Deakin University
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Ambivalent perception of cause-related marketing: investigating the (in)congruence of opposite motivational perceptions on consumer evaluations

journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-05, 06:57 authored by Yuting Wang, Yao Chen, Jie Fang, Bingqing XIONGBingqing XIONG
PurposeDespite the popularity of leveraging cause-related marketing (CRM) to make societal contributions and bolster business profits, sellers face a profound dilemma when conducting CRM due to consumers’ ambivalent understanding of sellers’ motivation for the initiative. Therefore, it is imperative to unravel consumers’ ambivalent understanding of CRM and determine how sellers can effectively employ CRM to elicit positive evaluations from consumers.Design/methodology/approachThis study gathered survey data from 217 participants and applied a polynomial regression model and response surface analysis for disentangling ambivalent perception of CRM by investigating the influence of (in)congruence between perceived egoistic and altruistic motivation.FindingsThe incongruence between perceived egoistic and altruistic motivation can positively influence consumers’ evaluations of sellers. Moreover, when perceived egoistic and altruistic motivations are congruent, increasing their absolute level also enhances consumers’ evaluation of sellers. Moreover, sellers’ platform function usage behavior can amplify the positive effect of incongruence but has no salient moderating role on the congruence effect.Originality/valueDiffering from prior literature that predominantly focused on either the positive or negative interpretation of CRM, this study reveals the coexistence of both positive and negative viewpoints and disentangles the congruence and incongruence effect between the two motivational understandings.

History

Related Materials

Location

Bingley, Eng.

Open access

  • No

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Industrial Management and Data Systems

Volume

125

Pagination

192-213

ISSN

0263-5577

eISSN

1758-5783

Issue

1

Publisher

Emerald