Stop and smell the roses: How and when busyness impacts consumers' preference for minimalist advertisements

Author:

Chen Siyun1ORCID,Ponomarenko Veronika2ORCID,Xiao Tingwen3,Lv Linxiang4,Liu Guanrong5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Advertising, School of Journalism and Communication Jinan University Guangzhou China

2. School of Marketing and Innovation, Muma College of Business University of South Florida Tampa Florida USA

3. Department of Marketing, School of Management Jinan University Guangzhou China

4. Department of Marketing, School of Business Administration Northeastern University Shenyang China

5. UQ Business School University of Queensland Saint Lucia Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractIn an era marked by the rapid growth of digital media and increasingly limited attention spans, advertisements employing minimalist aesthetics have emerged as a compelling approach. Yet, the specific conditions under which consumers favor minimalist ads remain underexplored. Through a comprehensive series of studies, including a field study and five scenario‐based experiments, this research unveils new insights into how busyness shapes consumer preferences for minimalist ad designs. This research found that busyness notably steers preferences toward minimalist over complex ads, both in real‐world (Study 1) and experimental environments (Study 2). Notably, we revealed a serial mediation, with busyness affecting ad preference through the desire for relaxation (distal mediator) followed by the intent to avoid processing disfluency (proximal mediator) (Study 3). Furthermore, two boundary conditions were identified in which this effect is attenuated or intensified. When consumers place a high (vs. low) price on time, the busyness effect on minimalism preference is undermined (Study 4). In addition, this effect is more pronounced when a temporal landmark that designates an end (vs. start) is made salient (Studies 5 and 6). These insights not only illuminate consumer behavior in visual marketing but also carry significant practical implications for advertisers, marketing professionals, and policymakers.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Marketing,Applied Psychology

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