Consumer response to negative celebrity publicity: the effects of moral reasoning strategies and fan identification
Journal of Product & Brand Management
ISSN: 1061-0421
Article publication date: 22 July 2019
Issue publication date: 20 January 2020
Abstract
Purpose
In the context of celebrity endorsement, this study aims to demonstrate that the ways in which consumers adopt moral reasoning strategies (i.e. rationalization, decoupling and coupling) are largely dependent on the severity (i.e. high vs low) of celebrity transgressions and the degree to which they personally identify with the celebrity.
Design/methodology/approach
A between-subjects online experiment (N = 144) with two conditions, representing high- and low-severity celebrity transgressions, was conducted. Participants’ attitudes toward the celebrity and endorsed brand, their purchase intention for the endorsed product and the degrees to which they identified with the celebrity and adopted the three types of moral reasoning strategies were assessed.
Findings
The rationalization and decoupling strategies mediate the effects of highly negative information about a celebrity on consumer attitudes toward the celebrity and endorsed brand as well as on purchase intention for the endorsed product. In addition, consumers who identify strongly as fans of the celebrity in question are more likely to activate rationalization and decoupling strategies to process and evaluate transgressive behaviors than those with weaker fan identification.
Originality/value
By exploring the ways in which moral reasoning and fan identification work in processing negative information, this study provides insights into the psychological process through which negative news coverage of a celebrity endorser influences consumer attitudes and purchase intention.
Keywords
Citation
Wang, S. and Kim, K.J. (2020), "Consumer response to negative celebrity publicity: the effects of moral reasoning strategies and fan identification", Journal of Product & Brand Management, Vol. 29 No. 1, pp. 114-123. https://doi.org/10.1108/JPBM-10-2018-2064
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited