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Status已发表Published
TitleVirtual idols vs online influencers vs traditional celebrities: how young consumers respond to their endorsement advertising
Creator
Date Issued2024-05-07
Source PublicationYoung Consumers
ISSN1747-3616
Volume25Issue:3Pages:329-348
Abstract

Purpose: This study aims to examine how young consumers perceive the advertising effectiveness of endorsements by virtual idols and how endorsements by virtual idols differ from endorsements by real human celebrities such as traditional celebrities and online influencers. Design/methodology/approach: An experimental study was conducted with 400 randomly selected young respondents in China in December 2022. A 3 × 2 factorial design was used to test how the type of celebrity endorser and level of product involvement influence the persuasiveness of advertising aimed at young adults. Among 400 respondents, the average age was 21.5 years. A total of 193 male and 207 female respondents participated in the experiment. Findings: Young consumers find virtual idols, online influencers and traditional celebrities attractive. Although virtual idols are the least credible among the three types of celebrity endorsers, young consumers tend to be more convinced by their endorsements of products with low levels of consumer involvement than those with high levels of involvement. Among the three types of celebrity endorsements, young consumers find traditional celebrities the most effective. In addition, young consumers’ attitudes toward celebrity endorsers mediate the impact of celebrity endorsers’ attractiveness and credibility on their attitudes toward the advertisements. The perceived level of product involvement moderates the transfer of meaning from the attitude toward the celebrity endorsers to the attitude toward the advertisement. Practical implications: First, when choosing celebrity endorsers to advertise products targeting young consumers, marketing communication practitioners should give priority to the endorsers’ perceived credibility, as young consumers have a variety of views about them that can significantly affect their attitudes toward the advertisement. Second, real human celebrity endorsers are more effective than virtual idols in celebrity endorsements. However, virtual idols may be suited for use in advertisements to promote products with low involvement levels, such as soft drinks. Originality/value: To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first experimental study to attempt to analyze the effectiveness of virtual idols in advertising aimed at young consumers. This is also the first comparative study to introduce virtual idols as celebrity endorsers in product advertising and to compare their effectiveness with that of the two other types of commonly discussed celebrity endorsers, traditional celebrities and online influencers.

KeywordAdvertising persuasiveness Celebrity endorsement Source attractiveness Source credibility Virtual idol
DOI10.1108/YC-08-2023-1811
URLView source
Indexed ByESCI
Language英语English
WOS Research AreaBusiness & Economics
WOS SubjectBusiness
WOS IDWOS:001112511700001
Scopus ID2-s2.0-85178416412
Citation statistics
Cited Times:8[WOS]   [WOS Record]     [Related Records in WOS]
Document TypeJournal article
Identifierhttp://repository.uic.edu.cn/handle/39GCC9TT/11780
CollectionBeijing Normal-Hong Kong Baptist University
Corresponding AuthorFan, Fei
Affiliation
BNU-HKBU United International College, Zhuhai, China
First Author AffilicationBeijing Normal-Hong Kong Baptist University
Corresponding Author AffilicationBeijing Normal-Hong Kong Baptist University
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Fan, Fei,Fu, Lin,Jiang, Qinghua. Virtual idols vs online influencers vs traditional celebrities: how young consumers respond to their endorsement advertising[J]. Young Consumers, 2024, 25(3): 329-348.
APA Fan, Fei, Fu, Lin, & Jiang, Qinghua. (2024). Virtual idols vs online influencers vs traditional celebrities: how young consumers respond to their endorsement advertising. Young Consumers, 25(3), 329-348.
MLA Fan, Fei,et al."Virtual idols vs online influencers vs traditional celebrities: how young consumers respond to their endorsement advertising". Young Consumers 25.3(2024): 329-348.
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