header

Should You Change Your Ad Messaging or Execution? It Depends on Brand Age

32 Pages Posted: 28 Aug 2021 Last revised: 29 Nov 2021 Publication Status: Preprint

See all articles by Koen Pauwels

Koen Pauwels

Northeastern University - D’Amore-McKim School of Business

Bharat Sud

University of Waterloo

Robert Fisher

University of Alberta - Department of Marketing, Business Economics & Law

Kersi Antia

University of Western Ontario - Richard Ivey School of Business

Abstract

Should advertisers change their message (what is said), just as they do the execution (how it is said) to reflect changing consumer preferences? This paper is the first to quantify how these ad components and their interplay affect brand sales. The authors define the concepts of Market Consistency and changes in ad executions and show how they interact with each other and with the brand’s age in their sales outcome. The empirical analysis confirms the hypotheses in the U.S. minivan market. As a brand matures, executional variations become increasingly beneficial, but changing advertising messaging to remain consistent with customer preferences becomes less effective. For older brands with little executional variation, changing the ad message even reduces sales.The authors thus uncover important boundary conditions for the opposing theories that brands should ‘stick with their message’ versus ‘change with the times’ and advice how to manage advertising as the brand matures.

Keywords: advertising, advertising messages and execution, brand management, Hausman-Taylor regression

Suggested Citation

Pauwels, Koen and Sud, Bharat and Fisher, Robert and Antia, Kersi, Should You Change Your Ad Messaging or Execution? It Depends on Brand Age. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3913055

Koen Pauwels (Contact Author)

Northeastern University - D’Amore-McKim School of Business ( email )

360 Huntington Ave.
Boston, MA 02115
United States

Bharat Sud

University of Waterloo ( email )

Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G1
Canada
519-888-4567 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://https://uwaterloo.ca/economics/about/people/bsud

Robert Fisher

University of Alberta - Department of Marketing, Business Economics & Law ( email )

Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2R6
Canada

Kersi Antia

University of Western Ontario - Richard Ivey School of Business ( email )

1151 Richmond Street North
London, Ontario N6A 3K7
Canada

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
198
Abstract Views
983
PlumX Metrics