Mehta 2000
Mehta 2000
Mehta 2000
ABSTRACT
Print advertising performance is influenced by consumers' attitudes toward advertising in general. Respondents with more favourable
attitudes toward advertising recalled a higher number of advertisements the day after exposure and were more persuaded by them. The
implications are discussed here.
INTRODUCTION
Executional and media factors significantly influence advertising performance. Substantial research is conducted to determine the most
effective creative executions and media dollars allocations. Individual personality variables and attitudinal orientations as factors
influencing advertising effectiveness have received less attention in the industry. While researchers have explored consumer attitudes to
advertising in general, they have not evaluated how these attitudes affect response to specific advertising.
In the context of real-world copy testing, do general attitudes toward advertising influence advertising reactions? If so, in what ways? This
study has been designed to answer these questions. The results should provide learning for advertisers and advertising researchers in
creating as well as in evaluating advertising. In the print medium, the reading experience is controlled by the reader who decides the pace
and time spent on any specific advertisement. A consumer’s own pre-disposition toward advertising in general, either favorable or
unfavorable, would influence how she or he would respond to any advertisement. Previous exploratory research at Gallup & Robinson
showed that this may be the case (Mehta and Purvis, 1995).
G&R’s Impact system for copy testing is designed to obtain multiple measures. Two key measures were selected for use as indicators of
advertising effectiveness in this study: Intrusiveness, an indicator of attention-getting power and memorability of the advertising, and
Persuasion, measured as the favorable buying interest for the advertised products.
The main objectives of this research were to test the hypotheses that consumers with more favorable attitudes toward advertising in
general would (1) recall more advertisements the day after exposure, and (2) be more persuaded by the advertisements.
THEORETICAL BACKGROUND
The influence of attitudes toward advertising in general on advertising effectiveness is an important area of study because the results have
implications for the industry. Greyser (1972) discussed at length how consumers’ overall perceptions of advertising impact the
effectiveness of advertising and the role of advertisers. Moreover, the study of attitudes to advertising may be especially significant
because it influences attitudes-toward-the-ad, an important antecedent of brand attitudes (for example, Lutz, 1985; Mackenkie, Lutz, and
Belch, 1986; Mackenzie and Lutz, 1989; Muehling, 1987; Shimp, 1981; Thorson, 1981). The influence of attitudes-toward-the-ad on brand
attitudes has been found to be even more significant under low-involvement conditions and for emotionally based advertising. Further,
findings of the ARF Copy Research Validity Project (Haley and Baldinger, 1991) also showed commercial liking (similar to attitudes-toward-
the-ad) was among the strongest predictors of sales differences attributable to advertising for the cases studied. Recently, along similar
lines, researchers have suggested there may be value in exploring the effect of attitudes-toward-the-website in evaluating the
effectiveness of web advertising (Chen and Wells, 1999).
While many researchers have explored attitudes toward advertising in general among adult consumers (see Zanot, 1981; Mittal, 1994;
Shavitt, Lowrey, and Haefner, 1998), student samples (Dubinsky and Hensel, 1984; Larkin, 1977, Muehling, 1987; Sandage and Leckenby,
1980; Petroshias, 1986), as well as evaluated cross-cultural differences (for example, Andrews, Lysonski, and Durvasula, 1991; Santos,
1976), or media-specific advertising attitudes (for example, Alwitt and Prabhaker, 1994), the influence of general advertising attitudes
directly on advertising effectiveness has hardly been studied. Researchers have suggested that general attitudes to advertising need to be
studied since these attitudes should have an impact on how consumers respond to advertising.
Among the few studies exploring this relationship, results of a study of outdoor (billboard) advertising suggest respondents who had a
positive attitude toward advertising in general seemed to recall more outdoor advertisements than those who had a negative attitude
(Donthu, Cherian, and Bhargava, 1993). In another study, James and Kover (1992) evaluated the impact of advertising in general on
advertising 'involvement,' measured as the amount of time spent looking at print advertisements. Results suggest that those who felt
advertising was not manipulative and was a good way to learn about products were more involved with the advertisements, that is, spent
more time looking at the advertisements. On the other hand, those who said they were irritated by program interruptions (by commercials
on television) and thought that products do not perform as well as advertisements claim were generally also more involved with the print
advertisements. The authors suggest this may be a result of a hunt for flaws, or a compensation for irritation with television advertising not
shown when reading print advertisements which allows more respondent control. The authors suggest that overall advertising attitudes are
likely to affect other aspects of advertising communications as well. Advertising intrusiveness and persuasiveness were explored in the
present study.
The construct
Although it is generally agreed that attitude toward advertising in general can be defined as 'a learned predisposition to respond in the
consistently favorable or unfavorable manner to advertising in general' (Lutz, 1985), its scope and measurement has widely varied in the
literature. Various measures of the construct have been used: from a measure of an 'overall favorability or unfavorability' to a set of belief
items related to positive and negative outcomes of advertising in the economic and social areas (Bauer and Greyser, 1968). Perceptions
related to other aspects of advertising include informational value, entertainment, interruptive nature, sexual content and use of women,
ethics, and deception and falsehood. These were later included in the belief set related to attitudes toward advertising by other researchers
(Alwitt and Prabhaker, 1994; Hailer, 1974; Durand and Lambert, 1985; James and Kover, 1992; Larkin, 1977; Lutz, 1985; Muehling, 1987).
Media-specific advertising attitudes have also been studied and compared.
More recently, thought listings in reaction to the word 'advertising' were used to measure attitudes toward advertising by categorizing them
into areas such as function, affective response, practice, industry, and user-related, and general. By far, scaled statements about
advertising have been most often used by researchers.
A battery of relevant attitudinal statements related to advertising in terms of its entertainment and informational value, trustworthiness,
and impact on product quality were selected for use in the present study.
Methodology
G&R’s Magazine Impact Research Systems (MIRS) methodology for print advertising testing was used to obtain data for the study. A total
of 1,914 adult (18+ years of age) regular magazine readers from over 30 geographically dispersed markets nationwide participated in the
study. Of these, 608 were men and 1,306 were women. Participants were recruited on the basis of their readership of four different types
of magazines: general, news, women’s general, and women’s fashion. Readers qualified for the study if they read two out of the last four
issues of selected magazines.
One of the key strengths of MIRS is that it is a real-world, in-magazine, at-home copy testing system. As such it is thought to approximate
actual advertising response more closely than other designs such as forced exposure or portfolio testing. Respondents, naïve to the true
purpose of the study, were recruited to participate in a magazine readership study. A phone interview was scheduled for the day after
exposure to discuss the magazine editorial and content. Advertising effectiveness measures were obtained during this interview.
Intrusiveness/recall measures were first taken, followed by idea communication and persuasion measures. Then demographic information
was collected. Finally, the attitudes toward advertising battery was administered.
Measures
Attitudes toward advertising. Various attitudinal statements were used to measure attitudes regarding advertising on an 11-point (0-10)
scale where 10 denoted 'strongly agree' and 0 was 'strongly disagree.' For each attitudinal statement, respondents were grouped as those
who 'agree' (8-10), those who were 'neutral' (4-7), and those who 'disagree' (0-3) for further analysis. Two of the statements were rotated
and only one of the two was asked in any test.
Intrusiveness/recall. Fifteen selected advertisements in each test magazine were cued by brand name. Respondents who claimed to recall
any of these advertisements were asked open-ended questions. The responses to these were used as evidence to prove that the particular
advertisement was actually recalled. Proved recall is a more stringent measure of attention-getting power and memorability of an
advertisement than claimed recall. The total number of advertisements that a particular respondent proved recalling, indexed to the sample
mean recall of advertisements, was used as the measure of intrusiveness for analysis.
Persuasion/buying interest. Recallers of an advertisement who had not purchased the brand last were asked to indicate on a 5-point scale
to what extent the particular advertisement increased their interest in buying the advertised product. The buying interest for each particular
advertisement was indexed to its category average and averaged across all advertisements recalled by any respondent. This average
buying interest index computed for each respondent was used as a measure of persuasion in further analysis.
Results
Attitudes toward advertising. While a substantial proportion of the respondents feel advertising keeps them up-to-date about products and
services in the marketplace, as shown in Table 1, a high proportion of respondents also believe products do not perform as well as
advertisements claim. Similarly, although many readers enjoy looking at advertising, many also feel much of advertising is annoying and
more manipulative than informative. Relatively few (only about one in five) respondents agreed that advertised brands are better than
those brands that are not advertised.
These results are generally in line with past research: although the vast research literature on the subject shows a variety of measurement
and analysis methods, making comparisons difficult, the research generally shows similar positive reactions to the informational value of
advertising and more negative responses to its manipulative, intrusive, and deceptive nature (see Shavitt, Lowrey, and Haefner, 1998).
Mittal (1994) found that attitudes toward TV advertising were significantly less positive than those toward print advertising.
Results for the impact of advertising attitudes on intrusiveness and persuasion are presented in Tables 2 and 3. No sex differences were
found and results have been presented for the full sample.
Intrusiveness/recall
The total number of advertisements recalled was significantly influenced by three out of the six advertising attitudes studied: those related
to liking to look at advertising, the informational value of advertising, and the perception regarding advertising being more manipulative
than informational (see Table 2). It appears that respondents who like advertising and feel advertising provides useful information also
notice and recall more advertisements than those who do not feel this way.
Overall, the results reported here are similar to those reported by Donthu, Chenan, and Bhargava (1993) in their study of outdoor
advertising. Our results are also partially similar to those of the James and Kover (1992) study who found that time spent looking at print
advertisements ('involvement') was influenced by similar attitudes. Their results, however, also showed that those who thought products do
not perform as well as advertisements claim spent more time looking at print advertisements, whereas the results of this study do not show
a difference in recall of advertisements. If hunt for flaws is the reason for spending more time looking at the advertisements by the former
group of respondents, as suggested by James and Kover, it appears that this does not translate to better memory of brands in
advertisements seen by these respondents. It should be noted that there were other methodological differences in the two studies (directed
exposure to series of advertisements versus in-magazine advertising exposure with recall measures obtained the day after advertising
exposure).
Persuasion/buying interest. Buying interest was significantly influenced by five of the six tested attitudinal statements, as shown in Table 3.
It appears that reactions toward advertising related to liking to look at advertising, its informational value as well as perceptions regarding
how truthful or manipulative advertising is all impact how persuaded respondents will generally be by an advertisement.
The above findings clearly show that individual attitudinal factors related to advertising in general do influence how a respondent reacts to
any particular advertisement, reinforcing expectations by other researchers previously. Specifically, the results of the study show that the
amount of attention that respondents will pay to magazine advertisements, measured as recall of the brand in the advertisement the day
after exposure, is influenced by how much they like to look at advertising, believe advertising helps them stay informed about
developments in the marketplace, and see it as not being manipulative.
Further, individual advertising orientation is significantly important in determining how persuasive respondents find advertising. Buying
interest was found to be influenced by five of the six advertising beliefs explored in this study, including liking to look at advertisements,
the value advertising has for the brands advertised, and how informative or truthful advertising is perceived.
It is not surprising to find a strong influence on persuasion of the perception that advertising helps consumers stay informed about products
and services in the marketplace. Those who believe this are the ones who not only pay attention to the advertisements but are also more
persuaded by advertisements. They look to advertising for information regarding available choices and respond favorably. Similarly, those
who like to look at advertising are more persuaded by advertising. Few respondents disagree that advertising is more manipulative than
informative, but those who do tend to have a higher advertising recall level.
Other advertising attitudes influenced buying interest but not recall: persuasion levels are significantly lower among those who believe that
advertising is annoying and that advertised brands are often not as good as advertisements claim. Not unfairly, consumers must believe
that the advertising is truthful. Further, those consumers who believe advertised brands are better than unadvertised brands are
significantly more interested in buying the advertised products.
As mentioned earlier, the reader controls advertising exposure in the print medium: he or she decides how much time is spent on a specific
advertisement and may simply choose to turn the page. These results show that one of the factors that influences how much attention will
be paid to an advertisement, whether it will be remembered and to what extent the consumers will be persuaded by it, is the attitude
toward advertising in general. This is not to dismiss or even downplay the creative aspects of advertising that must be used to help break
through the clutter in the overloaded media environment and provide useful messages that can influence consumers to be interested in the
advertised product or service. Regardless of how one may feel about advertising in general, it is not possible to respond to all advertising
stimuli. Creative and strategic aspects remain crucial in determining the success of an advertisement in both gaining attention and adding
to its memorability, and in persuading the consumer to be interested in the advertised product. Individual attitudes toward advertising in
general can, however, influence the way a consumer will respond to any particular advertising.
IMPLICATIONS
The above findings have significant implications for advertisers, agencies, and advertising researchers. First, the research reminds us that,
to be effective, advertising is something people should like looking at, believe, and find utility with keeping them up-to-date about products
and services. Advertising that is entertaining, informative, and truthful promotes consumers to like advertising in general and believe in its
value. Overall positive attitudes to advertising, in turn, render specific advertising messages to be better received and more effective
among consumers. By keeping this in mind as they develop new executions, advertisers and agencies will combat negative attitudes
toward advertising and improve response to all advertising.
In the meantime, since the results of the study show that different types of people view advertising differently, and on different dimensions
than conventional demographic or usership criteria, they focus attention on the complexity of the interaction that takes place between the
advertising stimuli and its audiences. They demonstrate from yet another perspective the value that research can play in helping gauge the
nature of that response.
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