articleJournal of AdvertisingJan 1, 2014GREEN OA

Signaling the Green Sell: The Influence of Eco-Label Source, Argument Specificity, and Product Involvement on Consumer Trust

The University of Texas at Austin · Nanyang Technological University

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Consumers cannot verify green attributes directly and must rely on such signals as eco-labels to authenticate claims. Using signaling theory, this study explored which aspects of eco-label design yield more positive effects. The study uses a 2 (argument specificity: specific versus general) × 2 (label source: government versus corporate) × 2 (product involvement: low versus high) experimental design (n = 233). Specific arguments consistently yield greater eco-label trust and positive attitudes toward the product and label source, but only with low-involvement products is source important, with corporate labels yielding more positive attitudes. Findings are discussed in terms of theoretical and managerial…

Citation impact

572
total citations
FWCI
50.81
Percentile
100%
References
88
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Argument (complex analysis)
  • Yield (engineering)
  • Product (mathematics)
  • Business
  • Marketing
  • Government (linguistics)
  • Advertising
  • Psychology
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