The effects of pre-scandal associations of athlete endorsers and scandal types on consumer blame and eWOM

Shintaro Sato, Y. Ko, Daehwan Kim, J. Lee
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Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this research is to examine how pre-scandal associations and scandal types interactively influence consumer judgment and negative electronic word-of-mouth (eWOM).Design/methodology/approachDrawing from cognitive dissonance theory and associative memory network model, the online experiments (Amazon Mechanical Turk; Nexperiment 1 = 146 and Nexperiment 2 = 189) were conducted to examine the effects of positive pre-scandal associations (performance vs pro-social) and scandal types (performance-related vs -unrelated) on consumer blame and eWOM toward scandalized athletes. Data were analyzed by employing t-test (experiment 1), Multivariate Analysis of Covariance (MANCOVA) and PROCESS Model 8 (experiment 2) to test the hypotheses.FindingsThe findings highlight that positive pre-scandal association demonstrated both protecting and backfiring effects depending on the types of scandals. Specifically, when performance-related scandals emerged, consumers made more negative blame judgment of athletes with salient performance association, relative to pro-social association. Inversely, when performance-unrelated scandals occurred, athletes with salient pro-social association were more likely to be blamed. Regarding eWOM, consumers generate more negative eWOM when athletes with pre-performance associations are involved with performance-related scandals. This pattern of the result was not observed when athletes' pro-social association and performance-unrelated scandals were prominent.Originality/valueThe current work adds consumers' negative eWOM toward scandalized athletes to the literature as a predictor of how athletes' pre-scandal association with consumers and scandal types are related. The findings indicate that consumers feel greater dissonance and generate more negative eWOM when athletes' pre-scandal associations and scandal types are closely related.
运动员代言人和丑闻类型的丑闻前关联对消费者指责和eom的影响
目的探讨丑闻前联想和丑闻类型如何交互影响消费者判断和负面电子口碑(eom)。基于认知失调理论和联想记忆网络模型,在线实验(Amazon Mechanical Turk;实验1 = 146和实验2 = 189)考察了丑闻前正向关联(成绩与亲社会)和丑闻类型(成绩相关与无关)对消费者对丑闻运动员的指责和eom的影响。采用t检验(实验1)、多元协方差分析(MANCOVA)和过程模型8(实验2)对数据进行检验。研究结果强调,根据丑闻的类型,正面的丑闻前关联表现出保护和反作用。具体而言,当与成绩相关的丑闻出现时,消费者对成绩关联显著的运动员的负向指责判断多于亲社会关联。相反,当与成绩无关的丑闻发生时,具有明显亲社会关系的运动员更有可能受到指责。在eWOM方面,当有成绩前联想的运动员卷入与成绩有关的丑闻时,消费者产生的负面eWOM更多。当运动员的亲社会交往和与成绩无关的丑闻突出时,这种结果模式不被观察到。独创性/价值当前的工作将消费者对丑闻运动员的负面eom添加到文献中,作为运动员丑闻前与消费者和丑闻类型的关联如何相关的预测因子。研究结果表明,当运动员的丑闻前联想与丑闻类型密切相关时,消费者会产生更大的不和谐感,并产生更多的负面eWOM。
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