Need for cognition;
Brand awareness;
Product placement;
Prominence;
Depth of processing;
Prior disclosure;
CONSUMER ATTITUDES;
IMPACT;
KNOWLEDGE;
INFORMATION;
REPETITION;
MOVIES;
NEED;
ACCESSIBILITY;
PERCEPTIONS;
PERSISTENCE;
D O I:
10.1108/MIP-03-2015-0051
中图分类号:
F [经济];
学科分类号:
02 ;
摘要:
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to contribute to literature on marketing communication by exploring the roles of depth of processing and the dispositional factor, need for cognition (NFC), on consumer perceptions of product placement. Design/methodology/approach - A web-based experiment with a 2 (low vs high prominence) x 2 (low vs high brand awareness) x 2 (with vs without prior disclosure) between-subjects full factorial design was conducted. Findings - The results indicate that prominent placements were found to elicit more extensive processing, which was negatively correlated with brand attitudes. A significant negative relationship between NFC and purchase intention toward a placed brand was also revealed. Practical implications - The study offers managerial and policy implications for practitioners and educators. It is suggested that brand practitioners should avoid placing brands too prominently or in film genres which are cognitively demanding. The low NFC group appears to be more vulnerable to covert marketing. Therefore it is suggested that media educators target this group and plan effective media literacy programs to guard youngsters from surreptitious selling. Originality/value - This is the first study to empirically examine the role of prominence, brand awareness and prior disclosure in the processing of product placement information and their influence on product placement effectiveness.