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Erschienen in: Journal of Business Ethics 2/2020

02.08.2018 | Review Paper

How do Consumers Reconcile Positive and Negative CSR-Related Information to Form an Ethical Brand Perception? A Mixed Method Inquiry

verfasst von: Katja H. Brunk, Cara de Boer

Erschienen in: Journal of Business Ethics | Ausgabe 2/2020

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Abstract

This research investigates how consumers’ ethical brand perceptions are affected by differentially valenced information. Drawing on literature from person-perception formation and using a sequential, mixed method design comprising qualitative interviews and two experiments with a national representative population sample, our findings show that only when consumers perceive their judgment of a brand’s ethicality to be pertinent, do they process information holistically and in line with the configural model of impression formation. In this case, negative information (brand misconduct) functions as a diagnostic cue to form an unethical brand perception, irrespective of other positive information at hand. However, in the case where processing relevance of the un/ethical information provided is low, brand perception formation is algebraic, in which case positive information (virtuous brand conduct) can counterbalance and neutralize the detrimental impact of brand misbehavior. Our findings extend existing research on consumer perceived ethicality as well as consumer reactions to corporate social responsibility and sustainability initiatives, which has so far assumed the asymmetric impact of negative information on ethical perceptions and consumer attitudes (negativity bias) to be prevalent. We derive a range of academic and managerial implications and present a number of important avenues for future research.

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Fußnoten
1
Throughout this article, the concepts of corporate ethics and CSR are used interchangeably due to their conceptual overlap as well as consumers’ inability to distinguish clearly between both terms (for an in-depth discussion, see Brunk 2010).
 
2
What kind of cue is considered most diagnostic and therefore determines the direction of the overall impression of another person also depends on the trait to be judged. While for ability-based judgments a positivity bias can be observed (positive information weighs more strongly than negative), for morality-based judgments a negativity bias is prevalent (for more information, see Skowronski and Carlston 1987).
 
3
In line with Trudel and Cotte (2009), a fictitious brand was chosen over established brands with pre-existing ethical perceptions, thus eliminating the possibility of a brand contamination effect in the observed impact.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
How do Consumers Reconcile Positive and Negative CSR-Related Information to Form an Ethical Brand Perception? A Mixed Method Inquiry
verfasst von
Katja H. Brunk
Cara de Boer
Publikationsdatum
02.08.2018
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Journal of Business Ethics / Ausgabe 2/2020
Print ISSN: 0167-4544
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-0697
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-018-3973-4

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