Frank Gregory Cabano, Mengge Li, Fernando R. Jiménez
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引用次数: 0
摘要
目的本文旨在研究消费者如何以及为何对社交媒体上的首席执行官(CEO)激进主义做出反应。在研究 1a 中,作者研究了 90 位首席执行官的 83259 条推文,并比较了消费者对有争议和无争议推文的反应。在研究 1b 中,作者使用机器学习主题建模方法重复了上述分析。在研究 2 和研究 3 中,作者使用实验设计对理论机制进行了检验。研究结果平均而言,消费者倾向于对 CEO 发布的涉及非争议性问题的帖子做出更多回应。消费者之所以相对不愿意喜欢和分享有争议的帖子,是因为害怕被拒绝。然而,首席执行官的名气会逆转这种效应。消费者更有可能参与热门 CEO 发表的有争议的积极主动帖子。这种效应在公众自我意识较高(与较低)的消费者中也存在。首席执行官的名气是消费者保护其网络形象的 "盾牌"。未来的研究可能会在其他社交媒体平台和国家复制这项研究。作者介绍了 "屏蔽"--喜欢和分享由知名人士撰写的内容--作为社交媒体上印象管理的一种策略。实践意义著名 CEO 应在社交媒体上就有争议的问题发表意见,因为他们的声音有助于消费者更多地参与此类对话。
Consumer responses to CEO activism: an impression management approach
Purpose
This paper aims to examine how and why consumers respond to chief executive officer (CEO) activism on social media. The authors developed a conceptual model that proposes impression management as a mechanism for consumer response to CEO activism.
Design/methodology/approach
In Study 1a, the authors examined 83,259 tweets from 90 CEOs and compared consumer responses between controversial and noncontroversial tweets. In Study 1b, the authors replicated the analysis, using a machine-learning topic modeling approach. In Studies 2 and 3, the authors used experimental designs to test the theoretical mechanism.
Findings
On average, consumers tend to respond more to CEO posts dealing with noncontroversial issues. Consumers’ relative reluctance to like and share controversial posts is motivated by fear of rejection. However, CEO fame reverses this effect. Consumers are more likely to engage in controversial activist threads by popular CEOs. This effect holds for consumers high (vs low) in public self-consciousness. CEO fame serves as a “shield” behind which consumers protect their online image.
Research limitations/implications
The study focused on Twitter (aka “X”) in the USA. Future research may replicate the study in other social media platforms and countries. The authors introduce “shielding” – liking and sharing content authored by a recognizable source – as a tactic for impression management on social media.
Practical implications
Famous CEOs should speak up about controversial issues on social media because their voice helps consumers engage more in such conversations.
Originality/value
This paper offers a theoretical framework to understand consumer reactions to CEO activism.
期刊介绍:
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