When to Use Facts vs. Feelings for Soliciting Donations

The JM Buzz - A podcast by Journal of Marketing - Thursdays

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A new Journal of Marketing study finds that when a collective goal such as is far from completion, consumers are more persuaded by fact-based (vs. affect-based) marketing appeals. In contrast, as the collective goal nears completion, people are more likely to enter a feeling state and are more impacted by affect-based marketing appeals. Read an in-depth recap of this research here: https://www.ama.org/2023/03/07/highlight-facts-or-appeal-to-feelings-the-psychology-of-persuading-consumers-to-contribute-to-a-collective-goal/ Read the full Journal of Marketing article here: https://doi.org/10.1177/00222429231152446 Reference: Liyin Jin, Yajin Wang, and Ying Zhang, “Give Me the Facts or Make Me Feel: How to Effectively Persuade Consumers to Act on a Collective Goal,” Journal of Marketing. Narrator: Josephine Stein Acknowledgments: Aman Soni Topics: goals, persuasion, cognition, charities, donations, petitions, marketing, decision behavior The JM Buzz is a production of the Journal of Marketing and is produced by University FM.