TY - JOUR
T1 - “Mirror, mirror, on the wall. Who is the greenest of them all?” the impact of green advertising cues on generational cohorts
AU - Muralidharan, Sidharth
AU - La Ferle, Carrie
AU - Roth-Cohen, Osnat
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Advertising Association.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Global warming is one of the top environmental concerns in the U.S, yet little is known about the effects of green advertising on different generational cohorts–Gen-Z, Gen-Y, Gen-X, and Baby Boomers. Specifically, environmental values (egoistic, altruistic, and biospheric) were assessed for differentially impacting ad attitudes and behavioral intentions across the four cohorts. Study-1 (n = 613) found the biospheric ad (plants and animals) to be more persuasive for Gen-Z and Gen-Y, with no preference shown for Gen-X and Baby Boomers, and no differences between the self (egoistic) and community (altruistic) focused ads. Based on these findings, Study 2 (n = 634) merged the four cohorts into two, Gen-ZY and Gen-XB, focused only on egoistic and biospheric, while introducing informativeness and task difficulty to better understand messaging preferences on attitudes and intentions to act. The findings revealed that Gen-ZY preferred to donate money for a biospheric ad with low information, while being motivated to volunteer their time when presented with a high information biospheric ad. Irrespective of ad appeal (egoistic or biospheric), Gen-XB had stronger intentions to donate for an advertisement with high information content (vs. low). Theoretical and advertiser implications are discussed along with future research avenues.
AB - Global warming is one of the top environmental concerns in the U.S, yet little is known about the effects of green advertising on different generational cohorts–Gen-Z, Gen-Y, Gen-X, and Baby Boomers. Specifically, environmental values (egoistic, altruistic, and biospheric) were assessed for differentially impacting ad attitudes and behavioral intentions across the four cohorts. Study-1 (n = 613) found the biospheric ad (plants and animals) to be more persuasive for Gen-Z and Gen-Y, with no preference shown for Gen-X and Baby Boomers, and no differences between the self (egoistic) and community (altruistic) focused ads. Based on these findings, Study 2 (n = 634) merged the four cohorts into two, Gen-ZY and Gen-XB, focused only on egoistic and biospheric, while introducing informativeness and task difficulty to better understand messaging preferences on attitudes and intentions to act. The findings revealed that Gen-ZY preferred to donate money for a biospheric ad with low information, while being motivated to volunteer their time when presented with a high information biospheric ad. Irrespective of ad appeal (egoistic or biospheric), Gen-XB had stronger intentions to donate for an advertisement with high information content (vs. low). Theoretical and advertiser implications are discussed along with future research avenues.
KW - ad attitudes
KW - behavioral intentions
KW - environmental values
KW - generational cohorts
KW - green advertising
KW - informativeness
KW - need for cognition
KW - task difficulty
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85150620312&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/02650487.2023.2187192
DO - 10.1080/02650487.2023.2187192
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AN - SCOPUS:85150620312
SN - 0265-0487
VL - 43
SP - 125
EP - 148
JO - International Journal of Advertising
JF - International Journal of Advertising
IS - 1
ER -