当品牌行为不当:三重底线可持续性背景下不道德行为的信号和溢出效应

B. Nichols, J. Kirchoff, I. Confente, Hannah J. Stolze
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引用次数: 3

摘要

目的可持续发展绩效的三重底线是众所周知的;然而,很少有研究将其与消费者的品牌认知和意图联系起来。这一点很重要,因为消费者认为品牌应该制定可持续发展战略,并以支持这些战略的方式开展业务。本研究运用信号理论和溢出效应的理论视角,探讨品牌三重底线可持续发展活动的负面信息对消费者感知的品牌道德、感知的产品质量和购买兴趣的影响。设计/方法/方法本研究包括两个与美国参与者的实验室实验。当品牌在可持续发展方面失败时,消费者会觉得该公司缺乏道德,其产品质量较低,购买兴趣受到影响——无论这种失败与三重底线(环境、社会或经济)有多大关系。这些效应受品牌熟悉度和信息来源的影响。与流行的文献相反,品牌熟悉度似乎可以保护公司的道德形象,当信息来自公司来源时也是如此。原创性/价值与大多数可持续发展研究不同,本研究在三重底线的所有三个维度上提供了比较效应。在此过程中,本研究强调了消费者如何将品牌的可持续发展相关活动与道德观念和品牌期望联系起来的细微差别。本研究还通过品牌熟悉度和信息来源将研究结果置于背景中,并为不断增长的可持续品牌文献做出了贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
When brands behave badly: signaling and spillover effects of unethical behavior in the context of triple bottom line sustainability
Purpose The triple bottom line of sustainability performance is well known; however, little research links it to consumer brand perceptions and intentions. This is important because consumers believe that brands should develop sustainability strategies and conduct business in ways that support those strategies. Using the theoretical lenses of signaling theory and spillover effects, this study aims to examine the impact of negative messages about brands’ triple bottom line sustainability activities on consumer perceived brand ethicality, perceived product quality and purchase interest. Design/methodology/approach This research includes two lab experiments with the US participants. Findings When brands have sustainability failures, consumers feel the firm is less ethical, its products are lower in quality and purchase interest suffers – regardless how the failure relates to the triple bottom line (environmental, social or economic). These effects are moderated by brand familiarity and the message source. Brand familiarity seems to protect a firm’s ethicality image as does when the information comes from a corporate source, contrary to the prevalent literature. Originality/value Unlike most sustainability research, this study provides comparison effects across all three dimensions of the triple bottom line. In doing so, this study highlights nuances in how consumers connect brands’ sustainability-related activities with perceptions about ethics and brand expectations. This research also contextualizes the findings through brand familiarity and message source and contributes to the growing body of literature on sustainability branding.
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