Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2010

Source Publication

European Journal of Marketing

Source ISSN

0309-0566

Abstract

Purpose – In 2005, the European Union launched a four-year antismoking television advertising campaign across its 25 Member States. This study aims to evaluate the second and third years (2006 and 2007) of the campaign based on telephone interviews with over 24,000 consumers (smokers, non-smokers, and ex-smokers).

Design/methodology/approach – The study focuses on smokers and examines the potential for using segmentation and targeting in informing the campaign. Three important factors are used to identify clusters: attitude toward the campaign; comprehension of the campaign; and inclination to think responsibly about their smoking behaviour.

Findings – Cluster analyses identify three distinct and significant target groups (message-involved, message-indifferent, and message-distanced) who respond differentially to the advertising. Furthermore, the percentage of respondents within each cluster varies across the EU Member States. Using Schwartz’s cultural framework, the cultural dimension of “openness to change versus conservatism” is found to explain substantial cross-national variation in message-involved and messaged-distanced respondents.

Research limitations/implications – Cluster solutions are shown to be stable across the two data waves. Implications of these results are discussed.

Originality/value – This is the first study that seeks to better understand consumer reactions to social-marketing advertising across different segments of the overall target group.

Comments

Accepted version. European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 44, No. 7/8 (2010): 1140-1164. DOI. © 2010 Emerald Group Publishing: www.emeraldinsight.com. Used with permission.

Included in

Marketing Commons

Share

COinS