Conspicuous Political Brand Interactions on Social Network Sites

Marder, Ben, Marchant, Caroline, Archer-Brown, Chris ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8774-5707, Yau, Amy and Colliander, Jonas (2018) Conspicuous Political Brand Interactions on Social Network Sites. European Journal of Marketing, 52 (3/4). pp. 702-724. ISSN 0309-0566

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Abstract / Summary

Purpose

Acquiring ‘Likes’ for a political party or candidate’s Facebook pages is important for political marketers. For consumers these ‘Likes’ are conspicuous, making their political affiliation visible to their network. Our study examines the roles of the undesired social-self and visibility (conspicuous vs. inconspicuous) in predicting consumers’ intention to ‘Like’ political brands. We extend knowledge on the undesired social-self, transference of theory from general marketing to a political domain and provide practical advice for political marketers engaging social network sites.

Design/methodology/approach

We gather data from two surveys run with Facebook using electorates in the run up to the UK 2015 and US 2016 elections (n = 1,205) on their intention to ‘Like’ political brands under different visibility conditions.

Findings

Data supports the theorized relationship of the undesired social-self with social anxiety intention to ‘Like’ when ‘Liking’ is conspicuous. However also
indicates that all users - irrespective of proximity to the undesired social-self - prefer to ‘Like’ inconspicuously.

Research limitations/implication

The research is limited by the generalizability of the specific context and the use of self-report measures.

Practical implications

Political marketers should reconsider promoting conspicuous consumption for that which is more inconspicuous.

Originality

We provide the first examination of the undesired social-self in driving behavior under different visibility conditions. Furthermore we challenge the extension of existing knowledge of the self-concept within political marketing, based on the ‘norm’ for consumers’ to avoid disclosing political views publically.

Item Type: Article
Identification Number: 10.1108/EJM-01-2017-0059
ISSN: 0309-0566
Subjects: Business
Computer Science, Information & General Works
Social Sciences > Public Administration
Social Sciences
Technology
Courses by Department: Business School > Business Entrepreneurship
Depositing User: Chris Archer-Brown
Date Deposited: 06 Feb 2018 13:01
Last Modified: 11 Nov 2022 16:29
URI: https://repository.falmouth.ac.uk/id/eprint/2806

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