El acceso a la versión del editor puede requerir la suscripción del recurso Access to the published version may require subscription
MEASURING SOFT-SELL VERSUS HARD-SELL ADVERTISING APPEALSOkazaki, Shintaro; Mueller, Barbara; Taylor, Charles R
ABSTRACTThe terms "soft sell" and "hard sell" are well known to advertising scholars and practitioners. Despite widespread use of these terms, generally accepted definitions do not exist. Attempts to measure soft-sell and hard-sell appeals have typically been unsophisticated, relying on a single item that classifies an ad into one category or the other. This study is designed to provide a deeper understanding of the concepts "soft sell" and "hard sell," and to examine whether they are better measured on a single dimension than on two distinct dimensions. The main objective of the study is to develop and validate a method for measuring soft-sell and hard-sell appeals. To this end, candidate items were generated via a review of prior literature, supplemented by content analysis, a free-association task, expert judgment, and focus groups. The measurement instruments were then purified and validated using a pretest with a sample of student participants, and further validated using a general consumer sample. Results indicate that soft-sell appeals can be measured using a 12-item, 3-factor index, whereas hard-sell appeals can be measured using a 15-item, 3-factor index.The concepts of soft-sell versus hard-sell advertising and related ideas have been discussed in the U.S. advertising trade literature for nearly a century (Beard 2004). Generally, advertising scholars and practitioners, as well as consumers, have a sense that "hard sell" refers to a more direct approach to selling, with the focus on encouraging a quick sale, whereas "soft-sell" approaches are more subtle and indirect. In spite of the widespread use of the terms "hard sell" and "soft sell," the academic literature to date has no widely accepted definition of either "hard sell" or "soft sell."Although some commonly used definitions appear to accurately reflect what academics and practitioners have in mind when they refer to "hard sell" and "soft sell," at present no adequate instrument to measure these appeal types has been developed. This is unfortunate because these appeal types have been employed in numerous academic studies and are described in many advertising textbooks. These appeal types have been particularly prominent in cross-cultural studies comparing advertising appeals. In spite of the ubiquity of the "soft-sell" and "hard-sell"concepts, major handbooks of marketing and advertising scales, including Bearden andNetemeyer (1998) andBruner, Hensel, andJames (2005), do not list a scale for measuring these appeals.The study is designed to contribute to the literature in multiple ways. First, as indicated above, the study proposes a clear conceptualization of "hard-sell" and "soft-sell" appeals, and how they are distinct from other types of appeals. A second contribution of the study is an assessment of wheth...