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1.
New models of communication for the digital age
Terry Willie, Admap, October 2007, Issue 487, pp.48-50
The advent of the digital age has changed the way many advertisers perceive how advertising works. In 1991, Mike Hall conducted research among creative agencies and clients and postulated four models ...
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256 times
2.
Brand Relationships: Strengthened by Emotion, Weakened by Attention
Robert Heath, David Brandt, and Agnes Nairn, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 46, No. 4, Dec 2006, pp.410-419
This article explores the way in which advertising builds brand relationships. Behavioral research by Watzlawick, Bavelas, and Jackson (1967) suggests it is the emotional not the rational content in c ...
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280 times
3.
Persuasive Talk: Is It What You Say or How You Say It?
Henry C Boyd III, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 46, No. 1, Mar 2006, pp.84-92
This article introduces a new framework for copy testing. It reveals how the quality of advertising-specific elements (as perceived by the viewer) function to trigger persuasion. Building on McGuire’s ...
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59 times
4.
Memory Change: An Intimate Measure of Persuasion
Kathryn Braun-LaTour and Gerald Zaltman, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 46, No. 1, Mar 2006, pp.57-72
A major goal for advertising is to have an enduring emotional impact on an audience by facilitating their creation of personally relevant understandings of an advertisement. This is achieved through a ...
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75 times
5.
Global advertising that sells - progressing towards the Holy Grail!
Spike Cramphorn and Georgia Phillips, ESOMAR, Annual Congress, Cannes, September 2005
This paper searches for the Holy Grail of advertising - an understanding of how advertising works locally and globally, unlocking the secrets of effective advertising to build successful brands. Initi ...
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30 times
6.
10 principles for marketing in the age of engagement
Jim Carroll, Admap, February 2005, Issue 458, pp.20-22
Jim Carroll, UK chairman of BBH, argues that where once we judged ads on first whether they communicated the core message, and then whether they were involving/engaging – now we must reverse the prior ...
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131 times
7.
The herd perspective
Mark Earls, Admap, April 2004, Issue 449, pp.14-16
Mark Earls, Ogilvy executive planning director, argues that human behaviour is better understood by thinking of consumers as herd animals (rather than individual decision makers). He then goes on to ...
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40 times
8.
The Power of Affect: Predicting Intention
Jooyoung Kim, James A. Geason, Chongmoo Woo and Jon D. Morris, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 42, No. 3, May/June 2002, pp.7-17
This robust structural modeling study, with over 23,000 responses to 240 advertising messages, found that affect when measured by a visual measure of emotional response dominates over cognition for pr ...
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32 times
9.
Persuasion: tacit suggestion versus full-frontal advocacy
A.S.C Ehrenberg, International Journal of Advertising, Vol. 19, No. 3 , 2000
A tailpiece about `strong persuasion' in a non-advertising context (Aeschylus' Oresteia, Ted Hughes' translation), in contrast with the way advertising works.
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11 times
10.
The Forms That TV Ads Take ('FAT')
Tony Schlaeppi, Andrew Ehrenberg, Rachel Kennedy and Pam Mills, ESOMAR, Audience Research, Miami, May 2000
An exploratory study of how the general public perceives specific TV ads has shown that about half do not see them as differentiating the brand, or as giving information about it. Hence there is then ...
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15 times
11.
Getting explicit about the implicit
Jeremy Bullmore, Admap, October 1985, (full text not available on WARC.com)
Discusses models of how communication (or at least persuasion) works. The most effective messages are ones which 'entice (the receivers) into mental collaboration': successful communication cannot be ...
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12.
The influence of experience and sequence of conflicting emotions on ad attitudes
Aparna A. Labroo and Suresh Ramanathan, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 33, No 4, March 2007, pp 523-528, (full text not available on WARC.com)
Experiments suggest that attitudes to ads are based on whether emotions deviate positively or negatively from their previous levels, and that people prefer ‘improving’ emotions. The beneficial effects ...
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13.
The role of ratio differences in the framing of numerical information
Jessica Y.Y. Kwong and Kin Fai Ellick Wong, Market Research Abstract from: International Journal of Research in Marketing, Vol 23, No 4, December 2006, pp 385-394, (full text not available on WARC.com)
The presentation of qualitatively equivalent data in different formats can have a considerable impact on consumer preferences and evaluations. The perceived differences between options are more powerf ...
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14.
Fluency of consumption imagery and the backfire effects of imagery appeals
Petia K. Petrova and Robert B. Cialdini, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 32, No 3, December 2005, pp 442-452, (full text not available on WARC.com)
To examine the apparent power of appeals urging consumers to imagine the product experience, three studies were undertaken to explore the mediating role of imagery accessibility. Research demonstrated ...
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15.
Grocery shopping: list and non-list usage
Art Thomas and Ron Garland, Market Research Abstract from: Marketing Intelligence & Planning, Vol 22, No 6, 2004, pp 623-635, (full text not available on WARC.com)
Little information exists on the use (or not) of shopping lists, though it is known that such behaviour affects purchase activity. This exploratory study examines the list as a moderator of purchase b ...
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16.
Ludic agency and retail spectacle
Roberts V. Kozinets, John F. Sherry Jr., Diana Storm, Adam Duhachek, Krittinee Nuttavuthisit and Benet DeBerry-Spense, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 31, No 3, December 2004, pp 658-672, (full text not available on WARC.com)
Spectacular, themed environments have been theorised as places where play is limited and consumer agency is overpowered. In a multiperspectival ethnographic engagement with the Entertainment and Sport ...
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17.
Goal seeker and persuasion sentry: how consumer targets respond to interpersonal marketing persuasion
Amna Kirmani and Margaret C. Campbell, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 31, No 3, December 2004, pp 573-582, (full text not available on WARC.com)
The article investigates how consumers respond to influence attempts by interpersonal marketing agents such as salespeople and service personnel. The consumer is conceptualised as a goal-directed indi ...
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18.
When goals are counterproductive: the effects of violation of a behavioural goal on subsequent performance
Dilip Soman and Amar Cheema, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 31, No 1, June 2004, pp 52-62, (full text not available on WARC.com)
The paper examines personal/consumer behaviour in terms of the success or failure in achieving set goals. It suggests that though those who set themselves goals (in, for example, saving money) may per ...
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19.
Answering questions about questions: a persuasion knowledge perspective for understanding the effects of rhetorical questions
Rohini Ahluwalia and Robert E. Burnkrant, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 31, No 1, June 2004, pp 26-42, (full text not available on WARC.com)
Based on recent theories of persuasion knowledge and rhetorical figures in advertising, the paper suggests conditions under which rhetoricals are likely to enhance argument elaboration (low salience o ...
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20.
Asymmetric association of liking and disliking judgements: so what's not to like?
Paul M. Herr and Christine M. Page, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 30, No 4, March 2004, pp 588-601, (full text not available on WARC.com)
The authors suggest that liking and disliking appear asymmetrically linked in memory. Experiments were undertaken which suggested, amongst other things, that liking queries about objects are answered ...
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21.
The A2SC2 model: the influence of attitudes and attitude strength on consideration and choice
Joseph R. Priester, Dhananjay Nayakankuppam, Monique A. Fleming and John Godek, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 30, No 4, March 2004, pp 574-587, (full text not available on WARC.com)
Three experiments provide support for the Attitude Strength, Consideration and Choice Model, which hypotheses (a) that attitude strength moderates the influence of attitudes on consideration and (b) c ...
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22.
Ideals and oughts and the reliance on affect versus substance in persuasion
Michel Tuan Pham and Tamar Avnet, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 30, No 4, March 2004, pp 503-518, (full text not available on WARC.com)
Two types of goal are identified in the literature, ideals (based on hopes, wishes and aspirations) and oughts (duties, responsibilities etc). The paper explores the impact of these two goals on consu ...
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23.
The timing of repeat purchases of consumer durable goods: the role of functional bases of consumer attitudes
Rajdeep Grewal, Raj Mehta and Frank R. Kardes, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Marketing Research, Vol XLI, No 1, February 2004, pp 101-115, (full text not available on WARC.com)
The authors suggest that attitude functions (knowledge, value expressive, etc) can help explain and predict purchase intervals. The effects of such functions are contingent on contextual factors, whic ...
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24.
Product complements and substitutes in the real world: the relevance of 'other products'
Allan D. Shocker, Barry L. Bayus and Namwoon Kim, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Marketing, Vol 68, No 1, January 2004, pp 28-40, (full text not available on WARC.com)
The paper suggests that buyer demand for a product can depend directly and indirectly on the marketing efforts of ‘other products’ in different categories. A behavioural rationale for the existence of ...
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25.
The idiosyncratic fit heuristic: effort advantage as a determinant of consumer response to loyalty programmes
Ran Kivetz and Itamar Simonson, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Marketing Research, Vol XL, No 4, November 2003, pp 454-467, (full text not available on WARC.com)
The authors examine the effect of the level of effort required to obtain a loyalty program reward on consumers’ perception of the programme’s attractiveness. It is suggested that in some conditions, i ...
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26.
Measuring the impact of promotions on brand switching when consumers are forward looking
Baohong Sun, Scott A. Neslin and Kannan Srinivasan, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Marketing Research, Vol XL, No 4, November 2003, pp 389-405, (full text not available on WARC.com)
The article examines whether brand-switching elasticities derived from logit choice models are overestimated as a result of a rational consumer adjustment of purchase timed to coincide with promotion ...
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27.
When competitive interference can be beneficial
Robert D. Jewell and H. Rao Unnava, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 30, No 2, September 2003, pp 283-291, (full text not available on WARC.com)
Prior research had suggested that competitive interference was undesirable given its negative effects on brand-attribute recall. The authors propose that competitive interference may be beneficial und ...
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28.
The effects of time constraints on consumers' judgements of prices and products
Rajneesh Suri and Kent B. Monroe, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 30, No 1, June 2003, pp 92-104, (full text not available on WARC.com)
The paper examines how time constraints influence consumers’ product evaluation over different levels of price information. A model incorporating both the motivational and resource effects of time con ...
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29.
The devaluation effect: activating a need devalues unrelated objects
C. Miguel Brendl, Arthur B. Markmam and Claude Messner, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol 29, No 4, March 2003, pp 463-473, (full text not available on WARC.com)
The paper notes than an object capable of satisfying need (for example, food) becomes more valuable as the need for it intensifies, and this could be called a valuation effect. It then suggests a seco ...
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30.
Affect, framing and persuasion
Punam Anand Keller, Isaac M. Lipkus and Barbara K. Rimer, Market Research Abstract from: Journal of Marketing Research, Vol XL, No 1, February 2003, pp 54-64, (full text not available on WARC.com)
The effectiveness of loss- versus gain-framed messages depends on the affective state of the message recipient. For example, participants in an experiment induced with a positive mood are more persuad ...
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