Publication | Closed Access
Communicating Green Marketing Appeals Effectively
85
Citations
39
References
2012
Year
GreenwashingGreen MarketingConsumer UncertaintyDigital MarketingBehavioral Decision MakingConsumer MotivationConsumer StudyConsumer ResearchConsumer AttitudeCommunicationNongreen Product AttributesBuying BehaviorPerceived AttractivenessManagementConsumer BehaviorGreen Decision-makingGreen Marketing AppealsConsumer Decision MakingPrevention-focused ParticipantsConsumer AppealAdvertisingMarketingGreen ProductAdvertising EffectivenessMarketing InsightsPersuasion
Abstract This study investigates the effect of consumers' self-regulatory focus on their response to green versus nongreen advertising appeals in terms of perceived attractiveness and purchase intention. Study 1 finds that prevention-focused participants are more strongly persuaded when "product-related" appeals emphasize green rather than nongreen product attributes, whereas the converse holds true for those who are promotion-focused. Study 2 finds that with respect to "non—product-related" appeals and for both categories of self-regulatory focus, green is significantly more persuasive than nongreen. Purchasing decisions by promotion-focused individuals are found to reflect a concern for experiential advancement; prevention-focused counterparts are motivated to minimize loss.
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