up . . .because they might feel teasedbecause they might look at otherpeoples trainers and say thattheir trainers are better thanmine, why cant I have them

    There was also a lot of discussion about

    taking the mick out of someone with

    manky trainers and the possibility of

    being beaten up because of not being in

    the in crowd, a group one could not

    enter without the appropriate footwear.

    Most of the children were either the

    victim or the potential perpetrator of

    bullying, for example, one boy said he

    would be unwilling to let someone in

    granny shoes join in his football game.

    Peoples images seemed to be a big

    trigger for bullying, and many of the

    children chose their trainers

    accordingly.

    and what made you choose Nike ones whenyou came to get some more trainers?V (girl) I dont know, I just prefer Nike

    cos they are the kind of brandthat people in my school like now

    so you choose ones that all your friends like?

    Journal of Consumer Behaviour Vol. 3, 4, 347359 #Henry Stewart Publications 1479-1838 355

    Peer pressure and poverty

  • V yeahis it really important that you have the sameones as all your friendsV yeah, cos if you want friends

    then, if you want to hang aroundwith friends then it is best to lookquite good and that, like umotherwise they are just going togo away cos thats what they arelike in our school

    oh right, so if you havent got the right sort ofstuff they dont want to be your friend?V yeah

    Many of the children talked about the

    bullying they had experienced or

    witnessed in school, a lot of which

    appeared to be centred around an

    individuals clothes and financial

    situation.

    can you tell me a bit more about wearing theright shoes to fit in?P (girl) well if we dont wear like what

    our other friends wear, like coolstuff and that, we get picked onlike and we wont quite fit inthere and that cos we just get, likepicked on and stuff. And I dontthink thats fair really, because itsnot fair on other people if theirmums and dads cant afford stufflike other people, its not theirfault so I dont know why peoplehave a go at them.

    have you been picked on for not wearing theright stuff?P yeah, people do pick on me,

    people wear stuff like this(indicates jeans) yeah and stufflike that and the cool people atschool they always be horrible toyou and I dont know why, it justgets right on my nerves and Ithink its horrid. They pick on thisgirl, who her mum aint gotenough money for stuff like otherpeople wear . . . this girl calledKathryn who is new to the schooland they always get picked on allthe time, and I dont know whythey do it. People who do are justbullies. It annoys me, cos I dontreally like it myself.

    When some of the children talked about

    wanting to have branded trainers they

    appeared to want to use them as a

    defence mechanism. One girl described

    how she did not think that anyone

    should have to have branded trainers,

    but that she had them just in case to try

    and prevent the other children from

    picking on her.

    Surprisingly, a number of children

    recognised and desired branded

    trainers, but thought, its whats on the

    inside that counts. They understood

    that at the moment they did not have

    access to expensive, branded trainers

    and were trying to play down their

    significance. It is quite possible that the

    children would like branded trainers,

    but by reaffirming that the brand of

    trainers they wore was not important

    they hoped that their lack of branded

    trainers would be viewed less

    negatively by their peers.

    . . . anything else you want to tell me aboutyour friends at school and trainers or wearingthe right clothes, stuff like that?G (girl) shoes arent everything in a

    person. You cant always look atsomeones shoes and tell whatthey are like. Its the person thatyou are meant to like, not theshoes. You are supposed to beliking the whole person, not theshoes, they are not everythingthey are only shoes, its not likethey are friends or nothing is it?Its like you are liking the shoesinstead of the actual personthemselves.

    DISCUSSION

    Very few of the children interviewed

    owned new, premium-branded trainers,

    despite saying that they desired them.

    The majority of the children indicated

    that their trainers had been bought

    when the previous pair wore out; this

    suggests that poor children have less

    control over their parents spending, as

    they do not have the trainers that they

    want. The children interviewed were

    from poor families and appeared to

    have little influence over the brand of

    trainers they had, the vast majority

    desiring Nike trainers, but often

    wearing cheaper brands.

    Although few of the children were

    able to afford expensive, top-of-the-

    range trainers, the majority owned a

    356 Journal of Consumer Behaviour Vol. 3, 4, 347359 #Henry Stewart Publications 1479-1838

    Richard Elliott and Clare Leonard

  • recognisable brand (Hi-Tec, Adidas etc)

    despite there being cheaper alternatives

    available. This implies that the

    childrens parents did have poor

    knowledge about the cheaper options

    available and bought branded trainers,

    albeit from the less expensive end of the

    market, because they were familiar with

    these popular brands and had some

    knowledge about them. These findings

    support those of Coe (1971) and

    Andreasen (1975) that the poor have

    little knowledge about less well-known

    brands and prefer information about

    more popular brands, thus spending

    more.

    These findings strongly support the

    suggestion of Pilgrim and Lawrence

    (2001) that the most powerful, and yet

    most unregulated, influence on children

    is their peer group. The children

    indicated that one of their primary

    motivations for desiring a certain brand

    of trainer was their need to fit in with

    their peers. They feared that their peers

    would refuse to be friends with them, or

    subject them to bullying, if they did not

    fit in with the group by wearing the

    same, fashionable, brand of trainers.

    When the children were asked what

    they would like to be doing when they

    were older, they all gave aspirational

    careers and said that they would like to

    be financially secure. This differed

    considerably from the situation in

    which their parents currently lived, so it

    could be that the children were

    beginning to think outside of Darley

    and Johnsons (1985) design for living

    handed down by their parents, even if

    they never achieved these goals.

    Most children interviewed discussed

    bullying and the pressure of wanting to

    wear fashionable clothing. Many of the

    children said that they would not talk to

    someone who was not wearing the right

    trainers and that they would be

    embarrassed to be seen with someone

    wearing unfashionable shoes. The

    pressures found in Chins (1992) US

    study of inner-city life are also found in

    much smaller cities in the South West of

    England but, unlike Chins study, these

    children made no mention of damaging

    others clothing through jealousy,

    although many of the children

    expressed strong desires to own

    branded clothes, a jealousy of those who

    were lucky enough to own branded

    trainers and a need to fit in with their

    peers.

    The children interviewed appeared to

    have a strong attachment to the Nike

    brand, with almost every child stating

    that Nike was their preferred brand of

    trainer. The childrens reasons for

    wanting to own Nike varied, but most

    of the children came up with a practical

    and then an emotional response. This

    reflects the model of brand trust in the

    consumer-brand relationship developed

    by Gurviez (1996), who argues that trust

    involves both a cognitive (functional

    attributes) and an emotional element. In

    addition, the children seemed to exhibit

    a shared consciousness regarding their

    feelings for Nike, with the majority of

    children describing Nike as cool and

    helps you to run fast. Muniz and

    OGuinn (2001) introduce the concept of

    brand community, which is a

    specialised, non-geographically-bound

    community, based on a structured set of

    social relations among admirers of a

    brand. The children appeared to be part

    of a symbolic brand community,

    united by their shared feelings about

    Nike trainers.

    This study clearly demonstrates how

    children want to own the branded

    trainers that their peers do in order to

    enable them to have equal status in the

    eyes of their friends. The children who

    owned branded trainers were seen as

    having a referent power (Solomon et al.,

    1999) as they inspired admiration among

    their peers and caused others to attempt

    to emulate them. The symbolic meaning

    of branded trainers appears to be that of

    a fashionable and popular person; if

    Nike were a person it would be the

    coolest kid in school. The children felt

    that by owning decent branded trainers

    they were making a statement about

    Journal of Consumer Behaviour Vol. 3, 4, 347359 #Henry Stewart Publications 1479-1838 357

    Peer pressure and poverty

  • themselves, they were saying that they

    were equal with their peers and were

    fashionable and popular.

    Many of the children seemed to use

    branded trainers as a disguise, they

    were aware that only their closest

    friends would see their home and be

    aware of the poverty they lived in, but

    everyone could see their trainers or

    school shoes and make a judgment

    about them. So, by wearing branded

    trainers, they were preventing negative

    reactions from other children by hiding

    their poverty. Branded trainers seemed

    to be used as symbolic self-completion

    in an attempt to disguise the childrens

    poverty (Wicklund and Gollwitzer,

    1982). Many of the children did not

    think that it was possible to be poor and

    own expensive trainers, therefore, by

    owning branded trainers themselves

    they were distancing themselves from

    their financial situation and taking on a

    new status, that of a wealthier child. If

    they owned branded trainers they could

    not be poor, could they?

    Fashion brands can be part of a

    system of meaning transfer from culture

    to the individual (McCracken, 1988).

    This is demonstrated here as the

    children attempted to transfer branded

    trainers personality onto their own,

    trying to transfer Nikes popularity

    and cool onto themselves by wearing

    Nike trainers. Elliott (1993) argues that

    in order for a product to function as a

    symbol it must have commonality of

    meaning among consumers, such that

    those in the reference group must have

    in common a shared conception of the

    products meaning. This study suggests

    that this common shared conception

    has been achieved among children with

    trainer brands, particularly with Nike as

    the children have a homogenous view

    of what the product means and the

    values they associate with it.

    IMPLICATIONS

    A seminal study on the unintended

    consequences of television advertising

    on childrens behaviour (Goldberg and

    Gorn, 1978) demonstrated that children

    would rather play with a child who had

    an advertised product than a child who

    had an unadvertised one. It seems that

    successful brand-building strategies,

    particularly those that focus on

    symbolic meanings, may be having

    unintended and undesirable

    consequences on various aspects of

    childrens attitudes and behaviour. In

    this respect marketers may be playing

    into the hands of no logo anti-

    consumerists (Klein, 2000). Surprisingly

    little is known about how consumption

    symbolism and materialism may arise

    from peer interaction (Roedder, 1999)

    and this study suggests that peer

    pressure may play an important role in

    the process and have effects which

    persist long after childhood.

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    APPENDIX: INTERVIEW GUIDE

    What brands of trainers do you own?

    Why did you get them?

    What do you like best about them?

    What is your favourite trainer ever and

    why?

    What brands do your friends have?

    What do the kids at school wear?

    Show stimulus board

    What do you think about these trainers?

    Are there any that stand out?

    Are there any you particularly like/

    dislike? (prompt: cool, crap, expensive,

    cheap)

    Do you know what make they are?

    Would you be popular if you had these

    trainers?

    Ask for response to each picture

    If you saw someone walking down the

    street wearing those, what else might

    they be wearing?

    What kind of person would they be?

    (prompt: tell me about them, are they

    young/old, what sort of job might they

    do, what do they wear, what are their

    friends like)

    If it was the first day of school and

    someone was wearing trainer number X

    and someone was wearing trainer

    number Y, which of the two people

    would you talk to first?

    Close

    You said earlier what all the cool kids at

    school wear, do you think you are one

    of the cool kids?

    Would you like to be really popular/

    cool?

    Do you think if you wore these trainers

    you would be?

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    Peer pressure and poverty