21 results on '"Davide C. Orazi"'
Search Results
2. There and Back Again: Bleed from Extraordinary Experiences
- Author
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Davide C Orazi and Tom van Laer
- Subjects
Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Anthropology ,Business and International Management - Abstract
From reenactments to pilgrimages, extraordinary experiences engage consumers with frames and roles that govern their actions for the duration of the experience. Exploring such extraordinary frames and roles, however, can make the act of returning to everyday life more difficult, a process prior research leaves implicit. The present ethnography of live action role-playing explains how consumers return from extraordinary experiences and how this process differs depending on consumers’ subjectivity. The emic term “bleed” captures the trace that extraordinary frames and roles leave in everyday life. The subjective tension between the extraordinary and the ordinary intensifies bleed. Consumers returning from the same experience can thus suffer different bleed intensities, charting four trajectories of return that differ in their potential for transformation: absent, compensatory, cathartic, and delayed. These findings lead to a transformative recursive process model of bleed that offers new insights into whether, how, and why consumers return transformed from extraordinary experiences with broader implications for experiential consumption and marketing.
- Published
- 2022
3. The effect of ending disclosure on the persuasiveness of narrative PSAs
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi, Liliana L. Bove, and Jing Lei
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Marketing ,Counterfactual thinking ,Persuasion ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Marketing communication ,Business economics ,0502 economics and business ,050211 marketing ,Narrative ,Public service ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050203 business & management ,media_common - Abstract
Cautionary stories in which misbehavior results in negative outcomes are often used in public service announcements (PSAs) to promote behavioral change. These cautionary stories can either disclose or withhold their endings and the associated negative outcomes for the characters involved. In four experiments, we show that disclosing (vs. withholding) a story’s ending increases persuasion due to greater counterfactual thinking about alternative actions that could have prevented the negative outcomes. Integrating these findings within the Transportation-Imagery Model of narrative persuasion, we also show how dispositional levels of need for cognitive closure can amplify the effect of ending disclosure in a PSA. Our findings have important implications for both marketing communicators and policy makers who seek to improve the effectiveness of PSAs.
- Published
- 2021
4. Consumer escapism: Scale development, validation, and physiological associations
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi, Kit Yi Mah, Tim Derksen, and Kyle B. Murray
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Marketing - Published
- 2023
5. To Erect Temples to Virtue: Effects of State Mindfulness on Other-Focused Ethical Behaviors
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi, Eugene Y. Chan, and Jiemiao Chen
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Economics and Econometrics ,Virtue ,Mindfulness ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,06 humanities and the arts ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Experimental research ,law.invention ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,State (polity) ,law ,0502 economics and business ,CLARITY ,060301 applied ethics ,Meditation ,Business and International Management ,Business ethics ,Psychology ,Law ,Social psychology ,050203 business & management ,media_common ,Quality of Life Research - Abstract
While prior research suggests a link between mindfulness and ethical decision-making, most of the evidence for this link is correlational and refers to self-focused ethical behaviors. The paucity of experimental evidence, coupled with a lack of clarity on what mechanisms underlie the effect, limits our understanding of whether and how mindfulness might foster other-focused ethical behaviors. In this research, we hypothesize that state mindfulness might promote other-focused ethical behaviors by increasing resourcefulness, which we define as a perceived state of resource abundance. Across four experimental studies, we report causal evidence for the effects of state mindfulness instantiated through brief mindful meditation exercises on other-focused ethical behaviors, including choice of fair-trade products (Study 1A), charitable giving (Study 1B), and volunteering (Study 1C and Study 2). Resourcefulness mediates the effects of mindfulness on other-focused ethical behaviors (Study 2). Our work answers the call for more experimental research on mindfulness and its important implications for ethical decision-making.
- Published
- 2019
6. LARPnography: an embodied embedded cognition method to probe the future
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi and Angela Gracia B. Cruz
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Marketing ,Cognitive science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Experiential learning ,Futures studies ,Naturalistic observation ,Embodied cognition ,Originality ,0502 economics and business ,050211 marketing ,Sociology ,Futures contract ,050203 business & management ,Meaning (linguistics) ,media_common ,Embodied embedded cognition - Abstract
PurposeThis paper aims to propose LARPnography as a more holistic method to probe the emergence of plausible futures, drawing on embodied embedded cognition literature and the emerging consumer practice of live-action role-playing (LARP). Current research methods for probing the future of markets and society rely mainly on expert judgment (i.e. Delphi), imagery or simulation of possible futures (i.e. scenario and simulation) and perspective taking (i.e. role-playing). The predominant focus on cognitive abstraction limits the insights researchers can extract from more embodied, sensorial and experiential approaches.Design/methodology/approachLARPnography is a qualitative method seeking to immerse participants within a plausible future to better understand the social and market dynamics that may unfold therein. Through careful planning, design, casting and fieldwork, researchers create the preconditions to let participants experience what the future may be and gather critical insights from naturalistic observations and post-event interviews.Practical implicationsOwing to its interactive nature and processual focus, LARPnography is best suited to investigate the adoption and diffusion of innovation, market emergence phenomena and radical societal changes, including the rise of alternative societies.Originality/valueDifferent from previous foresight methods, LARPnography creates immersive and perceptually stimulating replicas of plausible futures that research participants can inhabit. The creation of a fictional yet socio-material world ensures that socially constructed meaning is enriched by phenomenological and visceral insights.
- Published
- 2019
7. Integrating Construal-level Theory in Designing Fear Appeals in IS Security Research
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi, Merrill Warkentin, and Allen C. Johnston
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Protection motivation theory ,Is security ,Construal level theory ,Information security ,Psychology ,Fear appeal ,Social psychology ,Information Systems - Published
- 2019
8. Collaborative authenticity
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Fiona Joy Newton and Davide C. Orazi
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Marketing ,Knowledge management ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Source credibility ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Stakeholder ,Discriminant validity ,User-generated content ,Communication theory ,Integrated care ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Originality ,0502 economics and business ,Key (cryptography) ,050211 marketing ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,media_common - Abstract
PurposeEffective communication of information is central to integrated care systems (ICS), particularly between providers and care-consumers. Drawing on communication theory, this paper aims to investigate whether and why source effects increase positive evaluations of health-related messages among care-consumers. Design/methodology/approachA preliminary online survey (N = 525) establishes the discriminant validity of the measures used in the main experimental study. The main study (N = 116) examines whether identical messages disclosed to be created by different sources (i.e. institutional, care-consumer, collaborative) lead to different message evaluations, and whether source credibility and similarity, and message authenticity, explain this process. FindingsIn comparison to any other source, messages disclosed to be co-created are evaluated more positively by care-consumers. This effect occurs through a parallel serial mediation carried over by perceptions of source credibility and source similarity (parallel, first serial-level mediators) and message authenticity (second serial-level mediator). Practical implicationsThe findings offer guidelines for leveraging source effects in ICS communication strategies, signaling how collaborative message sources increase the favorableness of health message evaluations. Originality/valueThis research demonstrates the efficacy of drawing on marketing communication theory to build ICS communication capacity by showing how re-configuring the declared source of informational content can increase positive evaluations of health-related messages. In so doing, this research extends existing literature on message authenticity by demonstrating its key underlying role in affecting message evaluations.
- Published
- 2018
9. 'They Did Not Walk the Green Talk!:' How Information Specificity Influences Consumer Evaluations of Disconfirmed Environmental Claims
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi and Eugene Y. Chan
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Scrutiny ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Appeal ,Advertising ,06 humanities and the arts ,Consumer protection ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,0502 economics and business ,Credibility ,Corporate social responsibility ,060301 applied ethics ,Business ,Business and International Management ,Business ethics ,Law ,050203 business & management ,Quality of Life Research ,Skepticism ,media_common - Abstract
While environmental claims are increasingly used by companies to appeal consumers, they also attract greater scrutiny from independent parties interested in consumer protection. Consumers are now able to compare corporate environmental claims against external, often disconfirming, information to form their brand attitudes and purchase intentions. What remains unclear is how the level of information specificity of both the environmental claims and external disconfirming information interact to influence consumer reactions. Two experiments address this gap in the CSR communication literature. When specific (vs. vague) claims are countered by specific (vs. vague) external information, consumers report more negative brand attitudes and lower purchase intentions (Experiment 1). The effect is serially mediated by (1) skepticism toward the claims and (2) lack of corporate credibility (Experiment 2). We conclude by discussing strategies that firms can utilize to avoid information dilution and ensure that external disconfirming information percolates to consumers as specific.
- Published
- 2018
10. No Rest for the Wicked
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi and Matthias Koch
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Marketing ,Consumption (economics) ,05 social sciences ,Advertising ,Social marketing ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rest (finance) ,0502 economics and business ,050211 marketing ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Business ,Macromarketing ,Consumer behaviour - Abstract
Wicked consumption behavior, namely the inflated consumption of unhealthy commodities such as tobacco and soft drinks, constitutes a leading risk for noncommunicable diseases including cancer and diabetes. Despite the fatal impact of wicked consumption on societal welfare, both the social marketing literature and the public policy literature lack a systematic framework capturing the unfolding of the wicked consumption cycle and providing guidance on when and how to intervene upstream. Drawing on historical data on tobacco and soft drink consumption in the U.S., we propose a four-stage epidemic life cycle of wicked consumer behavior. The biological and habitual factors that make different types of wicked consumption appealing to consumers are reinforced by the marketing activities of the manufacturers. To overcome the strong resistance posed by habitual wicked consumption, we articulate a typology of upstream intervention parameters and provide guidance on when and how to intervene depending on the desired long-term equilibrium.
- Published
- 2017
11. Macro-Level Interventions in Systems of Wicked Consumption
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi, Srishti Varma, and Matthias Koch
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Consumption (economics) ,Public economics ,Psychological intervention ,Macro level ,Business - Published
- 2019
12. Running field experiments using Facebook split test
- Author
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Allen C. Johnston and Davide C. Orazi
- Subjects
Ecological validity ,Facebook ,Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental research ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,Crowdsourcing ,Article ,Field (computer science) ,0502 economics and business ,Relevance (information retrieval) ,Internal validity ,media_common ,Marketing ,Flexibility (engineering) ,Variables ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Online advertising ,Field study ,Contrast (statistics) ,Split testing ,Data quality ,050211 marketing ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer ,050203 business & management - Abstract
Business researchers use experimental methods extensively due to their high internal validity. However, controlled laboratory and crowdsourcing settings often introduce issues of artificiality, data contamination, and low managerial relevance of the dependent variables. Field experiments can overcome these issues but are traditionally time- and resource-consuming. This primer presents an alternative experimental setting to conduct online field experiments in a time- and cost-effective way. It does so by introducing the Facebook A/B split test functionality, which allows for random assignment of manipulated variables embedded in ecologically-valid stimuli. We compare and contrast this method against laboratory settings and Amazon Mechanical Turk in terms of design flexibility, managerial relevance, data quality control, and sample representativeness. We then provide an empirical demonstration of how to set up, pre-test, run, and analyze FBST experiments.
- Published
- 2019
13. There and Back Again: How Consumers Live and Extend Narrative Brands
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi and Tom van Laer
- Subjects
History ,Coping (psychology) ,Polymers and Plastics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Temporality ,Live action ,Consumption (sociology) ,Romance ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Feeling ,Aesthetics ,Ethnography ,Narrative ,Sociology ,Business and International Management ,media_common - Abstract
Extraordinary experiences create narrative worlds, defined as coherent, representative situation models woven from narrative elements. While narrative worlds are transitory, the challenge of returning to the everyday world has not been systematically unpacked. This study determines three dimensions of extraordinary experience that distinguish between the ranges of closing narrative worlds: intensity, engagement, and temporality. A multi-site ethnography of live action role-play identifies the challenge of closing a narrative world as “bleed”: the influence of consumers’ feelings, thoughts, and behaviors in the narrative world on those in the everyday world. Four types of bleed are found: disembedding, dissipation, disembodiment, and romantic. Consumers can cope with bleed by enacting strategies from one of two groups: keeping the portal to the narrative world open or closing the portal, resulting in either advantageous transformation or disadvantageous trans-mutilation. The findings have theoretical implications for understanding portals, narrative transportation, and extraordinary experience as well as practical implications for managing the capitalization of—and consumer distress from—experiential consumption.
- Published
- 2019
14. Developing Improvisation Skills: The Influence of Individual Orientations
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Davide C. Orazi, Kristine De Valck, and Pier Vittorio Mannucci
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Cognitive science ,Improvisation ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,STRUCTURES ,05 social sciences ,DEVELOPMENT, IMPROVISATION, LIVE ACTION ROLE-PLAYING, ORIENTATIONS, STRUCTURES ,DEVELOPMENT ,ORIENTATIONS ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,LIVE ACTION ROLE-PLAYING ,0502 economics and business ,050211 marketing ,Relevance (information retrieval) ,IMPROVISATION ,Role playing ,Psychology ,050203 business & management - Abstract
The growing relevance of improvisation for successful organizing calls for a better understanding of how individuals develop improvisation skills. While research has investigated the role of training and simulations, little is known about how individuals develop improvisation skills when formal training is not an option and how individual-level factors shape development trajectories. We explore these issues in a longitudinal qualitative analysis of live action role-playing. Our findings reveal a three-stage process of improvisation development shaped by the presence of task and social structures, which act as both constraints and resources. Moreover, our findings illuminate how collaborative and competitive orientations shape whether improvisers perceive these structures as a resource that they need to nurture and renew (i.e., collaborative) or to seize and exploit (i.e., competitive). We also show that individual orientations are not always enduring but can change over time, engendering four types of improvisation development trajectories. Our work provides a longitudinal account of how individual orientations shape the process of improvisation development. In so doing, we also explain why individuals who are skilled improvisers do not necessarily improvise effectively as a collective, and we reconcile different conceptualizations of improvisation.
- Published
- 2020
15. Empowering social change through advertising co-creation: the roles of source disclosure, sympathy and personal involvement
- Author
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Liliana L. Bove, Davide C. Orazi, and Jing Lei
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Marketing ,Consumer-generated advertising ,business.industry ,Communication ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Social change ,Public policy ,Advertising ,Citizen journalism ,Public relations ,Business economics ,0502 economics and business ,Sympathy ,Co-creation ,050211 marketing ,business ,Psychology ,Health communication ,050203 business & management ,media_common - Abstract
Despite the emerging trend of adopting co-creative approaches in public and non-profit advertising, research has overlooked participatory approaches in non-commercial settings. This research extends current knowledge on consumer-generated advertising to communications fostering positive social change. The results of an experimental study show that the disclosure of consumer participation in the ad creation process results in positive ad evaluations and reduces positive attitudes towards unhealthy eating. The main effect of source disclosure on ad evaluations is mediated by sympathy towards the ad creator. In addition, floodlight analyses show that the main effect of source disclosure on ad evaluations and attitudes is amplified when the audience is highly involved with the advertised issue. Implications for theory, practice and public policy are discussed.
- Published
- 2015
16. The nature and framing of gambling consequences in advertising
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi, Liliana L. Bove, and Jing Lei
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Marketing ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Self-esteem ,Advertising ,Fear appeal ,Social marketing ,Business economics ,Framing (social sciences) ,Construal level theory ,Attitude change ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Recreation ,media_common - Abstract
This research investigates the impact of the nature and framing of gambling consequences in responsible gambling advertisements. Two experimental studies are conducted to assess (1) the construal level of gambling consequences, and (2) the influence of the nature and framing of gambling consequences on advertising effectiveness for both recreational and problem gamblers. The results show that, compared to material consequences, social consequences are at a higher construal level and are more effective in reducing the propensity to gamble. This differential impact of social versus material consequences is stronger among problem gamblers (vs. recreational gamblers) and when the consequences are presented as losses (vs. gains). Implications for public health agencies and social marketers are discussed.
- Published
- 2015
17. Revisiting fear appeals: A structural re-inquiry of the protection motivation model
- Author
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Marta Pizzetti and Davide C. Orazi
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Marketing ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Research context ,Population ,Public relations ,Fear appeal ,Compliance (psychology) ,Response efficacy ,Perception ,Psychology ,business ,education ,Social psychology ,media_common ,Social influence - Abstract
Replicating Johnston and Warkentin (2010), we demonstrate that social influence and self-efficacy are the main drivers of compliance with fear appeals. Contrary to the original study, we find that the acknowledgment of a severe threat encourages subjects to seize on the proposed recommendation, bolstering perceptions of efficacy. With this sole exception, the original results are fully replicated in a different research context employing a different population.
- Published
- 2015
18. Le leadership du secteur public : nouvelles perspectives pour la recherche et la pratique
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi, Giovanni Valotti, and Alex Turrini
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General Engineering - Abstract
Dans le present article, notre intention est de decrire l’etat actuel de nos connaissances dans le domaine du leadership du secteur public afin de proposer des orientations pour la recherche et la pratique. A cette fin, nous passons en revue les differents courants de la litterature sur le leadership du secteur public (PSL, pour « Public Sector Leadership ») et les classons dans un cadre unique. Les resultats de notre etude indiquent que le leadership du secteur public devient peu a peu un domaine distinct et autonome dans les etudes sur l’administration publique/la gestion publique, meme si le debat est encore peu developpe par rapport aux etudes sur l’administration des affaires. Les competences en leadership jouent bel et bien un role important dans l’amelioration de la performance des organisations du secteur public, et il est tres probable que le style de leadership optimal soit un style integre : les responsables du secteur public doivent se comporter essentiellement comme des responsables transformationnels, qui tirent moderement parti de leurs relations transactionnelles avec leurs executants et qui reconnaissent avant tout l’importance du maintien de l’integrite et de l’ethique dans l’execution des tâches.Remarques a l’intention des praticiensLa presente etude sur le leadership public indique que les responsables administratifs dans le secteur public se comportent differemment de leurs homologues du secteur prive et que des programmes de developpement du leadership s’imposent, qui prennent en consideration ces differences plutot que de simplement copier des programmes destines aux responsables du secteur prive.
- Published
- 2013
19. Make It More Authentic: The Drivers of Positive Ad Evaluations in Co-created Health Communications
- Author
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Davide C. Orazi, Liliana L. Bove, Jing Lei, and Max Theilacker
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Engineering ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public health ,Source credibility ,Internet privacy ,Advertising ,Customer relationship management ,Business economics ,Identification (information) ,Perception ,medicine ,business ,Attribution ,media_common - Abstract
The reported lack of research on consumer-to-health department interactions (Andersen et al. 2012) and the audience’s perceptions that many health campaigns greatly exaggerate health risks (Cancer Vic 2012) suggest that increased consumer involvement in the design of health messages and increased message authenticity may enhance the persuasiveness of many, limitedly successful public health campaigns (e.g., Darrow and Biersterker 2008; de Gruchy and Coppel 2008; Kerr et al. 2013). Source effects literature (Wilson and Sherrell 1993) suggests that positive message evaluations may be strengthened when the audience develops a sense of identification with the message source. Similar, audience evaluations may benefit from messages that are perceived to be more authentic, since message authenticity enables self-referencing to the scenarios depicted in the health message (Ertimur and Gilly 2012).
- Published
- 2016
20. AUTHENTICITY, SOURCE DISCLOSURE AND CO-CREATOR IDENTITY: THE POTENTIAL OF ADVERTISING CO-CREATION FOR PUBLIC HEALTH CAMPAIGNS
- Author
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Max Theilacker and Davide C. Orazi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Public health ,Political science ,medicine ,Co-creation ,Identity (social science) ,Advertising - Published
- 2014
21. Game of Roles: Meaningful playing in organizations
- Author
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Kristine De Valck, Pier Vittorio Mannucci, and Davide C. Orazi
- Subjects
Improvisation ,Cognitive science ,Spacetime ,Computer science ,Bounded function ,Phenomenon ,General Medicine ,Simulation - Abstract
Play is an important tool in modern organizations. Despite its intrinsically dynamic nature, play continues to be conceptualized as a sporadic phenomenon, bounded in time and space. Based on an ind...
- Published
- 2016
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