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Message Order Effects and Gender Differences in Advertising Persuasion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2003

FRÉDÉRIC F. BRUNEL
Affiliation:
Boston Universitybrunel@bu.edu
MICHELLE R. NELSON
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin-Madisonmrnelson@facstaff.wisc.edu
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Abstract

This article demonstrates how presentation order, gender, and value relevance can influence advertising processing under different viewing situations. One study found that message order and gender influenced message persuasion: under situational low involvement, females (males) exhibited primacy (recency) effects when viewing two advertisements differing in values (help-self versus help-others) for a charity. In a second study, with higher situational involvement, all respondents appeared to process advertising messages systematically and considered the value content within the message in their evaluations. Thought-listing data revealed that females continued to exhibit primacy effects regardless of message appeal, but the recency effects with males disappeared when the advertisement (help-self) matched their values. Relevance for advertising effectiveness and media planning is discussed.

Type
OBSERVATIONS
Copyright
© Copyright © 1960-2003, The ARF

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