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Invite colleaguesAdapting advertising appeals to individualism or collectivism: The role of thought activation
Abstract
Research into international advertising has shown culturally adapted value appeals to be more persuasive and better liked than non-adapted value appeals, especially when they appeal to the individualism–collectivism dimension. The exception to this observation is in Europe, where, despite significant cultural differences across the continent, such effects have not been identified. This study replicates the material from a previous, highly successful study, and adds a qualitative part to the study. Dutch participants completed a cognitive response task, placed either before or after the main dependent measures, to investigate whether inviting participants to think actively about an advertisement may lead to value activation and consequently to cultural value adaptation effects. The results indicate that cultural value adaptation has no effect on liking or persuasion, even when the cognitive response task occurred before the main dependent measures. This study adds to a growing body of literature indicating that Western Europeans do not consider advertisements adapted to the individualism–collectivism dimension to be more persuasive than non-adapted advertisements; likewise, Western Europeans do not prefer them over non-adapted advertisements.
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Author's Biography
Anne Janssen is a junior researcher at the Department of Communication and Information Studies at Radboud University Nijmegen, where she earned her master’s degree in linguistics and communication sciences. Her research has been published in the Journal of Global Marketing
Jos Hornikx is an associate professor of communication and information studies at Radboud University Nijmegen (the Netherlands). His research interests focus on language and persuasion. He is particularly interested in persuasive argumentation, multilingual advertising and cross-cultural adaptation in persuasive messages. His research has been published in outlets such as Communication Monographs, Journal of Business Communication, Journal of Global Marketing and Journal of International Consumer Marketing. Jos Hornikx obtained his PhD from Radboud University Nijmegen in 2006.