More Is (Not Always) Better: A Multi-Year Analysis of Advertising Effects on Ad Recall

Authors

  • Kristen L. Sussman University of Texas at Austin
  • Laura F. Bright University of Texas at Austin
  • Gary B. Wilcox University of Texas at Austin

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jmdc.v15i4.4772

Keywords:

marketing development, engagement, brand communication, social media, recall, ad technology, Facebook advertising, ad fatigue, advertising effects

Abstract

Using data from 46 businesses and over 21,000 ads, this study provides an analysis of the relationship between advertising spend, engagement and ad recall on Facebook. An initial analysis reveals that advertising spend, and post comments are positively associated with ad recall, while frequency is negatively associated. A second analysis, segmented the data by the advertiser objective of brand awareness, video views or post engagement and reveals additional insight into the relationships between the variables. It is concluded that Facebook offers an effective channel to drive recall, but that advertisers should be careful to avoid ad fatigue. In total, the results provide evidence that Facebook advertising can easily become intrusive, and that brand awareness driven advertising exhibit the most promising relationship with ad recall.

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Published

2021-12-08

How to Cite

Sussman, K. L., Bright, L. F., & Wilcox, G. B. (2021). More Is (Not Always) Better: A Multi-Year Analysis of Advertising Effects on Ad Recall. Journal of Marketing Development and Competitiveness, 15(4). https://doi.org/10.33423/jmdc.v15i4.4772

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Section

Articles