Comparative and Noncomparative Advertising: Attitudinal Effects under Cognitive and Affective Involvement Conditions
- 1 June 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Advertising
- Vol. 23 (2) , 77-91
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00913367.1994.10673443
Abstract
This study compares effectiveness of comparative and noncomparative advertising for products characterized by different levels of cognitive and affective involvement. Comparative advertisements induce more positive brand attitudes for products which elicit cognitive and affective motivations simultaneously. This happens because brand comparisons facilitate an attribute-based processing style which might otherwise succumb to the competing affective involvement. Noncomparative attribute-based ads yield more favorable attitudes toward the ad when affective involvement is high than when it is low. Comparative ads are also shown to positively influence brand switchers and have a negative impact on consumers loyal to competing brands.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effect of Advertising on Attitude Accessibility, Attitude Confidence, and the Attitude-Behavior RelationshipJournal of Consumer Research, 1989
- Shaping the Route to Attitude Change: Central versus Peripheral Processing through Comparative versus Noncomparative AdvertisingJournal of Marketing Research, 1989
- Associative Positioning Strategies through Comparative Advertising: Attribute versus Overall Similarity ApproachesJournal of Marketing Research, 1987
- The Impact of Comparative Advertising on Perception and Attitude: Some Positive FindingsJournal of Consumer Research, 1984
- The Information Content of Comparative Magazine AdvertisementsJournal of Advertising, 1983
- One-Sided Versus Two-Sided Comparative Message Appeals for New Brand IntroductionsJournal of Consumer Research, 1982
- An Examination of Comparative and Noncomparative Television Commercials: The Effects of Claim Variation and Repetition on Cognitive Response and Message AcceptanceJournal of Marketing Research, 1981
- An Experimental Investigation of Comparative Advertising: Impact of Message Appeal, Information Load, and Utility of Product ClassJournal of Marketing Research, 1980
- Consumer Reactions to Explicit Brand Comparisons in AdvertisementsJournal of Marketing Research, 1979
- A Case for Comparative AdvertisingJournal of Advertising, 1975