The Effectiveness of Cause-Related Marketing: A Meta-Analysis on Consumer Responses

Christina Schamp*, Mark Heitmann, Tammo H.A. Bijmolt, Robin Katzenstein

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

38 Citations (Scopus)
279 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Cause-related marketing (CM), which links corporate donations to consumer purchases, has ongoing momentum in marketing. As the magnitude and direction of consumers’ response to CM are inconclusive, this meta-analysis synthesizes evidence on main and moderator effects from 237 studies. On average, the authors find a moderate effect for attitudinal response (d =.458) and a weak effect for behavioral response (d =.283; both ps <.001), both with high underlying heterogeneity. A multivariate meta-regression on CM moderators grounded along four conceptual pillars—transparency, signals of sincerity, purchase context, and consumers’ emotional attachment to CM—shows that attitudinal effects hinge mostly on emotional attachment. Suboptimal execution and poor communication of the donation appeal in particular can even have detrimental effects on attitudes. In addition, various moderators from other pillars play a relevant role. For behavioral outcomes, both emotional attachment and signals of sincerity are equally important. The visual prominence of the donation is the most relevant individual moderator, with only a few others related to the two pillars following at some distance. Therefore, CM requires different priorities depending on corporate objectives. This research further compares the effects of CM with those of discounts and other corporate social responsibility marketing instruments, simulates practical examples, and provides avenues for further research.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)189-215
Number of pages27
JournalJournal of Marketing Research
Volume60
Issue number1
Early online date13-Jun-2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb-2023

Keywords

  • attitude–behavior gap
  • cause-related marketing
  • corporate social responsibility‌
  • meta-analysis
  • prosocial behavior

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