USA Today: Why people are going crazy for Stanley x Starbucks quenchers
UC marketing professor says limited edition items can create urgency that fuels fads
Limited edition products, such as the Stanley x Starbucks quenchers that have taken social media and Target stores by storm, can play to consumers’ psyche, a University of Cincinnati marketing professor told USA Today.
The latest craze is a pink 40-ounce tumbler that launched exclusively at Starbucks stores inside Target locations on Jan. 3. Apps such as TikTok helped created buzz, and some shoppers waited for hours in line to grab the coveted cups.
Joshua Clarkson, PhD, Arthur Beerman Professor of Marketing Department of Marketing
By labeling a product as limited edition or exclusive, companies can increase the item’s perceived value, said Joshua Clarkson, PhD, the Arthur Beerman Professor of Marketing in UC’s Carl H. Lindner College of Business.
“It's this idea that we like what we can't have, and we don't like to have our options limited,” said Clarkson, a consumer psychologist who specializes in the areas of persuasion, social influence and self-control.
When products are labeled as limited edition, it tends to do a good job of creating a sense of urgency, Clarkson said.
"In looking back on our lives, we regret inaction more than action,” he said. “So the idea that if I buy this and I don't enjoy it, that really doesn't nearly bother us as much as the idea that, ‘Oh, I could have bought this and I didn't.’
“This sense of urgency can lead to this fury of excitement and buzz. It almost starts like that snowball that just starts rolling and ... at some point you kind of step back and say ‘How did we get here?’”
While a fad may seem trivial, the chase to secure a coveted item can create connections that build community.
"There is an element of this that is sort of kind of fun,'' Clarkson said. "It's really cool to see so many people from all these different walks of life and all these different places that we would not have connected with, that do sort of connect and bond over something that is seemingly trivial."
Featured image at top: Exterior of a Target store. Photo/Shabaz Usmani via Unsplash.
Impact Lives Here
The University of Cincinnati is leading public urban universities into a new era of innovation and impact. Our faculty, staff and students are saving lives, changing outcomes and bending the future in our city's direction. Next Lives Here.
Related Stories
Inaugural AI Symposium in Finance & Accounting explores the investment landscape
May 19, 2026
The Johnson Investment Institute hosted the first-ever AI Symposium in Finance & Accounting on May 8 at Lindner Hall, welcoming industry leaders from national firms, academics from leading universities, and emerging finance and accounting talent.
Pocket-sized population threat
May 18, 2026
The Financial Times took a deep dive into why populations around the world continue to be on the decline. The publication cited new University of Cincinnati research as part of the investigation that looks at the fall of fertility in the digital era.
Fire Awards spotlight innovation ecosystem at UC 1819 Innovation Hub
May 18, 2026
The Cincinnati Business Courier held its Fire Awards at UC’s 1819 Innovation Hub to highlight the region’s fast-growing startups and broader innovation community.