Emotional attachment to a brand and perception of its advertising
Automatic translate
The emotional connection between a consumer and a brand forms the foundation of long-term commercial relationships, influencing the perception of marketing communications. Attachment develops through cognitive-affective processes when a brand becomes embedded in a person’s value system and self-identity. Consumers with strong attachment demonstrate resilience to competitive offers and a willingness to pay more.
2 Impact on advertising perception
3 Relationship with satisfaction and loyalty
4 Measuring emotional attachment
5 Anthropomorphization and communication
6 Self-concept and identity
7 Cultural differences
8 Image and perceived value
9 Violations of norms and negative effects
10 Authenticity and trust
11 Branded love and passion
12 Tribalism and cooperation
The nature of emotional attachment
Brand attachment is the cognitive-emotional connection between a brand and a person’s self-image. This connection determines the accessibility of thoughts and feelings about the brand in the consumer’s mind, influencing the allocation of cognitive resources and attention. Brands become part of personal identity, serving as markers of self-definition.
The strength of attachment ranges from low, when choices are based on objective evaluation, to high, when consumers are willing to sacrifice personal resources to maintain a relationship with the brand. Deep attachment manifests itself in resistance to alternatives and insensitivity to price changes.
Attachment is formed through consistent positive interactions, value congruence, and effective emotional branding strategies. Narrative techniques and experiential design evoke emotions and form lasting bonds. Branding relies on emotional triggers that activate memories, a sense of belonging, or self-actualization.
Cognitive mechanisms
Consumer behavior is determined by emotions to a greater extent than rational assessment. Neuroscience research shows that 95% of purchasing decisions are made at a subconscious level, where emotional neural pathways determine preferences before rational assessment begins. The psychology of emotional branding is based on theories of needs and attachment.
Brand information is processed through a combination of emotional security, ego satisfaction, and alignment with personal values. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) reveals that consumers evaluate brands primarily through personal feelings and experiences, rather than product characteristics. The study found a distributed representation of brand associations across different brain regions.
Neurobiological foundations
Neuroimaging studies demonstrate activation of specific brain structures during the processing of information about food attachment. The left ventral pallidum, associated with positive reinforcement, and the right posterior cingulate cortex, involved in self-concept formation, are central regions in attachment mechanisms.
Psychophysiological analysis revealed a link between connectivity in the ventral pallidum and temporoparietal cortex, which correlated with activity in the dorsal raphe nucleus. This suggests similarities between object attachment and interpersonal attachment and the role of anthropomorphization in shaping feelings of security. Connections between the posterior cingulate cortex and the anterior hippocampus positively correlate with subjective assessments of attachment.
A study of the distribution of brand information in the brain revealed activation of the inferior frontal gyrus during semantic processing, the premotor and visual cortex during image processing, and the anterior and posterior cingulate cortex during emotional processing. These patterns indicate a complex representation of brand knowledge through thoughts, images, and feelings.
The prefrontal cortex and hippocampus are involved in brand recognition in adults. The medial prefrontal cortex is activated during judgments about people, while the lateral inferior parietal cortex is activated during evaluations of objects. The degree of anthropomorphization of a brand determines the pattern of neural activation.
Impact on advertising perception
Personal attachment to a brand moderates the advertising wearout effect. Research shows that strong attachment slows the negative perception of repeated advertising messages. This effect is explained by defensive cognitive mechanisms activated when the relationship with the brand is threatened.
People with strong attachment generate more positive thoughts to counteract negative ones, reflecting a response to a potential threat to their brand connection. The buffering effect is related to differences in cognitive processing rather than direct affective reactions. Three independent studies confirmed this effect using naturalistic measures and controlled manipulations of attachment.
Types of advertising messages
Psychological connection with a brand determines the effectiveness of different types of advertising messages. Levels of construction theory predicts that consumers with a strong connection think more concretely about a brand and respond better to utilitarian appeals, while those with a weak connection tend to think more abstractly and are more receptive to symbolic appeals.
The alignment between the degree of psychological connection with the brand community and the type of advertising message directly influences positive consumer attitudes, and subsequently, cognitions and behavior. Message elaboration acts as a mediating process, while relationship-oriented cultural values moderate this effect.
Narrative advertising evokes stronger emotional responses than factual advertising, enabling the formation of meaningful emotional connections with the audience. Engagement with advertising directly influences the formation of emotional attachment to the brand — the higher the engagement, the more likely attachment is to develop.
The role of trust and credibility
Attitudes toward advertising are linked to emotional attachment to the brand. Trust and belief in advertising messages, especially those from trusted sources, influence the emotional relationship between viewers and brands. Advertising that effectively conveys trustworthiness and credibility creates stronger attachment.
Attitudes formed through advertising have a direct and indirect impact on brand attachment, especially when advertising is perceived as attractive, engaging, and informative. A positive attitude toward advertising, based on trust in the message and the perceived value of the communication, strengthens the emotional connection.
Advertising that resonates with consumers on an emotional level not only influences brand perception but also fosters long-term relationships that enhance brand image and loyalty. Emotional advertising is 50% more effective than rationally focused advertising.
Relationship with satisfaction and loyalty
The interaction between satisfaction and emotional attachment creates a positive feedback loop, with each element reinforcing the other. There are three theoretical perspectives on this relationship: attachment predicts satisfaction; satisfaction leads to attachment; and emotional attachment mediates the relationship between satisfaction and loyalty.
The first perspective suggests that strong emotional connections lead to positive evaluative judgments, minimizing cognitive dissonance. The second emphasizes that repeated positive experiences form emotional attachment, emphasizing the importance of satisfaction in strengthening consumer-brand relationships.
Behavioral manifestations
Consumers with strong emotional attachment tend to act as brand advocates, recommending it and defending it against criticism. Attachment creates lasting loyalty, ensuring stability in volatile markets. It enhances the overall brand experience, integrating it into the consumer’s identity and daily life.
Emotionally connected consumers demonstrate a 306% higher lifetime value and are 71% more likely to recommend a company. Satisfaction mediates between brand attributes and emotional attachment, demonstrating how positive experiences shape emotional bonds and loyalty.
Loyalty includes a behavioral component (repeat purchases) and an attitudinal component (strong brand commitment). Consumers who feel emotional attachment and satisfaction are more likely to engage in loyal behavior, strengthening the consumer-brand relationship and contributing to long-term profitability.
Quantitative indicators
Empirical research confirms the strength of the relationships between the constructs. Analysis revealed that emotional attachment explains 76% of the variance in loyalty. The standardized regression coefficient was β=0.872, confirming that deep emotional connections with a brand shape consumer loyalty.
Higher emotional attachment correlates with greater satisfaction, and satisfaction predicts consumer loyalty, explaining 71.1% of the variance. Satisfaction mediates the relationship between emotional attachment and loyalty, indicating that satisfied consumers are more likely to remain loyal.
Emotional campaigns achieve a 50% higher ROI than rational approaches. A study by the Advertising Research Foundation identified "appeal" as the most reliable predictor of advertising-driven sales increases.
Measuring emotional attachment
The assessment of emotional attachment strength is based on the construct’s multidimensional structure. The developed scales include three components: connection, passion, and affection. All indicators demonstrate significant differences between conditions of strong and weak attachment.
In the high-attachment conditions, the mean values for connection were 4.35, for passion 3.85, and for attachment 3.63, while in the low-attachment conditions, the values were 1.73, 2.02, and 2.10, respectively. All differences reached a high level of statistical significance.
Validity of measurements
Correlations between the three dimensions of emotional attachment and the four behavioral manifestations of attachment were highly significant (all r values ranged from 0.66 to 0.80). Emotional attachment was strongly associated with each of the four behavioral manifestations of attachment.
Although attachment researchers in related disciplines typically assess attachment based on the existence of certain behaviors, the Emotional Attachment Scale captures the strength of this connection in a theoretically and empirically consistent manner with these behaviors, without the need to resort to inference.
The three-dimensional structure of emotional attachment reflects various aspects of the consumer-brand relationship. Connection characterizes the degree of cognitive unity with the brand, passion reflects the intensity of emotional involvement, and affection demonstrates warm feelings toward the brand.
Anthropomorphization and communication
Communication techniques influence the anthropomorphization of brands and subsequent connection with them. Teasing communications enhance consumer engagement and connection with the brand compared to simply funny or neutral communications. This effect occurs because consumers anthropomorphize brands that employ teasing communications to a greater extent.
Anthropomorphization leads to greater engagement with brand messages and a stronger connection with the brand. The literature on interpersonal teasing distinguishes between prosocial and antisocial teasing, identifying a significant boundary condition.
Types of communication
Prosocial teasing evokes a positive human schema, while antisocial teasing, although also anthropomorphic, activates a negative human schema, reducing brand connection. The content of the teasing defines a uniquely human form of communication, leading to anthropomorphization of the teasing brand.
The effect of anthropomorphism on engagement and brand connection differs for prosocial and antisocial teasers. Prosocial teasers evoke a positive human schema and increase engagement and brand connection, while antisocial teasers evoke a negative human schema, reducing engagement and connection.
Teasing promotes self-brand connection through anthropomorphization, but the nature of the teasing (prosocial or antisocial) determines the nature of the activated human schema (positive or negative), which influences the resulting self-brand connection.
Self-concept and identity
Congruence between consumer identity and brand is central to preference formation. Consumers use brand cues as images similar to their own self-concept to determine preferences. Choice or preference is unlikely without congruence.
Information inconsistent with a consumer’s self-concept is unlikely to attract attention, be accepted, or be remembered, and will not influence their desire to choose a given brand. Consumers may not perceive brand attributes as similar to their own, which does not influence their brand preference assessments.
Congruence and Choice
The relationship between self-brand congruence and brand identity focuses on how consumers evaluate the degree to which a brand’s identity matches their own when making a choice or forming a connection. Consumers who perceive a strong congruence between their own identity and a brand’s identity are more likely to demonstrate favorable attitudes and preference toward that brand.
Brands are embedded in the personality structure, acting as extensions of the self. The posterior cingulate cortex, which is involved in processing the self-concept, is activated when processing information about attachment to products. The individual concept of attachment and relationships with attached objects is represented in the anterior hippocampus.
Connections between the posterior cingulate cortex and the anterior hippocampus produce subjective awareness of attachment relationships. Associations between the memory and reward systems play a central role in the formation of attachments to products.
Cultural differences
National culture significantly influences consumer perceptions, brand loyalty, and purchasing behavior. Comparative studies reveal significant differences between cultural clusters. The Anglo cluster (the UK and the US) and the South Asian cluster (India and Iran) demonstrate different perspectives on brands, loyalty, and purchasing behavior.
Consumers in the Anglo cluster are more likely to have positive brand impressions, be loyal to companies, and have a strong propensity to purchase compared to consumers in South Asia, as indicated by higher average scores in all three categories.
Statistical differences
An analysis of variance reveals significant differences in consumer perceptions, brand loyalty, and purchasing behavior across cultural clusters, with p-values (0.000) for all three dependent variables. Brand loyalty (F = 14.25, p = 0.000) indicates that consumer loyalty levels are significantly dependent on national culture.
Cultural differences in brand loyalty are reflected in the between-group sum of squares (SS = 10.30), while the within-group variance (SS = 721.67) demonstrates the existence of variations in loyalty within each cultural cluster. These data provide compelling evidence that cultural influences play a significant role in determining the level of brand attachment.
Culturally-oriented relationship values weaken the effect of attachment-message congruence on the formation of favorable attitudes. The importance of considering cultural differences when developing marketing strategies for global markets is emphasized by research findings.
Image and perceived value
Brand image represents overall consumer perception. A positive image aligns with consumer expectations and strengthens emotional attachment, making the brand more attractive and trustworthy. Perceived value reflects the consumer’s assessment of the benefit-cost ratio.
High perceived value strengthens emotional attachment by providing tangible benefits — functional, emotional, or social. Brands that offer superior quality, competitive prices, or emotional satisfaction create deeper connections and lasting attachments.
Digital environment
In the digital marketing environment, satisfaction is linked to performance metrics such as engagement and conversion, indicating a strategic role in optimizing the brand experience. Emotional attachment is also conceptualized as a cognitive-affective connection that influences behavioral outcomes beyond traditional branding contexts, such as in prosocial consumption.
Consumers express brand affinity through passion, emotional connections, and positive reactions, leading to strong loyalty and repeat purchases. Brand love develops through consistent positive experiences, value alignment, and effective emotional branding strategies — such as storytelling and experiential marketing — that evoke emotions and create lasting brand connections.
Violations of norms and negative effects
Partnering with certain sources is perceived as a norm violation by consumers with high brand attachment. Attachment can lead to negative reactions when a brand acts contrary to expectations. Research shows that people with high brand attachment are more sensitive to brand actions that contradict their perceptions of it.
Cognitive dissonance arises when expectations and reality diverge. Satisfaction reduces cognitive dissonance — the psychological discomfort experienced when expectations and reality do not match. Emotional attachment minimizes cognitive dissonance by fostering positive evaluative judgments.
Defense mechanisms
A threat to the relationship with a brand activates defensive cognitive processes. Consumers with strong brand attachments generate counterarguments to counter information that potentially threatens their connection with the brand. This mechanism functions as an immunization against the negative impact of repeated advertising.
Defensive information processing reflects the motivation to maintain a relationship with a brand. The effect is observed in the cognitive realm, not in direct affective reactions. Attachment creates a cognitive buffer that protects brand perception from the influence of factors that typically lead to advertising wearout.
Authenticity and trust
Perceived brand authenticity is associated with the formation of attachment, loyalty, and willingness to pay a premium. Authenticity is a factor that determines the depth of the emotional relationship between the consumer and the brand. Brands that demonstrate consistent values and transparent communications build stronger bonds.
Social responsibility and values that resonate with consumer beliefs strengthen emotional connections. Brands that appeal to self-acceptance and environmental awareness create deep emotional bonds through authenticity. Exclusivity and prestige appeal to consumer aspirations and the desire for status.
Mechanisms for building trust
Trust is built through a consistent pattern of promises and their fulfillment. Psychological principles such as the hierarchy of needs explain how brands that satisfy high-level emotional needs (self-esteem, belonging) form stronger bonds. Brand attachment theory explains how consumers develop emotional connections with brands that align with their personal values and self-concept, driving loyalty and advocacy.
Personalized communications enhance emotional triggers. Memories, happiness, and empathy significantly influence consumer engagement. Emotionally connected consumers are 50% more valuable than highly satisfied consumers, highlighting the effectiveness of emotional branding strategies.
Branded love and passion
Brand love is a critical concept for building relationships between brands and consumers, as falling in love with a brand leads to strong loyalty. The neurobiological underpinnings of brand love are actively studied in neuromarketing. Various aspects of reward processing, including craving and liking, are associated with brand preferences.
Passion characterizes the intensity of emotional engagement with a brand. High passion scores correlate with brand defensiveness and willingness to recommend it. Passion is one of the key dimensions of emotional attachment, along with connection and affective commitment.
Long-term effects
Emotional connection transforms transactions into lasting relationships. Businesses that effectively utilize storytelling, color psychology, trust building, social proof, and sensory branding are more likely to stand out in a crowded marketplace. These elements combine to create an emotional resonance, making consumers feel a personal connection with the brand rather than simply buying a product or service.
Studies using functional magnetic resonance imaging have revealed the distribution of neural correlates of brand love across various brain regions, reflecting the complex nature of this phenomenon. The connection between the memory and reward systems plays a central role in the formation of lasting emotional bonds with brands.
Tribalism and cooperation
Emotional attachment to a brand is associated with the formation of brand tribes and cooperative value creation. Strong attachment fosters the formation of consumer communities united by a shared identification with the brand. Tribalism enhances the effects of attachment through social support and shared experiences.
The psychological sense of belonging to a brand community influences how consumers think about a brand and what types of advertising messages they perceive more effectively. Consumers with a strong sense of belonging to a brand community think about the brand more concretely.
Co-creation
Collaboration in value creation reflects the depth of consumer engagement in brand development. Emotionally connected consumers are more likely to participate in collaborative projects, propose ideas, and advocate for the brand. Advocacy is a natural consequence of a deep emotional connection.
Consumers with strong attachments are 71% more likely to recommend a brand to others, creating an organic marketing effect. The lifetime value of emotionally connected consumers is three times higher than that of other segments. These metrics demonstrate the economic significance of building emotional connections.