An Experimental Examination of the Differences in Readers's Responses to Editorial versus Advertising for Travel Destinations

The claim that editorial is superior to advertising, although commonly made by academics and practitioners alike, has received limited empirical support. The belief that editorial is more effective is strongly held, amongst others, by destination promoters, who frequently allocate considerable budge...

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Main Authors: Holben, Sharna, De Bussy, Nigel, Dickinson, Sonia, Allert, John
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Middlesex University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13235
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author Holben, Sharna
De Bussy, Nigel
Dickinson, Sonia
Allert, John
author_facet Holben, Sharna
De Bussy, Nigel
Dickinson, Sonia
Allert, John
author_sort Holben, Sharna
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The claim that editorial is superior to advertising, although commonly made by academics and practitioners alike, has received limited empirical support. The belief that editorial is more effective is strongly held, amongst others, by destination promoters, who frequently allocate considerable budgets to media 'familiarisations' in the hope of generating positive press. It was therefore decided to test claims for the promotional advantages of editorial in the context of tourism destinations. Drawing on the Elaboration Likelihood Model, attribution theories and agenda setting theory, the aim of this research was to test experimentally whether potential tourists do indeed respond more favourably to destination editorial than advertising, in relation to affective and conative impacts. A sample of 271 students was exposed to selected editorial and advertising for the destinations New Caledonia and Hong Kong, embedded in 12-page, full-colour, mock travel magazines. The study found that the editorial format was deemed to be more credible by readers than its advertising counterpart, but no direct format based differences were observed for respondents' attitudes to the brand or behavioural intentions. However, source credibility was found to be highly correlated with both brand attitude and behavioural intentions, suggesting editorial has an important indirect effect on these key dependent variables.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-132352017-01-30T11:35:41Z An Experimental Examination of the Differences in Readers's Responses to Editorial versus Advertising for Travel Destinations Holben, Sharna De Bussy, Nigel Dickinson, Sonia Allert, John Elaboration Likelihood Model editorial brand attitude behavioural intention destination marketing Advertising source credibility The claim that editorial is superior to advertising, although commonly made by academics and practitioners alike, has received limited empirical support. The belief that editorial is more effective is strongly held, amongst others, by destination promoters, who frequently allocate considerable budgets to media 'familiarisations' in the hope of generating positive press. It was therefore decided to test claims for the promotional advantages of editorial in the context of tourism destinations. Drawing on the Elaboration Likelihood Model, attribution theories and agenda setting theory, the aim of this research was to test experimentally whether potential tourists do indeed respond more favourably to destination editorial than advertising, in relation to affective and conative impacts. A sample of 271 students was exposed to selected editorial and advertising for the destinations New Caledonia and Hong Kong, embedded in 12-page, full-colour, mock travel magazines. The study found that the editorial format was deemed to be more credible by readers than its advertising counterpart, but no direct format based differences were observed for respondents' attitudes to the brand or behavioural intentions. However, source credibility was found to be highly correlated with both brand attitude and behavioural intentions, suggesting editorial has an important indirect effect on these key dependent variables. 2006 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13235 Middlesex University fulltext
spellingShingle Elaboration Likelihood Model
editorial
brand attitude
behavioural intention
destination marketing
Advertising
source credibility
Holben, Sharna
De Bussy, Nigel
Dickinson, Sonia
Allert, John
An Experimental Examination of the Differences in Readers's Responses to Editorial versus Advertising for Travel Destinations
title An Experimental Examination of the Differences in Readers's Responses to Editorial versus Advertising for Travel Destinations
title_full An Experimental Examination of the Differences in Readers's Responses to Editorial versus Advertising for Travel Destinations
title_fullStr An Experimental Examination of the Differences in Readers's Responses to Editorial versus Advertising for Travel Destinations
title_full_unstemmed An Experimental Examination of the Differences in Readers's Responses to Editorial versus Advertising for Travel Destinations
title_short An Experimental Examination of the Differences in Readers's Responses to Editorial versus Advertising for Travel Destinations
title_sort experimental examination of the differences in readers's responses to editorial versus advertising for travel destinations
topic Elaboration Likelihood Model
editorial
brand attitude
behavioural intention
destination marketing
Advertising
source credibility
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13235