Publication | Closed Access
When Fiction becomes Fact: Effect of Reverse Product Placement on Consumer Attitudes
26
Citations
73
References
2016
Year
Entertainment MarketingConsumer UncertaintyBehavioral Decision MakingDigital MarketingConsumer StudyConsumer ResearchBrand StrategyConsumer AttitudeJournalismReverse Product PlacementManagementMarketing CommunicationConsumer BehaviorBrand BuildingConsumer IssueBrand ManagementConsumer Decision MakingMarketing TheoryBrand AwarenessAdvertisingMarketingBrand AttitudesPersuasion KnowledgeBusinessConsumer AttitudesPersuasion
This exploratory study investigates the persuasive effects of reverse product placement (RPP)—subsequent commercialization of fictional brands from entertainment media into real world products—comparing it with product placement (PP). Persuasion Knowledge Model and Attribution theory were applied to frame hypotheses of effects on brand attitudes along with the constraining effect of skepticism. A mixed test design revealed presence of persuasion knowledge, recognition of persuasive intent, and negative effect of skepticism for PP, but not for RPP. RPP also had a stronger, positive effect on consumer attitudes. Potential application of RPP in new product development and adoption is discussed.
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