TY - JOUR
T1 - Verbal persuasion in marketing
T2 - A multimethod meta-analysis of analytical and narrative processing
AU - Orazi, Davide C.
AU - Hamby, Anne
AU - Herhausen, Dennis
AU - van Laer, Tom
AU - Ludwig, Stephan
AU - Gonsalves, Chahna
AU - Grewal, Dhruv
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/3/20
Y1 - 2025/3/20
N2 - Customers process persuasive verbal messages through analytical or narrative routes. Extant marketing research offers limited findings regarding the relative effectiveness of different communication antecedents to these routes; neither does it sufficiently specify if and how communication modalities (written vs. audio) and product/service type (hedonic vs. utilitarian) moderate their impact. To address this gap, the current article presents the results of a multimethod investigation. With a meta-analysis, Study 1 establishes the differential effects of antecedents on analytical and narrative processing and the moderating roles of both modality and product/service type. Study 2 gathers the expectations of marketing professionals to provide a comparison with the meta-analytic findings, highlighting areas of misalignment and a relevant managerial question pertaining to the effects of blended analytical–narrative messages. Study 3 addresses this relevant question with an experimental approach. The combined results offer novel insights into verbal persuasion and suggest several directions for research.
AB - Customers process persuasive verbal messages through analytical or narrative routes. Extant marketing research offers limited findings regarding the relative effectiveness of different communication antecedents to these routes; neither does it sufficiently specify if and how communication modalities (written vs. audio) and product/service type (hedonic vs. utilitarian) moderate their impact. To address this gap, the current article presents the results of a multimethod investigation. With a meta-analysis, Study 1 establishes the differential effects of antecedents on analytical and narrative processing and the moderating roles of both modality and product/service type. Study 2 gathers the expectations of marketing professionals to provide a comparison with the meta-analytic findings, highlighting areas of misalignment and a relevant managerial question pertaining to the effects of blended analytical–narrative messages. Study 3 addresses this relevant question with an experimental approach. The combined results offer novel insights into verbal persuasion and suggest several directions for research.
KW - Analytical processing
KW - Marketing communications
KW - Meta-analysis
KW - Multimethod
KW - Narrative processing
KW - Persuasion
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105001170660&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11747-025-01095-4
DO - 10.1007/s11747-025-01095-4
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105001170660
SN - 0092-0703
JO - Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science
JF - Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science
ER -