When and how does Singlish outperform English? Explicating the roles of language variation and ethnic cues in advertising effectiveness

Amidst increasingly globalised consumer markets, international brands have been experimenting with localised advertising strategies to build rapport with ethnic audiences. One such strategy is the utilisation of local languages in ads. In Singapore, the prevalence of two English language systems (i....

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Main Authors: Goh, Xin Yun, Lee, Yan Jie, Loon, Bryan Kin Tat, Por, Xin Rong
Other Authors: Chen Lou
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137518
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1375182020-03-31T06:45:24Z When and how does Singlish outperform English? Explicating the roles of language variation and ethnic cues in advertising effectiveness Goh, Xin Yun Lee, Yan Jie Loon, Bryan Kin Tat Por, Xin Rong Chen Lou Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information chenlou@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Communication Amidst increasingly globalised consumer markets, international brands have been experimenting with localised advertising strategies to build rapport with ethnic audiences. One such strategy is the utilisation of local languages in ads. In Singapore, the prevalence of two English language systems (i.e., Standard English and Singlish) is ideal for studying how language variation affects advertising effectiveness. Informed by the Communication Accommodation Theory, and literature on ethnic cues and perceived warmth, this study explicated how language variation and ethnic cues in ads influence purchase intentions across high- and low-involvement products. Our findings demonstrated that, for a high-involvement product (i.e., laptop), when ethnic cues were absent, participants perceived more warmth toward the Singlish (vs. Standard English) ad, leading to increased purchase intentions. Conversely, when ethnic cues were present, participants’ perceived warmth of the Singlish ad did not differ from that of the Standard English ad. For a low-involvement product (i.e., instant coffee), participants indicated higher purchase intentions when viewing the ad with ethnic cues than the ad without ethnic cues. Our findings advanced literature on the effect of language variation on advertising efficacy, identified ethnic cues as the boundary condition influencing language variation, and perceived warmth as an underlying mechanism. Bachelor of Communication Studies 2020-03-31T06:45:24Z 2020-03-31T06:45:24Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137518 en CS/19/041 application/pdf application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Communication
spellingShingle Social sciences::Communication
Goh, Xin Yun
Lee, Yan Jie
Loon, Bryan Kin Tat
Por, Xin Rong
When and how does Singlish outperform English? Explicating the roles of language variation and ethnic cues in advertising effectiveness
description Amidst increasingly globalised consumer markets, international brands have been experimenting with localised advertising strategies to build rapport with ethnic audiences. One such strategy is the utilisation of local languages in ads. In Singapore, the prevalence of two English language systems (i.e., Standard English and Singlish) is ideal for studying how language variation affects advertising effectiveness. Informed by the Communication Accommodation Theory, and literature on ethnic cues and perceived warmth, this study explicated how language variation and ethnic cues in ads influence purchase intentions across high- and low-involvement products. Our findings demonstrated that, for a high-involvement product (i.e., laptop), when ethnic cues were absent, participants perceived more warmth toward the Singlish (vs. Standard English) ad, leading to increased purchase intentions. Conversely, when ethnic cues were present, participants’ perceived warmth of the Singlish ad did not differ from that of the Standard English ad. For a low-involvement product (i.e., instant coffee), participants indicated higher purchase intentions when viewing the ad with ethnic cues than the ad without ethnic cues. Our findings advanced literature on the effect of language variation on advertising efficacy, identified ethnic cues as the boundary condition influencing language variation, and perceived warmth as an underlying mechanism.
author2 Chen Lou
author_facet Chen Lou
Goh, Xin Yun
Lee, Yan Jie
Loon, Bryan Kin Tat
Por, Xin Rong
format Final Year Project
author Goh, Xin Yun
Lee, Yan Jie
Loon, Bryan Kin Tat
Por, Xin Rong
author_sort Goh, Xin Yun
title When and how does Singlish outperform English? Explicating the roles of language variation and ethnic cues in advertising effectiveness
title_short When and how does Singlish outperform English? Explicating the roles of language variation and ethnic cues in advertising effectiveness
title_full When and how does Singlish outperform English? Explicating the roles of language variation and ethnic cues in advertising effectiveness
title_fullStr When and how does Singlish outperform English? Explicating the roles of language variation and ethnic cues in advertising effectiveness
title_full_unstemmed When and how does Singlish outperform English? Explicating the roles of language variation and ethnic cues in advertising effectiveness
title_sort when and how does singlish outperform english? explicating the roles of language variation and ethnic cues in advertising effectiveness
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137518
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