articleJournal of MarketingJun 11, 2009Closed access

Self-Benefit versus Other-Benefit Marketing Appeals: Their Effectiveness in Generating Charitable Support

University of Calgary · Simon Fraser University

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Abstract

Despite the growing need, nonprofit organization marketers have not yet fully delineated the most effective ways to position charitable appeals. Across five experiments, the authors test the prediction that other-benefit (self-benefit) appeals generate more favorable donation support than self-benefit (other-benefit) appeals in situations that heighten (versus minimize) public self-image concerns. Public accountability, a manipulation of public self-awareness, and individual differences in public self-consciousness all moderate the effect of appeal type on donor support. In particular, self-benefit appeals are more effective when consumers’ responses are private in nature; in contrast, other-benefit appeals…

Citation impact

615
total citations
FWCI
32.06
Percentile
100%
References
71
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Appeal
  • Donation
  • Accountability
  • Salience (neuroscience)
  • Marketing
  • Normative
  • Business
  • Public relations
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