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Value Tradition

Category: Schwartz Universal Values - Conservation Scale: 0.0 (low tradition orientation) to 1.0 (high tradition orientation)

Definition

Tradition represents the value placed on respect, commitment, and acceptance of the customs and ideas that one's culture or religion provides. Users high in tradition prefer established brands, are skeptical of new approaches, and value heritage and longevity.

Research Foundation

Primary Citation

"Tradition values derive from the function of groups in regulating social life and from a perceived continuity of identity over time." β€” Schwartz, 1992, p. 6

Full Citation (APA 7): Schwartz, S. H. (1992). Universals in the content and structure of values: Theoretical advances and empirical tests in 20 countries. Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, 25, 1-65. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0065-2601(08)60281-6

Supporting Research

"Brand heritage creates a perception of authenticity that positively influences consumer trust and loyalty." β€” Wiedmann et al., 2011, p. 1458

Full Citation (APA 7): Wiedmann, K. P., Hennigs, N., Schmidt, S., & Wuestefeld, T. (2011). The importance of brand heritage as a key performance driver in marketing management. Journal of Brand Management, 19(3), 182-194.


Behavioral Indicators

Level Value Web Behavior
Very Low 0.0-0.2 Actively seeks new brands, dislikes "old-fashioned"
Low 0.2-0.4 Open to new options, heritage not a factor
Moderate 0.4-0.6 Considers heritage but not decisive
High 0.6-0.8 Prefers established brands, suspicious of startups
Very High 0.8-1.0 Strong loyalty to heritage brands, avoids disruption

UX Implications

For High Tradition Users

Design Pattern Effect
"Since 1985" claims Positive β€” longevity = trust
Heritage branding Positive β€” authenticity
"New and innovative" Negative β€” suspicious
Family business messaging Positive β€” tradition
Classic design aesthetics Positive β€” familiarity

For Low Tradition Users

Design Pattern Effect
Heritage emphasis Neutral to negative β€” feels outdated
"Disrupting the industry" Positive β€” appeals to change
Modern, minimalist design Positive β€” contemporary
Startup positioning Positive β€” fresh, innovative
Legacy warnings Less effective β€” doesn't value history

Trait Correlations

Trait Correlation Direction
mentalModelRigidity Strong Direct β€” high tradition β†’ rigid mental models
curiosity Moderate Inverse β€” less exploration of new
riskTolerance Moderate Inverse β€” prefers known paths

Related Values

Value Relationship
Value-Conformity Compatible β€” both in Conservation cluster
Value-Security Compatible β€” both in Conservation cluster
Value-SelfDirection Opposing β€” heritage vs. innovation
Value-Stimulation Opposing β€” stability vs. novelty

Persona Profiles

Persona Tradition Level Rationale
Elderly User 0.8 Values familiar patterns, heritage
Power User 0.3 Embraces new tools, less tradition-bound
Enterprise Buyer 0.6 Values established vendors
First Timer 0.4 Open but seeks reliability signals
ADHD 0.3 Drawn to novel over established

See Also


Copyright: (c) 2026 Alexa Eden.

License: MIT License

Contact: [email protected]

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