Celebrity endorsement advertising is a prevailing advertising technique. Some marketers choose to utilize multiple celebrities to promote their products or brands. Nevertheless, it is surprising that so little research has focused on this phenomenon. This research discussed advantages and potential concerns of multi-celebrity endorsement advertising and documented the actual use of multiple celebrity endorsers in the milk mustache campaign in the USA. We analyzed the content of the 50 milk mustache ads appearing on the http://www.whymilk.com Web site on a list of celebrity-or productrelated dimensions. Overall, we found that these milk mustache ads have matched their celebrities' gender, age and type of milk attributes in appealing to their female/male, teen/adult consumers. The results support that fit between the endorsed product and various celebrities is a key factor for using multiple celebrity endorsers in advertising.
This paper deals with the issue of mood effects on perceived transaction value in the context of price promotions. Specifically, mood states appear to bias evaluation and judgments in mood congruent direction. Based on Grewal et al.’s model and mood congruent effects, we propose that when encountering price promotions, buyers in a positive mood, as opposed to buyers in a negative mood, will perceive a greater transaction value. Moreover, we hypothesize that the effect of advertised selling price on perceived transaction value is likely to be moderated by buyers’ mood states. Our results support these hypotheses. In addition, we also find asymmetric moderating effects on discount levels in positive mood state vs. in negative mood state. Managerial implications and future research directions are also discussed.
This paper applies the visual rhetoric model to celebrity gender images in magazine advertising. A content analysis of 207 ads containing celebrity endorsers was conducted. Results suggest that male celebrities are associated more with a visual plus verbal presentation mode and with functional product benefits. Conversely, female celebrities are associated more with a visual only presentation mode and psychosocial product benefits. Both theoretical and practical implications are ofered, along with future research suggestions.
This study explores how celebrity women's beauty images are constructed in regard to beauty ideal, body shape, and dress style, and how these beauty depictions are associated with product type in ads targeted towards female teens. This research is based on a content analysis of female celebrity ads in 31 issues of Seventeen published between 2007 and 2009 in the United States. Our results show that advertisers tend to select certain types of beauty portrayals in female celebrity ads. Also, a majority of these ads employ celebrity women to promote attractiveness-related consumption. Moreover, differential use of beauty portrayals emerges between attractiveness-related and non-attractiveness-related products. Additional analysis reveals that many beauty aspects of the female celebrities are not distributed uniformly across product types. Implications, limitations, and future directions of research are discussed.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.