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Erschienen in: Marketing Letters 2/2016

01.06.2016

How product–cause fit and donation quantifier interact in cause-related marketing (CRM) settings: evidence of the cue congruency effect

verfasst von: Neel Das, Abhijit Guha, Abhijit Biswas, Balaji Krishnan

Erschienen in: Marketing Letters | Ausgabe 2/2016

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Abstract

We are the first to examine the joint impact of product–cause fit and donation quantifier in the cause-related marketing (CRM) domain. We show that these two CRM cues interact in a unique manner, reflecting the cue congruency effect. Specifically, congruent combinations of these two cues result in high purchase intentions when the cues individually have positive effects. In all other cases, however, purchase intentions are low. Furthermore, we identify moderators of the above cue congruency effect. In Study 1, we show that the cue congruency effect is moderated by product-type, evidencing only in more hedonic product contexts. In Study 2, we show that the above cue congruency effect is moderated by purchase-type, evidencing in planned purchase contexts, but reversing in impulse purchase contexts. We discuss the process mechanism driving these effects, specify the contribution of this research for CRM, cue congruency and impulse purchases, and outline implications for practice.

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Fußnoten
1
The effect of cue congruency is not driven by argument strength. If this were the case, then purchase intentions should steadily increase from (1) the case when both cues are negative (low fit and vague donation quantifier), to (2) a case where one cue is positive (either high fit or concrete quantifier), to (3) the case where both cues are positive. Instead, cue congruency effect derives more from the negativity bias, where purchase intentions are (1) low if any one cue is negative (as the effect of the negative cue dominates) and (2) high only when both cues are positive.
 
2
In this research, we prefer to use the classification “more hedonic” versus “less hedonic” (rather than hedonic versus utilitarian), since the very same product can be classified as either hedonic or utilitarian, contingent on goals and subjective perceptions (e.g., cellphones: Khan et al. 2005; toothpaste: Batra and Ahtola 1991).
 
3
This difference score calculation is consistent with methods in Kronrod et al. (2012).
 
4
We thank an anonymous reviewer for this observation.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
How product–cause fit and donation quantifier interact in cause-related marketing (CRM) settings: evidence of the cue congruency effect
verfasst von
Neel Das
Abhijit Guha
Abhijit Biswas
Balaji Krishnan
Publikationsdatum
01.06.2016
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Marketing Letters / Ausgabe 2/2016
Print ISSN: 0923-0645
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-059X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11002-014-9338-6

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