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Measuring the Effect of Informational and Emotional Ad Strategies on Brand Recall and Brand Attitude Sean Bailey Jennifer Lee. Eww .. That’s gross. Oh, I recognize that design!. Hmm… I think I actually want that bag!. Brainstorming & Jotting down ideas
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Measuring the Effect ofInformationaland Emotional Ad Strategies onBrand Recall and Brand AttitudeSean BaileyJennifer Lee
Oh, I recognize that design!
Hmm… I think I actually want that bag!
Brainstorming & Jotting down ideas • Negative feelings led to positive outcome! • But.. Maybe I began to like it because it’s Louis Vuitton! • Shocking advertisements are easier to recall. • I wondered which would be more effective, positive feelings or negative feelings?
Theoretical Model (2X3 Design) Brand Awareness X Ad Strategy = Effect Informational High Awareness Brands Brand Recall Positive Emotional Low Awareness (Fictitious) Brands Brand Attitude Change Negative Emotional
Group 1 Show Advertisements with High brand awareness (REI, Nike, Patagonia, Reebok, Adidas, etc) • Group 2 Show the same advertisements with fictitious brand names and logos (Adobe Photoshop)
Positive emotional ads • Negative emotional ads • Informational ads
Positive emotional ads • Negative emotional ads • Informational ads
Positive emotional ads • Negative emotional ads • Informational ads
Theoretical Model (2X3 Design) Brand Awareness X Ad Strategy = Effect Informational High Awareness Brands Brand Recall Positive Emotional Low Awareness (Fictitious) Brands Brand Attitude Change Negative Emotional
Brand attitude -Yoo & MacInnis (2005) -Four items (like-dislike, positive-negative, good-bad, favorable-unfavorable) -Each item scored on a seven-point semantic differential scale. Like Dislike Positive Negative Bad Good Unfavorable Favorable
Brand recall Open-ended question Top of mind awareness Q: Please write down ALL brand names used in this experiment