In recent years, much research has been concerned with the effects of sponsorships and the possible advantages a company can gain from engaging in sponsoring activities. Recently focus has been on the role, that sponsoring plays in branding strategy. Here it becomes important to understand exactly what a potential party to be sponsored contributes to the perception of a brand or a company. In this paper, the aim has been reversed to focus on the sponsored party. We propose a number of measurements to determine emotional responses and overall evaluations associated with a sponsored party who is a part of a sponsorship agreement with a company. Four different groups of parties to be sponsored are investigated: social aid organisations, culture, sport and TV-programmes. Several interesting results emerged from this study; the parties to be sponsored were evaluated very differently on the dimensions used in the study and it is shown that a company can gain very different results depending on the type of object to choose to sponsor. Furthermore, it was shown that the overall evaluation of a party to be sponsored to a large extent is determined by emotions.
Maps differences among Danish children of 5‐18 years from the perspective of children as consumers; Denmark is a society characterised by high Internet use and a high degree of gender equality. Examines purchasing power, brand awareness, and media use; the media studied were internet, TV, cinema, and mobile phones. Explains the methodology used, which was both qualitative and quantitative, used self‐report questionnaires, and divided the study group into four age groups. Concludes that there are distinct differences between boys and girls: boys are better informed about brands, have more pocket money, use the Internet more, have better access to cable and satellite television, prefer computer games to internet chat, and have more positive attitudes to advertisements; the gender differences grow, reach a maximum in the 8‐12 year old group, and then diminish.
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