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Article
Horizontal and vertical cultural differences in the content of advertising appeals
Journal of International Consumer Marketing (2011)
  • S. Shavitt
  • T. Johnston, University of Illinois at Chicago
  • Jing Zhang, San Jose State University
Abstract

The distinction between vertical (emphasizing hierarchy) and horizontal (valuing equality) cultures yields novel predictions regarding the prevalence of advertising appeals. A content analysis of 1211 magazine advertisements in five countries (Denmark, Korea, Poland, Russia, U.S.) revealed differences in ad content that underscore the value of this distinction. Patterns in the degree to which ads emphasized status benefits and uniqueness benefits corresponded to the countries’ vertical/horizontal cultural classification. These and other patterns of ad benefits are analyzed, and the predictions afforded by the vertical/horizontal distinction versus the broader individualism/collectivism distinction are compared and tested.

Disciplines
Publication Date
2011
Publisher Statement
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Citation Information
S. Shavitt, T. Johnston and Jing Zhang. "Horizontal and vertical cultural differences in the content of advertising appeals" Journal of International Consumer Marketing Vol. 23 Iss. 3-4 (2011)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jing_zhang/2/