The Formation and Effect of Attitude Importance in Professional Sport

There are no files associated with this record.

Title The Formation and Effect of Attitude Importance in Professional Sport
Author Pritchard, Mark P.; Funk, Daniel Carl
Journal Name European Journal of Marketing
Year Published 2010
Place of publication United Kingdom
Publisher Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Abstract Purpose – Current research has largely overlooked importance as a meta-attitude consumers develop from related judgments. Drawing from observations by consumer theorists and attitude strength researchers, the present study seeks to investigate the formation and effect of attitude importance in an experiential setting, spectator sport. Design/methodology/approach – The study adapts a stimulus-response framework to conduct a structural examination of attitude importance. The investigation includes a multi-stage sampling procedure that distributed surveys to spectators attending five professional sport matches (n=370). Findings – Path analysis of a multiple indicator-multiple cause (MIMIC) model revealed that perceptions of technical and functional aspects of the service experience fuel a meta-attitude of importance. When evident in dual judgments of product interest and brand importance, the construct is able to play a significant role in patron responses. Research limitations/implications – These findings offer insight on the nature of importance and its role in moderating spectator behavior. Support for the structural sequence also holds implications for researchers interested in delineating other strong attitudes. However, study findings are limited to hedonic service consumers and await replication in other product settings. Practical implications – Practical implications consider different mixes of dual judgments and strategies organizations might use to leverage a meta-attitude of importance in their patrons. Examples of scenario-based challenges to managing this disposition in the sport industry and in other consumer contexts are discussed. Originality/value – Despite early attention by marketing practitioners on the importance of individual product features, explanations of how a larger meta-attitude forms and affects customers are rare. The study developed a MIMIC model and used path analysis to address the matter.
Peer Reviewed Yes
Published Yes
Alternative URI http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/03090561011047508
Volume 44
Issue Number 7/8
Page from 1017
Page to 1036
ISSN 0309 - 0566
Date Accessioned 2010-09-06
Date Available 2010-09-30T09:14:11Z
Language en_AU
Research Centre Centre for Tourism, Sport and Services Research
Faculty Griffith Business School
Subject Marketing Management (incl Strategy and Customer Relations); Sport and Leisure Management
URI http://hdl.handle.net/10072/34311
Publication Type Journal Articles (Refereed Article)
Publication Type Code c1

Brief Record

Griffith University copyright notice