“…Two-sided advertising, however, is not necessarily always persuasive. Previous research has provided mixed results for the effects of two-sided advertising on brand attitudes or purchase intentions, and some studies have even shown that two-sided advertising can detrimentally affect these dependent variables (e.g., Etgar & Goodwin, 1982;Settle & Golden, 1974;Stayman, Hoyer, & Leone, 1987). Crowley and Hoyer (1994) have suggested that such conflicting findings are due to variations in the proportion of negative information included in the two-sided message.…”