Creative media (CM) advertising is an advertising strategy wherein a non-traditional medium is creatively used for advertising purposes. This novel advertising strategy is gaining marketers' interest; however, little is known about its persuasive effects on consumers' cognitive, affective and behavioural responses and the processes that underlie them. Therefore, to convey a genuine experience to consumers, two field experiments with a one-factor (advertising type: creative vs. traditional) between-subjects design were conducted within a supermarket context. Results showed that creative (vs. traditional) media ads not only improve consumers' affective and behavioural responses but also consumers' cognitive responses. Even though no mediations were found through perceived surprise or perceived persuasive intent, results do provide evidence for the notion that perceived humor and perceived value are the underlying mechanisms through which affective and behavioural responses to creative media advertising can be explained.
ARTICLE HISTORY
UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) The effects of the integration of external and internal communication features in digital magazines on consumers' magazine attitude
This study tests a theoretical framework to explain the persuasive impact of interactive magazine ads on consumers' ad and brand attitudes. To obtain realistic (unforced) responses, a field experiment was conducted with a one-factor (interactive vs. noninteractive magazine ad) between-subjects design (N = 98). Results showed that, although they rarely used it, participants positively evaluated the presence of an interactive feature in a digital magazine ad. Furthermore, parallel-mediation analyses revealed that the interactive magazine ad was perceived as more interactive and more surprising than the non-interactive ad, which ultimately positively impacted consumers' attitudes towards the magazine. A second real-life setting experiment (N = 121) confirmed and extended these findings by revealing that the mediation effects were even stronger when consumers had used the interactive feature (vs. only seen). In addition, the relationship between interactive magazine ads and consumers' attitudinal responses was explained slightly better by 'perceived surprise' than by 'perceived interactivity.' KEYWORDS Magazine ad interactivity; online advertising; digital magazines; in-app analytics; perceived surprise; perceived interactivity CONTACT Fabi€ enne Rauwers f.rauwers@uva.nl
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