影响力营销
背景(考古学)
业务
社会化媒体
营销
广告
计算机科学
市场营销管理
地理
考古
万维网
关系营销
作者
Ajai Kumar Misra,Tam Duc Dinh,Soo Yeong Ewe
出处
期刊:British Food Journal
[Emerald (MCB UP)]
日期:2024-09-02
被引量:2
标识
DOI:10.1108/bfj-01-2024-0096
摘要
Purpose The study explores the impact of food influencers on consumer behaviour in the social media context. It assesses the interplay between the number of followers an influencer has and the type of content this influencer communicates to the audience. Doing so, the research contributes to the strategic refinement of influencer marketing practices, especially in the food industry. Design/methodology/approach The study employed an experimental between-subject design 2 (influencer type: micro vs macro) x 2 (content type: informational vs entertaining). It recruited 197 Prolific participants (45.7% female, Mage = 45.076), testing their perceptions towards the influencer and the endorsed product in the social media post. Findings There was a significant interaction between influencer type and content type on consumers’ attitudes towards and their willingness to buy the advertised product. Specifically, the notion that “the more followers, the better” may only be applicable when consumers peruse the content for entertainment purposes, whereas while they read it for information purposes, a micro influencer (with hundreds to thousands of followers) may have as much impact on consumer behaviour as a macro influencer (with hundreds of thousands to a million followers). Originality/value Our findings offer a nuanced understanding into the conventional wisdom that people often follow crowd behaviour. Using the Heuristic-Systematic Model (HSM), we explicate when the number of followers matters and when the content type prevails.
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