果冻传媒

Article

Too much information: An examination of the effects of social self-disclosure embedded within influencer eWOM campaigns

Details

Citation

AlRabiah S, Marder B, Marshall D & Angell R (2022) Too much information: An examination of the effects of social self-disclosure embedded within influencer eWOM campaigns. Journal of Business Research, 152, pp. 93-105. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusres.2022.07.029

Abstract
Social media influencers (SMIs) offer a unique form of electronic word-of-mouth (eWOM), disclosing personal information (e.g., daily routines, major life events) as part of their pitch when promoting products. To date, no research has explored if, and how, social self-disclosure impacts the way recipients respond to promotions and the influencer themselves. Through four studies deploying a mixed method design (total N = 888), we redress this knowledge gap. We find that increased depth and breadth in social self-disclosure is viewed as inappropriate, reducing trust and purchase intent. We further validate appropriateness as the critical mediator in understanding the impact of self-disclosure within this marketing context. We also establish that the context of the post (sponsored vs non-sponsored) and the audiences’ social media usage intensity together act as a boundary condition to the effects of high self-disclosure by SMI’s.

Journal
Journal of Business Research: Volume 152

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date30/11/2022
Date accepted by journal13/07/2022
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN0148-2963

People (1)

Professor Rob Angell

Professor Rob Angell

Professor in Marketing, Marketing & Retail