Title: Comparing Advertising and Editorials
1- Comparing Advertising and Editorials
- An Experimental Study in TV and Print
- Ana Tkalac Vercic, University of Zagreb, Croatia
- Kristina Laco, Premisa, Croatia,
- Dejan Vercic, Pristop University of Ljubljana,
Slovenia
2Our time has come in 2002
3Hypotheses
The aim of this study was to establish the
relationship between advertising and news
editorials in terms of communication effects
H1 a. TV editorial has greater impact on
perceived message credibility than TV
advertisement b. TV editorial has greater impact
on behavioral intentions than TV advertisement c.
TV editorial has greater impact on attitude
towards the subject of the message than TV
advertisement
4Hypotheses
The aim of this study was to establish the
relationship between advertising and news
editorials in terms of communication effects
H2 a. Print editorial has greater impact on
perceived message credibility than print
advertisement b. Print editorial has greater
impact on behavioral intentions than print
advertisement c. Print editorial has greater
impact on attitude towards the subject of the
message than print advertisement
5Methodology
- The research design was a 2 x 2 factorial design
- A sample of 400 adults participated in the
experiment, in two major Croatian cities, in
April 2008 - Subjects were randomly placed into one of the
four experimental groups
6Methodology
- Subjects were asked to give their opinion on a
number of humanitarian topics - They answered to a series of questions after
which they were exposed to a print advertisement,
a TV advertisement, a print editorial or a TV
editorial (these materials were never publicly
shown prior to the experiment) - After the exposure respondents were asked another
group of questions
7Materials presented to the subjects
8Materials presented to the subjects
- TV advertisement
- TV editorial
9Findings
- The first hypothesis predicted that TV editorials
would have a greater impact on message
credibility than TV advertisement - Results showed no statistically significant
difference between perceived message credibility
in those two groups - Thus, H1a was not supported
- Similar results proved true for the print as well
(thus H2a was also not supported)
10Perceived (self-reported) credibility of media
content
11Findings
- Hypotheses H1b and H2b predicted that editorials
would have a greater impact on behavioral
intentions than advertising in both print and TV - Even though there was increase in the readiness
to financially help drug addicts in all four
experimental groups, the difference among groups
was not statistically significant - Consequentially, both H1b and H2b were not
supported
12Findings
- Hypotheses H1c and H2c predicted that editorials
would have a greater impact on attitude towards
the subject of the message than advertising, in
both print and TV - These hypotheses also had to be rejected
13Post-exposure change of attitude
14Is it really?