Abstract
This research examines guilt appeals in green advertising by clarifying moderating roles of issue proximity and environmental consciousness. Advantageous effects of guilt appeals are produced in two contexts: promoting a highly proximal issue to consumers with weak environmental consciousness or promoting a less proximal issue to those with strong environmental consciousness. Guilt appeals are no more effective than non-guilt appeals when a low-proximity issue is presented to individuals with weak environmental consciousness. Guilt appeals backfire when promoting a high-proximity issue to highly conscious individuals. The implications of these findings are discussed, as are the limitations and directions for future research.
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Chun-Tuan Chang
Chun-Tuan Chang is an associate professor at the Department of Business Management, National Sun Yat-sen University. She received her PhD from the University of Edinburgh. Current research interests include advertising, consumer information processing, green marketing and corporate philanthropic influences on consumer behaviour. Her papers have been published in Psychology & Marketing, Journal of Advertising Research, Journal of Applied Social Psychology, Advances in Consumer Research and elsewhere.