SPONSORSHIP-LINKED MARKETING: OPENING THE BLACK BOX
University of Queensland · Middle Tennessee State University
Abstract
Sponsorship of sports, arts, and causes has become a mainstream marketing communications tool. A great deal of fieldwork has attempted to gauge the relative effectiveness of sponsorship in a marketing context, but these weakly controlled field studies contribute little to our understanding of how individuals process sponsorship-linked marketing communications. By considering possible underlying information-processing mechanics, individual- and group-level factors, market factors, and management factors, together with theorized sponsorship outcomes, this paper offers a model of consumer-focused sponsorship-linked marketing communications that summarizes and extends theoretical understanding of the topic.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 37.67
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 87
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Marketing
- Mainstream
- Advertising
- Context (archaeology)
- Marketing communication
- Business
- Marketing research
- Digital marketing