4.2 Article

Revisiting the effects of anthropomorphism on brand relationship outcomes: the moderating role of psychological disposition

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MARKETING
Volume 55, Issue 8, Pages 2174-2200

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/EJM-07-2018-0471

Keywords

Anthropomorphism; Need for cognition; Need for belonging; Parasocial interaction; Brand attachment; Brand experience

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST 1072410-H-004-218-MY2]

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This research delves into consumers' psychological traits that moderate the positive anthropomorphic effects on brand outcomes specific to relationship marketing. The findings suggest that motivational disposition significantly correlates with perceived anthropomorphism and brand relationship outcomes, and that the need for belonging and parasocial interaction act as moderators in strengthening the mediating effects of perceived anthropomorphism on brand attachment and brand experience, respectively. This study sheds light on marketers' strategic management efforts in implementing brand personification to target a wide range of market segments with diverse psychological disposition.
Purpose - Given the thriving attention paid to brand personification in marketing, this paper aims to delve into consumers' psychological traits that may moderate the positive anthropomorphic effects on brand outcomes specific to relationship marketing. Design/methodology/approach - A theoretical model was proposed based on a review of the extant literature. Study 1 conducted an online survey and used confirmatory factor analysis to validate the constructs significantly correlated with anthropomorphic processing. Two follow-up studies (Study 2a and 2b) using experimental designs were performed to provide evidence substantiating the moderated mediation in the process. Findings - Based on the results across the three studies, motivational, rather than cognitive, disposition significantly correlates with perceived anthropomorphism and brand relationship outcomes. Need for belonging serves as a sociality moderator in strengthening the mediating effects of perceived anthropomorphism on brand attachment and brand experience, respectively. Parasocial interaction serves as an effectance moderator in augmenting the mediating effects of perceived anthropomorphism on brand attachment. Research limitations/implications - This research extends and contrasts the theoretical grounding for anthropomorphism as a set of situational consumer perceptions by integrating its boosting factors in social psychology with emerging brand constructs in marketing and consumer behavior research. More studies are encouraged to probe into the complex anthropomorphic phenomenon. Practical implications - This research sheds light on marketers' strategic management efforts in implementing brand personification to target a wide range of market segments with diverse psychological disposition. Originality/value - Conceiving anthropomorphism as an in-process situational output in information processing, this research provides further understanding of the psychological traits that facilitate the construction of consumer-brand relationships through anthropomorphic perceptions in the context of brand personification.

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