The Cost of Looking Natural: Why the No-Makeup Movement May Fail to Discourage Cosmetic Use

in press at the Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science

39 Pages Posted: 4 Aug 2021

See all articles by Rosanna Smith

Rosanna Smith

University of Illinois Urbana Champaign

Elham Yazdani

University of Georgia

Pengyuan Wang

University of Georgia

Saber Soleymani

University of Georgia

Lan Anh Ton

University of Georgia

Date Written: August 1, 2021

Abstract

Consumers seek naturalness across many domains, including physical appearance. It seems that the desire for natural beauty would discourage artificial appearance-enhancement consumption, such as cosmetic use. However, across an analysis of the “no-makeup movement” on Twitter and Nielsen cosmetic sales (Study 1a), an image analysis of #nomakeup selfies using machine learning approaches (Study 1b), and three experiments (Studies 2–4), we find that calls to look natural can be associated with increased artificial beauty practices. Drawing from attribution theory, we theorize that calls to look natural maintain the value of attractiveness while adding the consumer concern that others will discount their attractiveness if overt effort is present. Thus, rather than investing less effort, consumers may engage in a self-presentational strategy wherein they construct an appearance of naturalness to signal low effort to others, thereby augmenting their attractiveness. This work contributes to attribution and self-presentation theory and offers practical implications for naturalness consumption.

Keywords: naturalness; beauty; effort; attribution; social media; image analysis; multimethod

Suggested Citation

Smith, Rosanna and Yazdani, Elham and Wang, Pengyuan and Soleymani, Saber and Ton, Lan Anh, The Cost of Looking Natural: Why the No-Makeup Movement May Fail to Discourage Cosmetic Use (August 1, 2021). in press at the Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3897431

Rosanna Smith (Contact Author)

University of Illinois Urbana Champaign ( email )

Department of Agriculture and Biological Engg.
Urbana, IL 61801
United States

Elham Yazdani

University of Georgia ( email )

Athens, GA 30602-6254
United States
8188023201 (Phone)
30606 (Fax)

Pengyuan Wang

University of Georgia ( email )

Saber Soleymani

University of Georgia ( email )

Athens, GA 30602-6254
United States

Lan Anh Ton

University of Georgia ( email )

Athens, GA 30602-6254
United States

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
139
Abstract Views
619
Rank
422,152
PlumX Metrics