Consumer Motivations to Participate in Marketing-Events: The Role of Predispositional Involvement

Date

2006-03-30

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

0915-5524

DOI

Volume Title

Publisher

Association for Consumer Research

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Confronted with the decreasing effectiveness of classic marketing communications, event-marketing has become an increasingly popular alternative for marketers in dealing with a changing marketing environment. Event-marketing is defined as the creation of 3-dimensional, interactive brand-related hyperrealities for consumers by staging marketing-events, which would result in an emotional attachment to the brand. However, as a pull strategy within marketing communications, successful event-marketing strategies require a thorough understanding of why consumers are motivated to voluntarily participate in those marketing-events. To narrow this information gap, this research, based on a thorough literature review, has developed a conceptual model suggesting that consumers’ motivations to participate in marketing-events are determined by their predispositional involvement either in the event-object, the event-content, event-marketing or the expected social interaction at the event. Thus, the main contribution is to the involvement and experiential consumption literature.

Description

The Publisher's final version can be found by following the URI link.

Keywords

Event-Marketing, Experiential Marketing, Experiential Consumption, Consumer Involvement, Consumer-Brand Experiences, Motivations

Citation

Wohlfeil, M. and Whelan, S. (2006) Consumer Motivations to Participate in Marketing-Events: The Role of Predispositional Involvement. European Advances in Consumer Research, 7, pp. 125-131.

Rights

Research Institute