Employ Humorous Marketing Tactics to Enhance Customer Preferences
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.31150/ajebm.v5i3.997Keywords:
Humorous Marketing, Customer PreferencesAbstract
At the beginning of the third millennium, many marketing strategies that used a different approach from the traditional methods product promotion. This promotion does no longer work in the current era as a result of the great technological development, the diversity of goods and services provided, and the high level of marketing culture among members of society. This is reflected negatively on the accepting promotional campaigns presented using traditional methods in addition to the increasing doubt in all that these campaigns contain. So there has become an urgent need to use new, unfamiliar methods that attract attention, including the use of humor directed at creating luxury and breaking the state of stagnation and monotony that has become a characteristic inherent with traditional marketing methods. Thus, humorous marketing appeared as a different approach effectively harnessed in crystallizing and directing the fostering of customer preferences towards the marketing organization and its products. In order to test ways to employ humorous marketing methods to enhance customer preferences, the topic will be addressed through four sections. The first dealt with the research methodology, which included the research problem, the question that the extent to which humorous marketing contributes and through its methods to enhancing customer preferences, as well as the importance and objectives of the research, its hypotheses and indicators for measuring its variables. The second topic reviewed the theoretical framework for the research variables, while the third was devoted to the field framework for research, and the fourth topic was concluded with conclusions and suggestions
Downloads
References
Kotler, P., & Armstrong, G. (2008). Principles of Marketing. Upper Saddle River, NewJersey. In: Pearson Education, Inc . Laroche, M., Nepomuceno, M. V., Huang, L., & Richard, M.-O. (2011). What's so funny?: The use of humor in magazine advertising in the United States, China, and France. Journal of Advertising Research, 51(2), 404 .416- Limbu, Y. B., Huhmann, B. A., & Peterson, R. T. (2012). An examination of humor and endorser effects on consumers' responses to direct‐to‐consumer advertising: The moderating role of product involvement. International journal of pharmaceutical and healthcare marketing . Mathies, C., Chiew, T. M., & Kleinaltenkamp, M. (2016). The antecedents and consequences of humour for service: A review and directions for research. Journal of Service Theory and Practice . Novemsky, N., Dhar, R., Schwarz, N., & Simonson, I. (2007). Preference fluency in choice. Journal of marketing research, 44(3), 347-356 . Spotts, H. E., Weinberger, M. G., & Parsons, A. L. (1997). Assessing the use and impact of humor on advertising effectiveness: A contingency approach. Journal of advertising, 26(3), 17-32 . Voicu, M.-C. (2007). The questionnaire – a tool in the survey research. The ian Magazine of Statistics, Supplement Warren, C., & McGraw, A. P. (2016). When does humorous marketing hurt brands? Journal of Marketing Behavior, 2(1), 39-67 . Woltman Elpers, J. L., Mukherjee, A., & Hoyer, W. D. (2004). Humor in television advertising: A moment-to-moment analysis. Journal of Consumer Research, 31(3), 592-598 . Zhang, Y., & Zinkhan, G. M. (2006). Humor in television advertising: The effects of repetition and social setting. ACR North American Advances .
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Raad A. Raouf

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.