Gender differences in brand attitude towards real unhealthy and fictitious healthy brands: The role of slogan familiarity

The effectiveness of brand slogans (also referred to as slogans in this study) in communicating product information has been widely discussed, but there is limited research on whether consumers’ familiarity with slogans differs for healthy and unhealthy products, and whether gender plays a role in t...

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Published in:SEARCH Journal of Media and Communication Research
Main Author: Amin N.M.; Tugiman N.; Salehhuddin Sharipudin M.-N.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor's University Lakeside Campus 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85187425077&partnerID=40&md5=49aa1c81999f731067b0e1ee43ae4a50
id 2-s2.0-85187425077
spelling 2-s2.0-85187425077
Amin N.M.; Tugiman N.; Salehhuddin Sharipudin M.-N.
Gender differences in brand attitude towards real unhealthy and fictitious healthy brands: The role of slogan familiarity
2023
SEARCH Journal of Media and Communication Research
2023
Spl2

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85187425077&partnerID=40&md5=49aa1c81999f731067b0e1ee43ae4a50
The effectiveness of brand slogans (also referred to as slogans in this study) in communicating product information has been widely discussed, but there is limited research on whether consumers’ familiarity with slogans differs for healthy and unhealthy products, and whether gender plays a role in this context. This study investigates consumer familiarity with real unhealthy and fictitious healthy slogans and examines how consumers evaluate these slogans, which ultimately influences their brand attitude. A mixed-method approach was employed to address the research questions and hypotheses. First, a content analysis was conducted using relevant literature on slogan familiarity and brand attitude from 2007 to 2022. Subsequently, advertisement stimuli were developed based on the content analysis findings. Next, a questionnaire survey was conducted involving 122 local university students in Malaysia. The results indicate that respondents who were familiar with real slogans tended to have a positive attitude towards real brands, while participants more familiar with fictitious healthy brands exhibited a positive attitude towards fictitious healthy brands. Interestingly, gender was found to interact with slogan familiarity, specifically for fictitious healthy brands, and this effect was predominantly true for female participants only. Female consumers were found to be more affected by the slogan or messaging strategy for healthy products compared to male consumers, even for unfamiliar brands. Based on the research findings, marketers may consider tailoring their branding strategies to align with their target consumers’ brand exposure, slogan familiarity, and demographic characteristics, such as gender. © SEARCH Journal 2023.
Taylor's University Lakeside Campus
26727080
English
Article

author Amin N.M.; Tugiman N.; Salehhuddin Sharipudin M.-N.
spellingShingle Amin N.M.; Tugiman N.; Salehhuddin Sharipudin M.-N.
Gender differences in brand attitude towards real unhealthy and fictitious healthy brands: The role of slogan familiarity
author_facet Amin N.M.; Tugiman N.; Salehhuddin Sharipudin M.-N.
author_sort Amin N.M.; Tugiman N.; Salehhuddin Sharipudin M.-N.
title Gender differences in brand attitude towards real unhealthy and fictitious healthy brands: The role of slogan familiarity
title_short Gender differences in brand attitude towards real unhealthy and fictitious healthy brands: The role of slogan familiarity
title_full Gender differences in brand attitude towards real unhealthy and fictitious healthy brands: The role of slogan familiarity
title_fullStr Gender differences in brand attitude towards real unhealthy and fictitious healthy brands: The role of slogan familiarity
title_full_unstemmed Gender differences in brand attitude towards real unhealthy and fictitious healthy brands: The role of slogan familiarity
title_sort Gender differences in brand attitude towards real unhealthy and fictitious healthy brands: The role of slogan familiarity
publishDate 2023
container_title SEARCH Journal of Media and Communication Research
container_volume 2023
container_issue Spl2
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85187425077&partnerID=40&md5=49aa1c81999f731067b0e1ee43ae4a50
description The effectiveness of brand slogans (also referred to as slogans in this study) in communicating product information has been widely discussed, but there is limited research on whether consumers’ familiarity with slogans differs for healthy and unhealthy products, and whether gender plays a role in this context. This study investigates consumer familiarity with real unhealthy and fictitious healthy slogans and examines how consumers evaluate these slogans, which ultimately influences their brand attitude. A mixed-method approach was employed to address the research questions and hypotheses. First, a content analysis was conducted using relevant literature on slogan familiarity and brand attitude from 2007 to 2022. Subsequently, advertisement stimuli were developed based on the content analysis findings. Next, a questionnaire survey was conducted involving 122 local university students in Malaysia. The results indicate that respondents who were familiar with real slogans tended to have a positive attitude towards real brands, while participants more familiar with fictitious healthy brands exhibited a positive attitude towards fictitious healthy brands. Interestingly, gender was found to interact with slogan familiarity, specifically for fictitious healthy brands, and this effect was predominantly true for female participants only. Female consumers were found to be more affected by the slogan or messaging strategy for healthy products compared to male consumers, even for unfamiliar brands. Based on the research findings, marketers may consider tailoring their branding strategies to align with their target consumers’ brand exposure, slogan familiarity, and demographic characteristics, such as gender. © SEARCH Journal 2023.
publisher Taylor's University Lakeside Campus
issn 26727080
language English
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