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International Journal of Advertising
The Review of Marketing Communications
Volume 39, 2020 - Issue 3
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Articles

Portraying product or cause in charity advertising: how execution style and appeal type affects prosocial attitudes by enhancing perceived personal roles

Pages 342-364 | Received 29 Sep 2015, Accepted 05 Jul 2019, Published online: 23 Jul 2019
 

Abstract

Across two studies, the purposes of this research are two-fold: (1) to examine the moderating role of appeal types on charity campaign attitudes, including temporal distance and spatial distance in the sub-dimension of psychological distance; and (2) to test the mechanism on these effects of the perception of personal roles in helping a cause. The results show that when charities are far from accomplishing their goals or are targeting international recipients, charity campaign attitudes will be higher when the images featured in their advertising are cause-focused rather than product-focused. In contrast, when charities are close to reaching their goals or are targeting local recipients, charity campaign attitudes will be higher when the images featured in their advertising are product-focused rather than cause-focused. Furthermore, perceived personal roles partially mediate the interaction between execution style and appeal type for predicting charity campaign attitudes. A match (vs. mismatch) between the execution style and appeal type leads to persuasion effectiveness of charity advertising. This research provides guidance to marketers for nonprofit organizations which are interested in communicating with donors and persuading them to take an interest in their campaigns.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Funding

The author would like to thank the Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan for their financial support, under grant MOST: 103-2410-H-005-035.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Ming-Yi Chen

Ming-Yi Chen is an Associate Professor. Her research interests are advertising and promotion, communication and persuasion, and consumer psychology. Her papers have been published in the International Journal of Advertising, Journal of Business Research, European Journal of Marketing, Electronic Commerce Research, Online Information Review, Journal of Electronic Commerce Research, International Journal of Consumer Studies, and Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication.

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