The Importance of Advertising Skepticism for Brand Extension Appeals
Psychology & Marketing, volume 36, issue 7, 2019[10.1002/mar.21205]
47 Pages Posted: 20 Apr 2026
Date Written: January 19, 2019
Abstract
According to existing research, ad persuasiveness decreases as advertising skepticism (i.e., the tendency to disbelieve advertising claims) increases. What remains unclear, however, is whether or not this effect extends to brand extension appeals. We suggest that the effect may vary according to brand extension similarity. Three studies test this assertion while providing process evidence and boundary conditions for the proposed effect. According to the findings, consumers automatically transfer associations from parent brands to highly similar extensions, or automatically block these associations in the case of highly dissimilar extensions-reducing the impact of advertising skepticism on ad persuasiveness. At moderate levels, however, similarity is less predictive of the transfer process, increasing the negative effect of advertising skepticism on persuasion. Consistent with this account, the results identify brand transfer (i.e., the ability of the parent brand to make the extension) as the underlying mechanism explaining the advertising skepticism effect for moderately similar brand extension appeals. Furthermore, the results show how marketers can reduce these effects, and increase extension success, by emphasizing extension attributes that are shared with the parent brand. Collectively, these results provide a unique theoretical view, improving our understanding of advertising skepticism and the drivers of brand extension success.
Keywords: advertising, consumer skepticism, brand extension similarity, advertising skepticism, persuasion, brand transfer, affect transfer
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