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Effects of vividness, information and aesthetic design on the appeal of pay-per-click ads

Ying Zhu (Faculty of Management, The University of British Columbia Okanagan, Kelowna, Canada)
Yong Wang (Department of Marketing, College of Business and Public Management, West Chester University of Pennsylvania, West Chester, Pennsylvania, USA)
Joicey Wei (School of Business, Singapore University of Social Sciences, Singapore, Singapore)
Andy Hao (Department of Marketing, University of Hartford, West Hartford, Connecticut, USA)

Journal of Research in Interactive Marketing

ISSN: 2040-7122

Article publication date: 10 February 2023

Issue publication date: 11 November 2023

456

Abstract

Purpose

Few studies illustrate how contextual effects (e.g. assimilation and contrast) in pay-per-click ad design may impact consumers' attitudes and purchase intention. To fill this research gap, the authors provide theoretical predictions and empirical evidence on how ad design may prompt an assimilation and/or a contrast effect that may influence consumers' attitudes toward the ad and the brand and purchase intention. They also investigate whether the impact of contextual effects on consumers' decisions depends on the level of vividness in the ad.

Design/methodology/approach

A 2 (vividness: dynamic motion vs. static page) × 2 (information design: assimilation vs. contrast) × 2 (aesthetic design: assimilation vs. contrast) between-subjects experimental design is used to examine the effects of vividness, information design and aesthetic design. Conditional process analysis is used to assess the mediating role of attitudes toward the ad and the brand in the relationship between contextual effects and purchase intention.

Findings

For dynamic ads (i.e. high vividness) but not for static ads (i.e. low vividness), combined information contrast and aesthetic contrast designs generate a more favorable attitude toward the brand and a higher purchase intention than do combined information assimilation and aesthetic assimilation designs. Notably, combined information contrast and aesthetic contrast designs have the strongest effects than any other combination of assimilation and contrast designs of information and aesthetics. Attitudes toward the ad and the brand are significant mediators between contextual factors and intention to purchase.

Research limitations/implications

The study examines the effectiveness of online ads from a new theoretical angle based on the attributes of pay-per-click ads.

Practical implications

The results suggest that when advertisers decide to use dynamic ads, they should adopt a contrast design for both the ad information and its aesthetics.

Originality/value

This study fills a research gap in the contextual effects literature, including providing evidence of an underlying process in the relationship between certain contextual effects and purchase intent. It also extends previous findings of assimilation/contrast in information design to aesthetics design and advances the literature on vividness by examining a moderation effect of vividness.

Keywords

Citation

Zhu, Y., Wang, Y., Wei, J. and Hao, A. (2023), "Effects of vividness, information and aesthetic design on the appeal of pay-per-click ads", Journal of Research in Interactive Marketing, Vol. 17 No. 6, pp. 848-864. https://doi.org/10.1108/JRIM-07-2022-0207

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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