Search Conferences

Type in any word, words or author name. This searchs through the abstract title, keywords and abstract text and authors. You may search all conferences or just select one conference.


 All Conferences
 EMAC 2019 Annual Conference
 EMAC 2020 Annual Conference
 EMAC 2020 Regional Conference
 EMAC 2021 Annual Conference
 EMAC 2021 Regional Conference
 EMAC 2022 Annual
 EMAC 2022 Regional Conference
 EMAC 2023 Annual
 EMAC 2023 Regional Conference

EMAC 2019 Annual Conference


A double-edged sword? The role of consumer advocate television shows (CATS) in enhancing consumer performance and biasing brand attitudes
(A2019-9758)

Published: May 28, 2019

AUTHORS

Anja Spilski, Saarland University; Lara Boesen, Saarland University; Andrea Gröppel-Klein, Saarland University, Institute for Consumer & Behavioral Research

KEYWORDS

consumer advocate television shows; mind-sets; self-efficacy

ABSTRACT

Consumer advocate television shows (CATS) aim to educate consumers not only about the specific brands they feature but also about business practices in general. Their goal is to reduce the imbalance of information that exists between companies and consumers, and to improve consumers’ performance in business-related decisions. In this article we address the impact of CATS from the perspective of “mind-sets” and “self-efficacy”. Our results show that exposure to CATS improves consumers’ ability to manage business-related tasks. Additionally, consumers that have watched CATS have a more negative attitude towards brands that are completely unrelated to the brand featured in the CATS than do a control group. We discuss these results in terms of whether CATS are therefore something of a double-edged sword: They empower consumers to solve decision tasks better. However, CATS may also lead to biased beliefs that result in consumers penalizing unrelated, “innocent” brands.