Exploring how consumers cope with online behavioral advertising

被引:115
|
作者
Ham, Chang-Dae [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Illinois, Charles H Sandage Dept Advertising, Coll Media, 330 Gregory Hall,MC 462,810 S Wright St, Urbana, IL 61822 USA
关键词
online behavioral advertising; online privacy concerns; ad avoidance; persuasion knowledge; protection motivation; PROTECTION MOTIVATION THEORY; INFORMATION PRIVACY CONCERNS; PERSUASION KNOWLEDGE; PLANNED BEHAVIOR; FEAR APPEALS; DETERMINANTS; ADOLESCENTS; RESPONSES; ATTITUDE; ME;
D O I
10.1080/02650487.2016.1239878
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This study explores how consumers cope with a computer technology-driven persuasion tactic called online behavioral advertising (OBA). By tracking consumers' online behaviors, OBA delivers highly tailored advertising messages to individual consumers, giving rise to serious privacy concerns due to their covert nature. Integrating the persuasion knowledge model and the protection motivation theory, we employed a survey method (N = 442) to examine how consumers cope with OBA based on their persuasion knowledge, cognitive appraisal, and cognitive processing variables. The results reveal that persuasion knowledge was indirectly associated with coping behavior of ad avoidance throughout cognitive appraisal process (perceived risks; perceived benefits; self-efficacy). Privacy concerns partially mediated such associations with ad avoidance. Interestingly, cognitive processing variables (reactance; perceived personalization) were significantly associated with ad avoidance without being related to persuasion knowledge. The implications for theoretical, managerial, and social contributions are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:632 / 658
页数:27
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