Differentiated effect of advertising: Joint vs. separate consumption

TR Number

Date

2015-04-01

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

In a context of intense competition, cooperative advertising between firms is critical. Accordingly, the objective of this article is to analyze the potential differentiated effect of advertising on two basic consumption patterns: individual products (i.e. hotel, restaurant) vs. bundle (i.e. hotel + restaurant). This research adds to the extant literature in that, for the first time, this potential differentiated effect is examined through a hierarchical modelling framework that reflects the way people make their decisions: first, they decide whether to visit or not a region; second, whether to purchase an advertised product in that region; and third, whether to buy products together or separately at the region. The empirical analysis, applied to a sample of 11,288 individuals, shows that the influence of advertising is positive for the decisions to visit and to purchase; however, when it comes to the joint or separate consumption, advertising has a differentiated effect: its impact is much greater on the joint alternative ("hotel + restaurant") than the separate options ("hotel" and "restaurant"). Also, the variable distance moderates the advertising effect.

Description

Keywords

Destination advertising, Cooperative advertising, Hierarchical decision making, Destination choice, Random coefficient logit model

Citation