Examination of pet imagery in digital marketing communications: understanding if and when pets can be effective endorsers
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Lavertu, Laura
Abstract
Animals, and pets in particular, are prevalent in consumers’ lives, as well as in
marketing communications. Yet, despite the important roles they play in our society,
the marketing literature remains scarce and crucial questions are still to be answered.
Are pets effective endorsers? Can they be more effective than human endorsers? Are
there certain circumstances under which they might be more or less effective? This
research aims to start answering these questions. Adopting a positivist stance, and
through one qualitative exploratory study and three experimental papers (including
seven experiments and two field studies), this research explores pet endorsements in
the digital environment, with the first two papers exploring pets as social media
influencers (SMIs), whereas the last paper examines generic pet images used in
marketing communications (not from SMIs). While the exploratory study helps to
confirm which areas mentioned in the literature are worth exploring, Paper One finds
that pet social media influencers, also known as petfluencers, can be more effective
than their human counterparts in driving positive consumer responses such as social
media engagement and willingness to pay (WTP) because they are perceived as more
sincere. Petfluencers’ sincerity can be further manipulated through the type of photos
they post on their social media profiles, increasing their effectiveness for consumers
who are less likely to respond positively to their content, such as individuals with a low
propensity to anthropomorphise. Paper Two supports that overall, pets are more
persuasive (i.e., increase purchase intentions) when endorsing congruent products
(i.e., products that they can use or ‘fit’ with the pet endorser) rather than incongruent
products. This is because congruent information attracts greater consumer attention
in digital environments where clearer and simpler information is more effective.
However, inducing immersion through a more vivid background can mitigate the
negative consequence of product incongruence and increase the effectiveness of
incongruent pet ads. Paper Three shows that including the image of a pet in an
apology message following a service failure results in better outcomes, such as
increased repurchase intentions and customer service ratings, and decreased
intention to engage in negative word-of-mouth (nWOM). Apologies including a pet
picture increase the perceptions of warmth towards the brand, without reducing its
competence perceptions. However, the effect only holds when the service failure is
minor, not when it is major. The findings provide novel theoretical contributions to the
marketing literature on pets, influencer marketing, congruence, and service recovery.
It also offers actionable recommendations for marketers.
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