“Environmental brand attribusetand nature imagery in vegan product advertising”
Autor corporativo
dc.contributor
Universidad de Chile, Facultad de Economía y Negocios, Escuela de Postgrado
es_ES
Professor Advisor
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Olavarrieta Soto, Sergio
Author
dc.contributor.author
Yli-Kauhaluoma, Jaana
Admission date
dc.date.accessioned
2023-06-07T21:03:52Z
Available date
dc.date.available
2023-06-07T21:03:52Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2021
Identifier
dc.identifier.uri
https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/194163
Abstract
dc.description.abstract
Environmental issues have been the center of discussion for a long time and the effects of
climate change are becoming increasingly visible around us. On a positive side, people have
started to become more aware of these effects and other environmental issues. This has also
led to people being more conscious about the power of their own purchasing decisions
(Glocalities 2019). In addition, companies around the world have started executing more
environmentally friendly business practices and offering greener products (Clarke, Crocker,
Ferguson y Marcell 2019) following consumers’ growing demand for sustainability. Among the
rise in demand for green products also the sales of different plant-based food products have
seen an incredible rise in recent years (The International Trade Center 2019; The Good Food
Institute, 2020).
Although today there are some significant green trends, green marketing and green advertising
have existed for a long time. For decades marketers have used different green advertising
strategies in order to attract environmentally conscious consumers. One of these strategies is
the usage of different green product attributes such as ecolabels and information of the
product’s environmental characteristics in advertisements in order to communicate the product’s
environmental benefits to the consumer and to generate cognitive advertisement responses
such as utilitarian environmental brand benefits. Another green advertising strategy includes the
usage of nature imagery which purpose is to create affective responses in consumers by
creating virtual nature experiences. These effects are said to positively affect for example, brand
attitude which in turn could have a positive effect on purchase intention.
This thesis follows the study of Schmuck, Matthes, Naderer and Beaufort (2017) in which they
investigated the cognitive and affective advertisement responses and their effect on brand
attitude and purchase intention using different levels of environmental involvement,
environmental concern, green purchase intention and attitude towards green products, as
moderators. Among other relevant variables environmental involvement is often used as a
predictor of green consumer behavior.
The objective of this present study is to test how the international vegan label, the V-Label,
generates perceived utilitarian environmental brand benefits when used as an environmental
brand attribute in advertisements. In addition, the combined effect of nature imagery and the V-
Label is tested in order to gain insight into what type of responses nature imagery creates in
vegan product advertising, especially when advertising vegan food products.
The products chosen for this study are plant-based milk and a television. Plant-based milk was
chosen due to the growing popularity of vegan milk alternatives, and television in order to test
what kind of responses the exposure to the V-Label creates in a similar product category used
by Schmuck et al. (2017). Two fictitious brands were created around these products: Plantay for
the vegan milk and Kandai for the television. Consequently, altogether three advertisement
appeals were created for each of the products: control appeal presenting the product on a blank
background, functional appeal presenting the product together with the V-Label and a combined
appeal that included both the V-Label and nature imagery.
The effects were measured by conducting a survey which included the advertisement appeals
as stimulus. The survey measured the levels of individuals’ environmental involvement before
exposure to the advertisements. After seeing the advertisements, the cognitive and affective
responses of utilitarian environmental brand benefits and virtual nature experience were
measured. This was followed by questions related to the respondents’ attitudes towards the
brand seen on the advertisement and their purchase intention.
These results were then tested by running different statistical analyses such as ANOVA and
regression modeling. The tests provided similar results as previous studies alike, further
consolidating the existing correlations between the studied variables. One of the key findings of
this study is that V-Label was found to create perceived utilitarian environmental brand benefits
in a similar way like other labels, such as eco-seals (see Schmuck et al.2017). The findings
were similar with both the functional and combined advertisement appeals.
The findings indicate that the usage of V-Label in vegan product advertising is more beneficial
than for instance just stating the product being plant-based and may create a more positive
effect on utilitarian environmental brand benefits even among those individuals perhaps
otherwise not interested in vegan products. In addition, presenting the V-Label together with
emotional attributes such as nature imagery can create even stronger effects which then in turn
positively affect brand attitude and purchase intention.
es_ES
Lenguage
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en
es_ES
Publisher
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Universidad de Chile
es_ES
Type of license
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States