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Does the Context Really Matter, and for Whom? Explaining the Effects of Program Liking for an Advertiser Funded Program

Advertising in New Formats and Media

ISBN: 978-1-78560-313-6, eISBN: 978-1-78560-312-9

Publication date: 29 December 2016

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to explain how program liking, program connectedness, and product category involvement influence brand attitudes as a result of advertiser funded programming.

Methodology/approach

We conduct a field study on a panel of real television viewers that were surveyed one week after the final episode of an advertiser funded fashion program was broadcasted. A moderated mediation model is constructed and tested that captures the interplay of three determinants of brand attitudes: program liking, product category involvement, and program connectedness.

Findings

Liking of the program is transferred to brand attitudes. This effect is complementarily mediated by connectedness with the program, and this mediation is moderated by product category involvement. Program liking only spills over to brand attitude through connectedness for viewers with moderate to high levels of involvement with the sponsor product category.

Research implications

The findings add to the understanding of the role of program liking and program connectedness in the formation of brand attitudes. Although prior research has established that liking and connectedness are indeed an important determinant of brand attitudes, this research unveils product category involvement as an important boundary condition for this effect.

Practical implications

Consumers can develop liking for even an advanced form of brand placement, an Advertiser Funded Program (AFP). When consumers’ evaluations of the program are positive, they connect to the program on a personal basis, also leading to positive brand effects. Advertising practitioners should focus on the meaningful integration of their brand in a context that is involving for their target audience.

Keywords

Citation

Verhellen, Y., De Pelsmacker, P. and Dens, N. (2016), "Does the Context Really Matter, and for Whom? Explaining the Effects of Program Liking for an Advertiser Funded Program", De Pelsmacker, P. (Ed.) Advertising in New Formats and Media, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 291-306. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78560-313-620151015

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016 Emerald Group Publishing Limited