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Threat specificity in fear appeals: examination of fear response and motivated behavior

Kamila Sobol (Department of Marketing, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada)
Marilyn Giroux (Department of Marketing, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand)

Journal of Consumer Marketing

ISSN: 0736-3761

Article publication date: 16 March 2023

Issue publication date: 4 May 2023

498

Abstract

Purpose

A fear appeal is a communication tactic designed to scare people into adopting desired behaviors (e.g. wash hands to avoid contracting COVID-19). While it is generally acknowledged that fear appeals can be persuasive at motivating behavior, this paper aims to identify how to optimally identify how to optimally frame the focal threat to increase their effectiveness as well as to uncover additional underlying processes.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors conducted four experimental studies.

Findings

This research validates that exposure to fear appeals can strongly motivate behavior. However, this study shows that this effect is moderated by threat specificity. Specifically, this study demonstrates that people are more motivated to engage in behaviors that facilitate threat avoidance after exposure to a personally relevant threat that represents a nonspecific (e.g. aging appearance) rather than a specific outcome (e.g. wrinkles). This effect is mediated by perceptions of assimilation (versus contrast) to the focal threat. This study reliably shows the effect across three threat domains (i.e. aging appearance, weight gain, illness) and for different behaviors.

Originality/value

Theoretically speaking, this study contributes to the fear appeal literature by identifying a new type of message framing that has the potential to increase fear appeal’s persuasive power, and uncovering a distinct mechanism by which fear appeals impact behavior. Practically speaking, the findings confirm that fear appeals have the potential to help marketers mobilize consumer behavior, especially when the communication highlights a nonspecific rather than specific threat.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Funding: Fonds de Recherche Société et Culture Québec.

Citation

Sobol, K. and Giroux, M. (2023), "Threat specificity in fear appeals: examination of fear response and motivated behavior", Journal of Consumer Marketing, Vol. 40 No. 4, pp. 470-480. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCM-02-2021-4487

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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