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The influence of consumer religiosity on responses to rational and emotional ad appeals
by
Minton, Elizabeth A.
, Cabano, Frank Gregory
in
Celebrities
/ Cognitive style
/ Consumer behavior
/ Marketing
/ Religiosity
2023
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The influence of consumer religiosity on responses to rational and emotional ad appeals
by
Minton, Elizabeth A.
, Cabano, Frank Gregory
in
Celebrities
/ Cognitive style
/ Consumer behavior
/ Marketing
/ Religiosity
2023
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The influence of consumer religiosity on responses to rational and emotional ad appeals
Journal Article
The influence of consumer religiosity on responses to rational and emotional ad appeals
2023
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Overview
Purpose
This research aims to examine how religiosity influences consumers’ responses to rational versus emotional ad appeals.
Design/methodology/approach
Four experiments were conducted that examined how religiosity affected consumers’ responses (attitude toward the product, purchase intentions and brand trust) to rational versus emotional ad appeals, and how perceived fit between the ad appeal type and consumers’ information processing style mediated the effects.
Findings
The results show that consumers low in religiosity respond more favorably to rational (vs emotional) appeals because of these types of appeals being more congruent with their rational information processing style. In addition, there is no difference in consumer responses toward rational and emotional appeals for individuals high in religiosity.
Research limitations/implications
In this research, the authors only used surveys and measured behavioral intentions rather than actual behaviors. Thus, future research should measure actual behaviors in the field to enhance the external validity of the observed effects. In addition, this research samples one primary culture that is more representative of Judeo-Christian religious beliefs. Therefore, future research should sample from other cultures and religious groups.
Practical implications
The results suggest that marketers should use rational rather than emotional appeals in their marketing communications to low religiosity consumers (identifiable through such means as demographic data for geographic regions or self-identified classifications on social media). Marketers can also prime low religiosity in their messages (e.g. using words such as “evolution”) and, when doing so, should couple that prime with a rational (vs emotional) appeal.
Originality/value
This research is novel in that it is the first, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, to examine how religiosity influences consumers’ responses to rational versus emotional ad appeals.
Publisher
Emerald Publishing Limited,Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Subject
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