{"title":"Plastic-Free Brand Choices as a Holistic Approach to Self-Care: A Netnographic Analysis of Young Consumers’ Motivations","authors":"Angela A. Beccanulli, Silvia Biraghi","doi":"10.1057/s41299-024-00186-2","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Young consumers are increasingly taking on the mantle of champions for sustainable behavior. However, notwithstanding the long-established and rich debate on sustainable consumption, studies are missing that delve deeper on how young consumers, especially Millennials and Gen Z, dialogically frame their sustainable consumption choices and their favor for sustainable brands. We conduct an in-depth netnographic investigation that provides a deep cultural understanding of the motivations and priorities that young consumers associate with sustainable choices in their social media conversations, which represent the most common ground where sustainable commitments are discussed. Considering that plastic-free refillable water bottles are emerging as the daily consumption choice that young consumers are adopting to pursue a more sustainable lifestyle, we see in that a compelling research context in which the motivations that young consumers prioritize when they embrace plastic-free brands can be explored. Our findings visually map and dig deeper into the complex constellation of the dominant themes and interplays among them that young consumers discuss in their conversations about the adoption of plastic-free refillable water bottles. Across all the conversations we analyzed, the notion of care emerges as the key priority for young consumers and sustainable consumption is depicted as a holistic form of self-care. Our paper contributes to delve deeper into those conversational dynamics in and through which the priorities related to sustainable consumption choices are shaped and constructed through the expressive and material capacities of the different social formations that are engaged into the discussion of sustainability issues. Our paper also provides a methodological blueprint for the investigation of the dialogic process of sustainable brand building.</p>","PeriodicalId":47317,"journal":{"name":"CORPORATE REPUTATION REVIEW","volume":"12 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"CORPORATE REPUTATION REVIEW","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1057/s41299-024-00186-2","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"BUSINESS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Young consumers are increasingly taking on the mantle of champions for sustainable behavior. However, notwithstanding the long-established and rich debate on sustainable consumption, studies are missing that delve deeper on how young consumers, especially Millennials and Gen Z, dialogically frame their sustainable consumption choices and their favor for sustainable brands. We conduct an in-depth netnographic investigation that provides a deep cultural understanding of the motivations and priorities that young consumers associate with sustainable choices in their social media conversations, which represent the most common ground where sustainable commitments are discussed. Considering that plastic-free refillable water bottles are emerging as the daily consumption choice that young consumers are adopting to pursue a more sustainable lifestyle, we see in that a compelling research context in which the motivations that young consumers prioritize when they embrace plastic-free brands can be explored. Our findings visually map and dig deeper into the complex constellation of the dominant themes and interplays among them that young consumers discuss in their conversations about the adoption of plastic-free refillable water bottles. Across all the conversations we analyzed, the notion of care emerges as the key priority for young consumers and sustainable consumption is depicted as a holistic form of self-care. Our paper contributes to delve deeper into those conversational dynamics in and through which the priorities related to sustainable consumption choices are shaped and constructed through the expressive and material capacities of the different social formations that are engaged into the discussion of sustainability issues. Our paper also provides a methodological blueprint for the investigation of the dialogic process of sustainable brand building.
年轻消费者正日益成为可持续行为的拥护者。然而,尽管有关可持续消费的讨论由来已久且内容丰富,但却缺少深入研究年轻消费者(尤其是千禧一代和 Z 世代)如何以对话的方式确定他们的可持续消费选择以及他们对可持续品牌的青睐。我们开展了一项深入的网络调查,从文化角度深入了解了年轻消费者在社交媒体对话中将可持续消费与可持续选择联系在一起的动机和优先事项,社交媒体是讨论可持续承诺的最常见场所。考虑到无塑料可充装水瓶正在成为年轻消费者追求更可持续生活方式的日常消费选择,我们认为这是一个极具吸引力的研究背景,在此背景下可以探索年轻消费者在接受无塑料品牌时优先考虑的动机。我们的研究结果直观地描绘并深入挖掘了年轻消费者在关于采用无塑料笔芯水瓶的对话中讨论的主导主题及其相互影响的复杂关系。在我们分析的所有对话中,"关爱 "这一概念成为年轻消费者关注的重点,而可持续消费则被描述为一种全面的自我关爱形式。我们的论文有助于深入探讨这些对话动态,在这些对话中,通过参与可持续发展问题讨论的不同社会形态的表达能力和物质能力,与可持续消费选择相关的优先事项得以形成和构建。我们的论文还为研究可持续品牌建设的对话过程提供了方法论蓝图。
期刊介绍:
Corporate Reputation Review is the leading international journal for all scholars and academics concerned with managing and measuring corporate reputation.The Journal is reviewed by a distinguished editorial board, under the guidance of Guido Berens (Erasmus University, The Netherlands). Corporate Reputation Review provides a forum for rigorous, practically relevant academic research into reputations and reputation management, as well as related concepts such as identity and corporate communication.