May 1, 2026

Kelly Herd, Ph.D. University of Connecticut

Kelly Herd, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

  • Storrs CT UNITED STATES
  • Marketing

Professor Herd focuses on creativity and product design as they relate to social cognition, identity, and emotions

Contact More Open options

Biography

Marketing professor Kelly Herd’s research focuses primarily on creativity and product design as they relate to a variety of topics including social cognition, identity, and emotions. She is particularly interested in what motivates consumers to engage in aesthetic product design and how companies can better enable individuals to develop unique and effective solutions to fulfill their own needs and wants (e.g., customization) as well as those of the marketplace (e.g., crowdsourcing). Dr. Herd’s has been published in the Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Marketing, and Journal of Consumer Psychology. In 2010, she won both the Marketing Science Institute’s Alden G. Clayton Dissertation Proposal Award and the Society for Marketing Advances’ “Best Retail Proposal” Dissertation Award.

Dr. Herd holds a Ph.D. in Marketing from the University of Colorado and a B.S. in Business Administration from Washington and Lee University. Prior to completing her Ph.D., she specialized in public relations and consumer research, developing marketing campaigns for clients including Toshiba, Disney, NBC, and Pepsi.

Areas of Expertise

Emotions
Product Design
Social Cognition
Consumer Behavior
Creativity
Identity

Education

Washington and Lee University

B.S.

University of Colorado

Ph.D.

Links

Social

Media

Media Appearances

The 30-second trick that can make anyone more creative

Fast Company  online

“A lot of people are told to be very objective. ‘You’re a professional. Think about this in an objective way. Don’t get caught up in emotions,'” says Kelly Herd, marketing professor at the University of Connecticut. “But what we find is that [the empathetic] process actually leads to more creativity.”

View More

Amazon Wants To Change How You Buy Condoms, And Other 'Embarrassing' Items

Forbes  print

“Embarrassment has received sparse attention in consumer psychology literatures,” according to the study, “Wetting the Bed at Twenty-One: Embarrassment as a Private Emotion,” co-authored by Kelly Herd, assistant professor of marketing .

View More

Why even online shopping can get embarrassing

Futurity  online

The authors demonstrate that embarrassment is an emotion, which can also be experienced without the presence of others, and by self-judgment. Such private embarrassment can occur, for instance, when one wets the bed as an adult or overeats in the privacy of one’s own kitchen.

View More

People experience embarrassment buying personal products online

Phys.org  online

Private embarrassment depends more heavily on the buyer's purpose—self-concept was affected more when the purchase was for impotence than for performance.

View More

The hard way: Our odd desire to do it ourselves

New Scientist  online

Kelly Herd identifies a factor: a customised product takes on elements of the customer’s identity, reflecting them back to themselves. This, she thinks, could help explain the huge discrepancy between how people who have designed and customised an object rate them, and how other people rate them. “People create pretty objectively unattractive stuff but they love it,” she says.

View More

Articles

Crowdfunding a Project? Why Casting a Wider Net Helps

American Marketing Association

Kelly Herd, Girish Mallapragada, and Vishal Narayan

2021-08-16

Crowdfunding offers an alternative for creators looking to raise funds for their ideas. Creators list their ideas on online crowdfunding platforms by describing their idea, setting a monetary goal for fundraising, and requesting backers to support their idea. When backers find ideas to their liking on the platform, they support them by committing funds and, in so doing, grow the community as they form co-backing relationships with other backers. Such co-backing relationships are referred to as affiliations. However, affiliations might have unexpected consequences to the success of ideas. In a new study in the Journal of Marketing, we study how affiliations among backers affect the success of crowdfunded ideas.

view more

Look at Me! Or Don’t…: How Mere Social Presence Impacts Innovation Adoption

Journal of the Association for Consumer Research

Xu, Lidan, Ravi Mehta, and Kelly B. Herd

2019 While the adoption of innovative products offers an opportunity for consumers to stand out and signal their uniqueness, such adoption also may also be associated with social risk. The current research highlights how the mere presence of others can make these related and often conflicting factors salient and in turn impact consumers’ willingness to fund or buy innovative products.

view more

Head vs. Heart: The Effect of Objective versus Feelings-Based Mental Imagery on New Product Creativity

Journal of Consumer Research

Herd, Kelly B. and Ravi Mehta

2018 Imagination visual mental imagery, a mental simulation process that involves imagining an end user interacting with an end product, has been proposed as an efficient strategy to incorporate end-user experiences during new product ideation. Consumer research finds that this strategy enhances overall product usefulness, but does not resolve whether and how this process may impact outcome originality.

view more

A Review of Consumer Embarrassment as a Public and Private Emotion

Journal of Consumer Psychology

Krishna, Aradhna, Kelly B. Herd, and Nilufer Z. Aydınoğlu

2018 Whether the result of mispronouncing a fancy brand name, miscalculating a tip, purchasing a sensitive product, or stumbling into a product display, embarrassment is an important part of the consumer landscape. Embarrassment has traditionally been considered a social emotion, one that can only be experienced in public.

view more

Wetting the bed at twenty-one: Embarrassment as a private emotion

Journal of Consumer Psychology

Aradhna Krishna, Kelly B Herd, Nilüfer Z Aydınoğlu

2015 Embarrassment has been defined as a social emotion that occurs due to the violation of a social norm in public, which is appraised by others (what we call “public embarrassment”). We propose that embarrassment can also be felt when one violates a social norm in private, or when one appraises oneself and violates one’s self-concept (“private embarrassment”). We develop a typology of embarrassment with two underlying dimensions – social context (transgression in-public or in-private) and mechanism (appraisal by others or by the self)…

view more

It's the Thought (and the Effort) That Counts: How Customizing for Others Differs from Customizing for Oneself

Journal of Marketing

C Page Moreau, Leff Bonney, Kelly B Herd

2011 While interest in customization is growing among consumers and academics, researchers have focused on consumers designing products for themselves. Many customization firms, however, are successfully positioning themselves as key sources for unique gifts. In this research, the authors examine whether factors under the firm's control (i.e., the level of design support provided and the presence of a strong brand) are differentially effective when consumers design products for themselves or as gifts for others…

view more

To Each His Own? How Comparisons with Others Influence Consumers’ Evaluations of Their Self-Designed Products

Journal of Consumer Research

Kelly Herd, Page Moreau

2009 The vast majority of consumer behavior research has examined how consumers respond to products that are offered on a “take it or leave it” basis by the manufacturer. Self-design changes the rules substantially, allowing consumers to have much more control over the product’s characteristics. This research examines the factors influencing consumers’ evaluations of self-designed products…

view more

Powered By

Discover more about what’s happening at UConn

Our websites may use cookies to personalize and enhance your experience. By continuing without changing your cookie settings, you agree to this collection. For more information, please see our University Websites Privacy Notice.

What are cookies?

Web cookies (also called HTTP cookies, browser cookies, or simply cookies) are small pieces of data that websites store on your device (computer, phone, etc.) through your web browser. They are used to remember information about you and your interactions with the site.

Purpose of Cookies:

  1. Session Management:

    • Keeping you logged in
    • Remembering items in a shopping cart
    • Saving language or theme preferences
  2. Personalization:

    • Tailoring content or ads based on your previous activity
  3. Tracking & Analytics:

    • Monitoring browsing behavior for analytics or marketing purposes

Types of Cookies:

  1. Session Cookies:

    • Temporary; deleted when you close your browser
    • Used for things like keeping you logged in during a single session
  2. Persistent Cookies:

    • Stored on your device until they expire or are manually deleted
    • Used for remembering login credentials, settings, etc.
  3. First-Party Cookies:

    • Set by the website you’re visiting directly
  4. Third-Party Cookies:

    • Set by other domains (usually advertisers) embedded in the website
    • Commonly used for tracking across multiple sites
Authentication Cookies

Authentication cookies are a special type of web cookie used to identify and verify a user after they log in to a website or web application.


What They Do:

Once you log in to a site, the server creates an authentication cookie and sends it to your browser. This cookie:

  • Proves to the website that you’re logged in
  • Prevents you from having to log in again on every page you visit
  • Can persist across sessions if you select “Remember me”

What’s Inside an Authentication cookie?

Typically, it contains:

  • A unique session ID (not your actual password)
  • Optional metadata (e.g., expiration time, security flags)
Analytics Cookies

Analytics cookies are cookies used to collect data about how visitors interact with a website. Their primary purpose is to help website owners understand and improve user experience by analyzing things like:

  • How users navigate the site
  • Which pages are most/least visited
  • How long users stay on each page
  • What device, browser, or location the user is from

What They Track:

Some examples of data analytics cookies may collect:

  • Page views and time spent on pages
  • Click paths (how users move from page to page)
  • Bounce rate (users who leave without interacting)
  • User demographics (location, language, device)
  • Referring websites (how users arrived at the site)
Opt Out

Here’s how you can disable cookies in common browsers:

1. Google Chrome

  • Open Chrome and click the three vertical dots in the top-right corner.
  • Go to Settings > Privacy and security > cookies and other site data.
  • Choose your preferred option:
    • Block all cookies (not recommended, can break most websites).
    • Block third-party cookies (can block ads and tracking cookies).

2. Mozilla Firefox

  • Open Firefox and click the three horizontal lines in the top-right corner.
  • Go to Settings > Privacy & Security.
  • Under the Enhanced Tracking Protection section, choose Strict to block most cookies or Custom to manually choose which cookies to block.

3. Safari

  • Open Safari and click Safari in the top-left corner of the screen.
  • Go to Preferences > Privacy.
  • Check Block all cookies to stop all cookies, or select options to block third-party cookies.

4. Microsoft Edge

  • Open Edge and click the three horizontal dots in the top-right corner.
  • Go to Settings > Privacy, search, and services > cookies and site permissions.
  • Select your cookie settings from there, including blocking all cookies or blocking third-party cookies.

5. On Mobile (iOS/Android)

  • For Safari on iOS: Go to Settings > Safari > Privacy & Security > Block All cookies.
  • For Chrome on Android: Open the app, tap the three dots, go to Settings > Privacy and security > cookies.

Be Aware:

Disabling cookies can make your online experience more difficult. Some websites may not load properly, or you may be logged out frequently. Also, certain features may not work as expected.