THE BUILDING BLOCKS OF SOCIAL BRANDS

20
THE BUILDING BLOCKS OF SOCIAL BRANDS On consumer-brand relationships in social media Daniël G. Muntinga, Edith G. Smit, Marjolein Moorman University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands 2 nd International Colloquium on Consumer-Brand Relationships 19 March 2011 | Rollins College | Winter Park

Transcript of THE BUILDING BLOCKS OF SOCIAL BRANDS

THE BUILDING BLOCKS OF SOCIAL BRANDS

On consumer-brand relationships in social media

Daniël G. Muntinga, Edith G. Smit, Marjolein Moorman

University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands

2nd International Colloquium on Consumer-Brand Relationships

19 March 2011 | Rollins College | Winter Park

On social media,

Who does what why where,

with what brands, and

with what effects?

On social media,

Who does what why where,

with what brands, and

with what effects?

Study 1 & 2

Muntinga, D.G., Moorman, M. & Smit, E.G. (2011). Introducing COBRAs: Exploring motivations

for brand-related social media use. International Journal of Advertising, 30(1), 13-45.

On social media,

Who does what why where,

with what brands, and

with what effects?

This study

?

Study helps to assess

whether a brand is suited

for a social media strategy

Wat are the common denominators of

brands that elicit brand-related social

media use?

Brand-related social media use may be a

function of brand-relationship quality

H1 BRQ is positively related to brand-

related social media use

HYPOTHESES (1)

BRQ is a function of brand personality

H2 More exciting BP’s lead to more active

brand-related social media use

H3 BP moderates the relationship between

BRQ and brand-related social media use

HYPOTHESES (2)

BRQ

BP

Brand-related

social media use?

CREATING

CONTRIBUTING

CONSUMING

Consumers’

Online

Brand-

Related

Activities

BRAND-RELATED SOCIAL MEDIA USE

Source: Muntinga, Moorman, & Smit (2011)

April 2010

Brand profiles on Facebook

8 brands (Rossiter-Percy grid)

Survey distributed with help of

administrators

N = 315, Mage= 27.9, SD = 9.8, 56.7% male

METHOD

H1 Brand relationship quality COBRAs

No BRQ differences between COBRA types *

But:

The higher BRQ, the more active someone

engages in each COBRA type

* Consuming: β = .35, p < .001; Contributing: β = .27, p < .001; Creating: β = .26, p < .001;

F(56,203) = 1.27, p = .123

RESULTS (1)

H2 Brand personality COBRAs

The more a brand is perceived as having an

“excting” personality, the more active people

engage with that brand *

No BP differences between COBRA types **

* Exiting: β = .36, p < .001; Responsability: β = .30, p > .05; Simplicity: β = .09, p > .05,

** F(35,119) = 39.59, p = .117

RESULTS (2)

H3 Brand personality χ brand relationship

quality COBRAs

BP “exiting” moderates the relationship

between BRQ and each COBRA type*

* Consuming: Z = 3.93, p < .001; Contributing: Z = 2.80, p < .001; Creating: Z = 2.65, p < .001

RESULTS (3)

No BRQ and BP differences between

consuming, contributing and creating

behaviors;

Strong consumer-brand relationships leads to

more brand-related activity on social media…

especially when a brand is perceived as having

an “exciting” personality.

CONCLUSIONS

Brands with which consumers perceive strong

relationships

and that

have exciting brand personalities.

? What kind of brands elicit brand-related

social media use?

IMPLICATIONS

Consumer characteristics vis-à-vis COBRAs;

Relationships between consumer

characteristics, brands characteristics,

motivations, BRQ, and COBRAs.

Collective creation of brand meaning via social

media / brand community

Positive feedback loops/ mutually reinforcing

spirals à la Slater (2007)

FUTURE

THANK [email protected]

Brand Personality (BP)12 items: Geuens, Weijters, and De Wulf (2009)

Brand Relationship Quality (BRQ)14 items: Smit, Bronner, and Tolboom (2007)

Brand-related social media use

“consumers’ online brand-related activities”

COBRAs

(Three questions; Muntinga, Moorman, and Smit (2011)

MEASURES